Wednesday, February 21, 2024

Today’s Politics of Weakness



It was some years ago that my grandson eagerly showed me a video of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher opining on the leadership of the European Union.

They're a weak lot, some of them in Europe, you know. Weak. Feeble.

And that was almost before Ursula von der Leyen was born.

Let us analyze the world with the notion that almost all the leaders are weak. And thus ruled by their subordinates, their bureaucrats, and the narrative.

Example One is the Carlson Putin interview -- that all the best people now agree was a Carlson clown show. Putin said he proposed to Bush Senior “that the United States, Russia and Europe jointly create a missile defense system.” Bush seemed interested until he talked to his people. Then Putin proposed to Bill Clinton that Russia join NATO. “Interesting,” said Clinton, but not after he talked to his “team.”

Example Two is the Stalin Peace Note of 1952. Stalin proposed in March 1952 that foreign troops, from both east and west, be removed from a rearmed Germany, but that Germany should be nonaligned. Well, the West wasn’t going to respond to that, not after the Berlin blockade of 1948, the Czech coup of 1948, the founding of NATO in 1949, and the Korean War that started in 1950. Too much, too soon. And then Stalin died in 1953 and the new Soviet leaders were too busy figuring out who was on first in the Kremlin to propose any change in the status quo in Europe.

Example Three is the Zman on the Senate foreign aid bill for Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan.

Listening to these feeble old men sing their own praises, one cannot help but think of the Politburo in the waning days of the Soviet Union. Like Washington, Soviet politics had come to be controlled by a class of geezers. Their primary concern for a long time had been keeping their spot. The result was they surrounded themselves with sycophants good only for praising their bosses. The result was the political system was incapable of responding to the brewing crisis.

Is the Zman right, or is he right?

Example Four is Phillips Exeter Academy after the George Floyd Unpleasantness. Christopher Rufo writes that at the school,

English has become an “exploration of racial identity”; history focuses on “transgender identities”; economics examines “racialized and gendered” forms of “income inequality.”

Rufo suggests that this stands “in stark contrast with the founding mission of the school,” but I suspect that the school mission has always been to propel its privileged students on a trajectory that will land them into their rightful place in the ruling class. Today, if the Elite 1% believes in DEI and climate change then that is what Phillips Exeter Academy will teach its students. Weak. Feeble.

Now I am going to make a leap. I propose that the Deep State’s relentless lawfare against Trump and his supporters is not proceeding from strength in our ruling class, but from weakness.

By the way, isn’t it odd that our ruling-class friends have lined up Blacks to do the dirty work on Trump, from Fani Willis to Alvin Bragg to Letitia James to that nice young lady assisting Judge Engoron? What is that all about? Is it because our White liberal friends running the liberal Plantation don’t want to get their hands dirty?

The fundamental political fact of our times is that all the glorious promises of liberal politics have failed. But it can’t be that liberal ideas and liberal government programs have failed. Oh no. If there are any economic or social problems it is obviously the fault of the White oppressor enemy and/or climate and/or racism and/or “wealthiest corporations” and/or billionaires.

Here’s the mission statement of “The Labor Institute.”

The Labor Institute is unequivocally committed to a more equitable, more just society. We believe that racial inequality coupled with runaway economic inequality are the foundation and drivers of our current incarceration state… We stand arm and arm with all those protesting the murder of George Floyd, and all the others who have suffered from police violence.

Oh yeah! Inequality and police violence. That’s it! That’s what killed George Floyd, the drug addict and petty thief!

And notice that our liberal friends do not deny that “liberal programs did it.” They live in a liberal bubble where such an idea doesn’t even exist. Of course, the problem is inequality and police violence; what else could it be?

Earth to liberals: if you are not prepared to break out of your narrative and not even start to analyze all the lovely programs you passed over the years, you are Weak. Feeble.

The Economist has a piece out on “The Growing Peril of National Conservatism.” Back in the day Reagan and Thatcher were okay. But Meloni, Orban, Le Pen: OMG!

Maybe the real peril is a globalist ruling class that is weak, feeble, and just does not think outside the box of free migration, climate change, and anti-racism.



X22, And we Know, and more- February 21

 




Navalny’s Death and Western Hypocrisy

When the left says Putin killed a political opponent in order to subvert democracy, you should start wondering what they have in store for Donald Trump and his supporters here at home.


Western media and political figures have solved the case!

A jailed opposition politician in Russia, Alexander Navalny, has apparently died in prison. How did he die? Was he murdered, or was it natural causes? Suicide? I do not know, and neither do you. But Putin’s many critics—essentially the entire global neoliberal establishment—have declared him and the Russian government responsible before the body is even cold.

This is all very convenient for Putin’s critics, but it begs the question of why Putin or anyone in the Russian government would do this since Navalny was already in prison serving a long sentence. Just last week, Putin concluded an effective and substantive interview with Tucker Carlson. He showed himself to be a rational and intelligent person. The Russian army also won the Battle of Adveedka, another last stand by the Ukrainian armed forces similar to Bachmut.

Nalvany’s death comes right as the Munich Security Conference is beginning and right after the “space nukes” story left most western audiences, including the American Congress, unimpressed. Right on time, Nalvany’s widow happened to be at the Munich Security Conference with a ready-made speech on the meaning of his death. Then all the pro-war fanatics intoned that Putin was responsible and that Nalvany’s death should galvanize support for more funding of Ukraine’s suicidal war to recover Crimea.

Insiders Desperate for Public Support of New Cold War

Foreign policy decisionmakers—and specifically the evil and grotesque Victoria Nuland—have been trying for years to meme a new cold war into existence, but the American people are not buying it. Indeed, our people are not even the same people as yesteryear. Their character has been radically transformed by decades of mass immigration and years of anti-American propaganda in schools. Younger generations, which include a large plurality of newcomers and their children, simply are not as moved by the blood and soil appeals that got young men to fight in Korea, Vietnam, and the Middle East.

Even legacy Americans who still feel patriotic balk at a new multiyear struggle for world supremacy with the added bonus of heightened risks of nuclear war. The failed and dishonest campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan, coupled with the realization that our leaders are hostile to ordinary Americans and also profoundly incompetent, have encouraged extreme wariness.

When fear does not work, the leadership class’s rhetoric appeals to our political morality. We are supposed to hate Russia because it is authoritarian, illiberal, hostile to gay rights, and undemocratic. Even if all of these charges against Russia were true, I don’t really care, just as I don’t care about the internal politics of China or Saudi Arabia or Turkey. The idealists’ mistake is to presume our internal political values are ones that we must impose forcefully on the rest of the world.

I care about countries, including their internal politics, only to the extent they may affect me and my country. They are allowed to run themselves as they see fit. True, I wouldn’t want to live in North Korea or Saudi Arabia, but that does not mean what they do inside their own borders is any of my business.

Who Are We to Judge?

Critics implicitly assume that we are this pristine, well-ordered, corruption-free model of democracy that has the moral authority to condemn Russia. Are we? Today, in our country, hundreds of people are being sent to prison for many years for parading in the Capitol, the people’s house, protesting the fishiest election in my lifetime. Draconian punishments of 16 years in prison are happening for nonviolent offenders, even as criminals are being given lesser sentences in the same jurisdiction for stabbing people to death.

The war party presumes to know what Russia and the rest of the world want: to be just like us! But today’s Russia is not the Soviet Union, and it has elections, private property, and a growing middle class. In other words, it has already emulated the best of the West’s political exports.

Also, Russia’s experience with westernization has been a mixed bag. Critics assume Putin’s support comes from a small group of wealthy oligarchs, but the oligarchs arose during Yeltsin’s rule, when ex-communist insiders exploited western-led privatization efforts to become filthy rich. Putin’s sustained support is better understood as something quite predictable because he restored law and order and national pride after Russia’s hellish, near-anarchic experience in the 1990s.

In addition to anticorruption activism, Navalny was, until recently, an ultranationalist. He also might have been CIA-funded like so many of the NGOs America deploys to interfere in Russia’s elections. Just like the Ukrainian neo-Nazis used in 2014 to bring down the pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovich, the CIA has little compunction about using people with retrograde political values against a perceived enemy. The CIA funded Islamists, including al Nusra and ISIS, to undermine the Assad regime in Syria.

Western critics naively seem to assume that because someone is an “opposition leader,” he must be all rainbows and puppy dogs.

Sometimes People in the Opposition Commit Real Crimes

It is also remarkable to hear so many people declare Navalny was definitely innocent and that all the charges he faced were trumped up. He was only sent to prison after several suspended sentences.

By way of analogy, the story of his death dropped the same day one of the main witnesses against Joe Biden was arrested for allegedly lying to the FBI. I do not know if Nalvany did anything illegal, or, for that matter, if the guy who testified against Biden was guilty of lying, but anyone who says confidently that there is no way either of them did anything wrong is just guessing.

It is possible, like the many American congressmen who have been indicted over the years, that Navalny had beliefs counter to the party in power and also committed a crime. Being a Putin opponent does not give one the right to break the law. And there is extensive corruption in Russia, with complainers often being those deprived of their cut. There seems to be very little factual analysis behind the claims of his innocence or about the cause of his death, just overconfident declarations by established Putin haters.

Jeffrey Epstein, a man with dirt on almost every major figure in American finance and politics, died under mysterious circumstances in a federal prison. He supposedly committed suicide, but a lot of powerful people had ample motives to make him disappear. The same people who dismissed these speculations as baseless conspiracy theories now confidently declare Navalny was murdered and also who murdered him.

If cui bono analysis has value in exposing something fishy in the death of Epstein, isn’t Nalvany’s death at this time—after Putin’s recent interview with Tucker Carlson, the Russian victory in Adveedka, and an ongoing debate about how much funding to give to Ukraine—work more to the benefit of Putin’s opponents? Could someone affiliated with the West have killed him? Could he have killed himself out of despair or even idealism in order to make things difficult for the Russian government?

Domestically, you can tell what the leftists are up to by what they say about their opponents. When the left was wringing its hands over censorship, democracy, and Russian collusion, the Deep State colluded with social media monopolies to censor opponents, worked to remove Trump from several state ballots to save democracy, and literally colluded with Russian and other foreign sources to gin up a defamatory dossier to permit spying on the Trump campaign.

Today, Trump faces ruinous fines from a civil suit brought by the State of New York, in addition to facing multiple criminal prosecutions crafted to influence the election and remove him from the ballot. In a similar case of turnabout in Ukraine, American blogger Gonzalo Lira died in Ukrainian custody last month at the age of 55, and hardly anyone uttered a word of protest.

When the left says Putin killed a political opponent in order to subvert democracy, you should start wondering what they have in store for Donald Trump and his supporters here at home.



Government-Backed Censors Who Rigged The 2020 Election Are Now Stealing 2024

Tucker Carlson’s interview with Mike Benz should be a wake-up call for all Americans that our government is waging war on us.



If you didn’t see Tucker Carlson’s interview last week with Mike Benz, you need to take an hour and watch the whole thing. In a mind-bending narrative about the emergence of what Benz calls “military rule” through an online censorship industry in the U.S., he lays out in startling detail just how corrupt and tyrannical the U.S. defense and foreign policy establishment has become. 

Most importantly, Benz, the executive director of the Foundation For Freedom Online, explains how a constellation of federal agencies and publicly funded institutions, under the pretext of countering “misinformation,” rigged the 2020 election and are right now smothering the First Amendment and rigging the 2024 election through massive state-sponsored censorship online. The 2020 election and the Covid-19 pandemic, says Benz, were the “two most censored events in human history.” And 2024 is shaping up to be the same, thanks to the emergence of a federal censorship-industrial complex.

The problem here is profound, with deep historical roots that go back to the aftermath of World War II and the creation of the CIA along with a host of U.S.-funded international institutions. But for our purposes, it suffices to understand the problem in its two most recent stages: the period from 1991 to 2014, and from 2014 to the present.

At the outset of internet privatization in 1991, free speech online was seen as an instrument of statecraft. At that time, says Benz, internet free speech was championed by the U.S. foreign policy and defense establishments as a way to support dissident groups around the world in their efforts to overthrow authoritarian or disfavored regimes. It allowed the U.S. to conduct what Benz calls “insta-regime change operations,” in service of the State Department’s foreign policy agenda. 

The plan worked really well. Among other things, free speech on the internet allowed U.S.-backed groups to assert control over state-run media in foreign countries, making it much easier to overthrow governments. The high-water mark of this way of deploying free speech online, Benz explains, was the Arab Spring in 2011 and 2012, when governments the Obama administration considered problematic — Egypt, Tunisia, Libya — all began falling in so-called Facebook and Twitter revolutions. During that time, the State Department worked closely with these social media companies to keep them up and running in those countries, to be used as tools for protesters and dissident groups that were trying to circumvent state censorship.  

But all of that changed in 2014 after the U.S.-backed coup in Ukraine toppled the government of Viktor Yanukovych and there was an unexpected pro-Russia counter-coup in Crimea and parts of eastern Ukraine. Later that same year, says Benz, when the people of Crimea voted to be annexed into the Russian Federation, “that was the last straw for the concept of free speech on the internet in the eyes of NATO.”

Thereafter, NATO, the CIA, and the State Department, together with the intelligence agencies of our European allies, did an about-face on internet free speech. They began instead to engage in what amounted to hybrid or information warfare to censor what they saw as Russian propaganda online. These efforts quickly spread beyond Ukraine and Eastern Europe to include the censorship of populist groups on the right that were emerging across the EU as a response to the Syrian migrant crisis.

By the time Brexit emerged in the summer of 2016, explains Benz, NATO and the foreign policy establishment felt there was a real crisis afoot; the problem was spreading west from Central and Eastern Europe, and it had to be stopped. If it wasn’t, then Brexit might trigger the collapse of the entire EU, along with NATO and the entire constellation of supranational institutions that relied on NATO. The entire postwar architecture of institutions might come crashing down, all because the hearts and minds of the people were being swayed. So went the thinking, anyway. As far as the national security establishment was concerned, citizens were being swayed by Russian and far-right propaganda, and we can’t have that.

Under these circumstances, free speech was the last thing that could be allowed to flourish online. Censorship became the order of the day. As Carlson put it, these NATO and EU leaders identified their new enemy as democracy within their own countries — their own voters, in other words: “They feared that their people, the citizens of their own countries, would get their way. And they went to war against that.”

And then Trump was elected. From that moment — and indeed, as we know from the Russia-collusion hoax, even before Trump was elected in November 2016 — the U.S. foreign policy and defense establishments, which had done so much to censor and weaponize the internet overseas, turned their attention to American citizens.

Initially, their predicate for domestic surveillance was Crossfire Hurricane, the fatuous notion that Russia had infiltrated the Trump campaign and that Trump was a Russian asset. Once that collapsed, they needed another excuse to spy on and censor Americans who held disfavored opinions or who spread “misinformation,” to put it in the parlance of the censorship-industrial complex. To do that, they had to get around the prohibition against the CIA operating on American soil.

Since they couldn’t very well get away with openly spying on and censoring American citizens, they decided to house the bulk of their censorship operations inside the Department of Homeland Security, specifically in a part of DHS tasked with reducing and eliminating threats to U.S. critical physical and cyber infrastructure. Hence “domestic misinformation” — which is really just a term for opinions and information that the national security state doesn’t like or that run counter to State Department policy — was classified as an attack on “critical cognitive infrastructure,” and could therefore be censored. What it amounted to was an end-run around the First Amendment.

But even DHS couldn’t do this directly, so it outsourced online censorship operations to third parties like the Election Integrity Partnership, or EIP, which consisted of four separate organizations: the Stanford Internet Observatory, the University of Washington’s Center for an Informed Public, Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab, and a firm called Graphika. These private-sector “partners” did the nitty-gritty work of mapping out entire online networks of people who helped spread certain disfavored opinions, or what the censors called “false narratives.” Essentially they were deputized to censor Americans on behalf of the government. 

It should come as no surprise that the people behind the EIP censorship network are leftists who hate Donald Trump, despise his supporters, and love censorship. For example, former Facebook executive Alex Stamos is the director of the Stanford Internet Observatory. He has compared “over half of the Republicans in Congress” to ISIS, called for Newsmax and OANN to be kicked off the air, and said, “We have to turn down the capability of these conservative influencers to reach these huge audiences.” His views are typical among the managers of the censorship industry.

These managers and their partners inside the U.S. government went about their task with gusto, including a seven-month pre-censorship campaign ahead of the 2020 election. Any content challenging public faith in mail-in ballots, early voting, and ballot drop boxes was flagged for violating new rules about “delegitimizing elections.” The censors, along with the government, had strong-armed the social media companies into adopting these rules, as documented in great detail last year with the release of the “Twitter Files.” 

Indeed, the “Twitter Files” exposed a massive effort by the federal government to deputize Twitter and other social media companies to do what it could not, at least not legally. But in some ways, the “Twitter Files” just revealed the tip of the censorship iceberg.

We at The Federalist were caught up in all this during the 2020 election. As detailed in a recent lawsuit filed in December by The Federalist, The Daily Wire, and the state of Texas, the State Department illegally used a counterterrorism center intended to fight foreign “disinformation” to censor Americans.

The State Department, through grants and product development assistance to private entities like the Global Disinformation Index (GDI) and NewsGuard, was “actively intervening in the news-media market to render disfavored press outlets unprofitable by funding the infrastructure, development, and marketing and promotion of censorship technology and private censorship enterprises to covertly suppress speech of a segment of the American press,” according to the lawsuit.

In our case, it meant the federal government was using cutouts like NewsGuard to throttle our reporting and commentary on the 2020 election and its chaotic aftermath. Both the GDI and the State Department’s Global Engagement Center (GEC) developed censorship tools that included “supposed fact-checking technologies, media literacy tools, media intelligence platforms, social network mapping, and machine learning/artificial intelligence technology,” the lawsuit says. The State Department then gave these tools to companies like Facebook and LinkedIn to target disfavored media outlets, including The Federalist.

Through these and other methods, during the 2020 election cycle and the Covid pandemic, the government-backed censorship-industrial complex throttled millions of online posts, suppressing traffic to news sites, and undermined revenue streams for a host of outlets and influencers with disfavored or dissident views.

But this isn’t a thing of the past. All of the censorship infrastructure described above is still intact, still functioning, and is firing on all cylinders right now ahead of the 2024 election. If anything, the censorship-industrial complex is more robust than it was four years ago. Just last week, Meta’s President of Global Affairs Nick Clegg boasted on CNBC that he currently has some 40,000 employees, which is nearly 60 percent of Meta’s entire workforce, tasked with censoring speech on Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. Clegg also claimed Meta has spent about $20 billion, including $5 billion in the last year, on its censorship efforts — or what he euphemistically called “election integrity.”

What does that mean in practice? We don’t have to guess. Remember that Facebook infamously censored the Hunter Biden laptop story in October 2020 at the behest of the FBI. With 40,000 employees now charged with censoring “hate speech” and ensuring “election integrity,” we can be fairly certain that if another Hunter Biden laptop story comes along this election cycle, it too will be quashed by the censors.

Why exactly is our government doing this? It’s not merely a partisan preference for ensuring Democrats stay in power, but something deeper and more insidious. To circle back to Carlson’s interview with Benz, it’s because the national security state has come to regard “democracy” not as the will of the people expressed through elections, but as the constellation of government agencies, government-backed institutions, corporations, media outlets, and nonprofit groups. Protecting democracy, in this view, means protecting these institutions from the people they were putatively meant to serve.

As Benz says at one point in the interview, “The relationship between the managers of the American empire and the citizens of the American homeland has broken down, and that has played itself out in the story of the censorship industry.”

All of this seems rather complex and dense, at least in the details of how it works. But at root it’s very simple: Those who have power don’t want to be held accountable by the unwashed masses, by “populism,” and certainly not by the results of free and fair elections. They will not tolerate anyone, not even a duly elected president, going against the “interagency consensus” — that famous phrase of Alexander Vindman’s from the first Trump impeachment. They don’t think the people have that right, and they intend to use every tool they have to protect their power and privilege.

The stark truth is that if we don’t defeat and dismantle this censorship-industrial complex, it means the end of our republic and the rise of tyrannical military rule in the United States.

If you think that’s an overstatement, go watch the entire Benz interview and consider it in the context of what we have all seen play out in America over the past half-decade or so. There is no language alarmist enough to convey the gravity of what’s happening here. This is a hybrid war being fought mostly online but with real-world consequences that are every day becoming more obvious. We have to win the war to save our country, but we can’t even fight if we don’t know what’s happening, or how, or why.

About 15 minutes into the interview, I was again reminded of something I once heard the late, great Angelo Codevilla say in a lecture. He said our response to 9/11 was fundamentally flawed because it took a “law enforcement” approach to terrorism that required the creation of a vast state security and surveillance apparatus to detect and stop terrorist attacks. Once the terrorist threat subsided, Codevilla explained, this surveillance apparatus would be turned on the American people and destroy the republic it was supposedly designed to protect.

That lecture was in 2013. Codevilla was right. It’s all happened exactly as he said it would. What happens next is up to us.



The Idiocy Is Getting Overwhelming


Everything is so stupid now, and I can’t even deal. Yeah, this used to be a functioning country. You used to be able to go places and get things and do stuff, and it wasn’t perfect, but it worked pretty well. Now everything’s ridiculous and annoying. Did you see the NYPD dance team video? The only thing they look like they could bust is the budget of a buffet owner. It’s a bunch of uncoordinated hippos hopping around proud of themselves as the city they’re supposed to protect turns into a bubbling cauldron of social pathologies and crime. This is so typical of our institutions – they failed to do what they’re supposed to do, but distract by doing, and badly, something they have no business wasting their time on. Some people ask, “What’s the big deal?” It’s just some hefty ladies dancing. It’s fun. Lighten up.” But I can’t lighten any more than they can. Cops should be arresting criminals, not doing the electric boogaloo. But, of course, it’s a moot point. The criminals wouldn’t get charged with crimes anyway.

No, New York has real criminals in its sights, like political opponents who pay back every penny of the loans they took out. That’s got to be stopped. You’ve got urban scumbags running through the streets, torturing and threatening normal citizens, and stripping store shelves of basic necessities so the Duane Reades have to lock up the Right Guard tighter than Fort Knox. But that’s OK – at least the Bad Orange Man got slapped with a zillion-dollar fine for a crime no one’s ever committed before. 

Oh, and right down the street, you’ve got another judge letting a jury hit that same guy for $83 million because he pointed out how freaking obvious a lie it is that 30 years ago, at a date and time unknown, while she was wearing a dress that didn’t even exist at the time, he somehow managed to rape some nut in a dressing room in a packed department store. You’re supposed to believe all that. You’re supposed to celebrate the rule of law in the jury system and all that. If you don’t, you’re racist or sexist or imperialist or some other Official Bad Thing. 

Yeah, they’re driving our country into the ground, and it’s only going to get worse. It’s only going to get uglier. I wrote about it in the “People’s Republic” books, and I hate to say it, but my prognostications seem to be coming true. We’re developing into two different countries, one that’s complete chaos and one that’s less chaos but still has blue spots of urban chaos within them. I just spent about a week or two in Texas and you know what was different than California? It worked. Yeah, there was the occasional degenerate wandering around, but he didn’t get uppity. As one of my neighbors observed, everybody’s got a gun in his car, and it’s perfectly legal. It’s not legal in New York. No, the only crime there is defending other citizens. If you try to stop one of these monsters from hurting other people, you’re going to feel the full weight of the law – and as the dancers show, that’s a lot of weight. But if you’re actually tormenting regular citizens you’re released without bail. Hell, you could beat the crap out of a cop, which is weird because the cops have weight on the criminals, and you’re back out on the street before you say, “Wow, what a great country” in whatever bizarre language they speak in your crappy homeland.

I don’t know how this can go on. Some people seem to like it. There’s this weird sliver of society, including affluent, sexually unsatisfied liberal wine women, who feel that it’s necessary to make normal people suffer. They don’t usually do any suffering themselves because they live in well-guarded enclaves, insulated from the consequences of their bizarre ideology by armed guards, hopped up on SSRI goofballs. 

What can’t be sustained won’t be sustained, and this is unsustainable. A reckoning is coming.

I was reading about the death of the Roman Republic the other day because that’s what men do, and I noted some eerie similarities to what’s going on here. The patricians of Rome, the rich folks, the people who ran things, got mighty defensive when the plebs decided they wanted a say in how things were going. Remember, Rome was a republic, but everybody knew where the power lay. And those with the power were intent on keeping it. Any attempts to equalize things were met with hordes of senators breaking up their wooden benches and literally beating their political opponents to death. 

Well, we’re not quite there yet. We’re still near the top of the slippery slope, for now. But there’s plenty of political oppression here. Ashli Babbitt got murdered. January 6 dissidents and people praying at abortion clinics are getting thrown into prison forever. The most popular politician in America and the number one candidate for president is being publicly framed in addition to having his livelihood stolen. Yet our trash establishment informs us that we’re supposed to be much, much more upset about the death of a dissident in a faraway country at the hands of a dictator for reasons and shut up because if you don’t agree, you love Putin. Putting aside that when I was in the Cold War, these same voices were sucking up to the Russians. The idea that we’re not supposed to notice the disaster that is overtaking our own country is ridiculous. We’re noticing. And change is going to come. 

I hope it’s not the kind of change outlined in my Kelly Turnbull books. And I hope it’s not spurred on by the kind of massive terrorist attack I predict in my latest novel, “The Attack,” but it’s going to come. Just like in Rome, those in power will resist reform and it will get ugly. In Rome, you had massive civil wars where each political faction tried to annihilate the other. People are somehow under the impression that this can’t happen here. Why the hell would they think that? Look at what the ruling class here thinks of you. Look at what it tells you. We have that senile, corrupt, perverted, old zombie telling us he will turn the F-16s on us if we get too rowdy, and is there any evidence that says he wouldn’t do it to preserve what he and his so-called elite compadres believe is theirs? Where are the guardrails? When do the Ted Lieus or Eric Swalwells or Adam Schiffs say it’s too much? Never. They’ll never say that.

Dark times are ahead. Be watchful. Be prepared. Buy guns and ammunition to lawfully protect yourself, your family, your community, and your Constitution. Because no one else will protect them for you.



Here's Who Is on Trump's VP Shortlist

Rebecca Downs reporting for Townhall 

Former and potentially future President Donald Trump participated in a Fox News town hall on Tuesday night, during which he was asked about who might be on his shortlist to be his running mate. Not only are some former primary challengers included on that list, but also a former Democrat as well. 

Host Laura Ingraham pointed to how "various names came up" of possible running mates when audience members were asked, with names such as Vivek Ramaswamy, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida. As Ingraham also mentioned that there is "a big presence here for Tulsi Gabbard," the crowd applauded. The crowd also applauded when Ingraham shared she meant to mention South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem as well. 

Gabbard, now an Independent, was formerly a Democrat who represented Hawaii's 2nd Congressional District until 2021. She even ran for president herself in 2020 as a Democrat, hoping to be the one to challenge Trump. 

Those names are all ones we've heard before, though Gabbard's name is a newer one. Sarah covered last week how Trump and the former Democrat were reportedly in talks. 

As Ingraham mentioned, DeSantis also made headlines of his own on Tuesday night, as he headed to South Carolina ahead of the state's Republican primary on Saturday. Although former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley has committed to staying in the race, and hopes for a much-needed boost there. Trump is leading by over 25 points in her own state. 

Trump confirmed "they are" on his shortlist, though he did share that "the one thing that always surprises me is that the VP choice has absolutely no impact," noting "it's whoever the president is, it just seems." As he talked about it further with Ingraham, though, he did acknowledge it's "very important," especially since he can only serve one more term if he is reelected in November. Speaking of that importance, Trump noted "you would like to get someone who could help you, from the voter's standpoint."

Going back to addressing those names just mentioned, Trump offered "honestly all those people are good, they're all solid." He also emphasized his desire to have "people with common sense," especially as "there's so many things happening in this country that just don't make sense." Trump went on to warn against an open border, high-interest rates, having only electric vehicles without a choice, a strong military, education, and wanting to "have things that can really make our country great again." He especially emphasized concerns with the border. 

Various trends have appeared on X in response to the town hall event, including "Tulsi Gabbard."

Given that Trump, DeSantis, and Donalds are all from Florida, if Trump were to pick either of them, he or his running mate--or any other running mate from Florida--would likely have to change his state of residency in order to abide by Article II of the Constitution. 


Here's a Supercut of the Media Being Wowed Over Biden's Supposed Mental Prowess

Matt Vespa reporting for Townhall 

Eighty-six percent of Americans feel Joe Biden is too old to run for a second term, an inescapable fact that cannot be righted by pointing out Donald Trump is also a senior citizen. Trump looks and acts differently than Biden, who almost suffered another tumble while trying to enter Air Force One. It also didn’t help that when he could’ve neutralized the portions of the special counsel report about his memory, which was filed by Robert Hur this month, he got the presidents of Mexico and Egypt mixed up. Hur’s report concerned Biden’s willful retention of classified materials, which resulted in no charges because federal prosecutors felt the president was too old and senile. 

That development follows Biden saying he’s been speaking to dead European leaders at multiple campaign events. The media has channeled this dual role: they’re consistently insinuating the man is too old while also arguing that his mind degrading isn’t all that big of a deal. CNN was surprisingly harsh toward Biden during his address to the nation on the night the Hur report dropped, with reporters suggesting he was hurting the party by refusing to step down. The president lashed out and then mixed up heads of state. He’s fine, right? Well, Newsbusters compiled a nice compilation of the media relaying how they were stupefied by Biden’s all-powerful mental prowess, which no one believes (via Newsbusters):


Even as recently as a few months ago, reporters were going on television to insist that Biden was actually in great mental shape. On September 6, 2023, Atlantic editor Jeffrey Goldberg remarked: “Mentally, he’s quite acute.” 

Back in 2022 when he was still at CNN,then-White House correspondent John Harwood insisted: “The gears of his mind are working.” 

[…] 

On the July 14, 2023 edition of Morning Joe, Washington Post associate editor Eugene Robinson absurdly claimed Biden was “sharp as a tack” according to people who actually spent time with the President: 

No one believes Chocolate Chip Cookie Man has it together. For all these anecdotes about how Joe has super brain powers in meetings, we’ll need video footage, if that’s even possible, because everyone views him as a man who you would call adult protective services if he weren’t president. 


Donald Trump is Right about NATO

As he is wont to do, Donald Trump caused heads to explode among the American political establishment and legacy media when he recalled an encounter he had with an unnamed president “of a big country” regarding the North Atlantic Treaty Organization  (NATO). In Trump’s telling, the leader asked him, “Well sir, if we don’t pay and we’re attacked by Russia, will you protect us?” Trump answered by saying: “No, I would not protect you. In fact, I would encourage them to do whatever the hell they want. You gotta pay.”

Almost immediately, an avalanche of shopworn accusations of Trump being a Putin sycophant determined to surrender Europe to the tender mercies of a rampaging Russia filled the airwaves and saturated the internet allowing the Democrats and their mouthpieces in the legacy media to reprise the long-debunked Russia collusion hoax of 2016-17.

Apparently, Trump also stunned many European leaders and much of the European media. So much so that the New York Times ran an article titled “An Outburst by Trump on NATO May Push Europe to Go It Alone” as more European leaders are now quietly discussing among themselves how they might prepare for the possibility that America removes itself from being the centerpiece of the alliance.

The leaders of Europe are finally beginning to understand the views of a majority of Americans, who are increasingly concerned about the seemingly endless litany of near-intractable domestic crises, the skyrocketing national debt, and the dire future of the United States.

In a recent Pew poll, 55% of Americans say that the U.S. should pay less attention to problems overseas and concentrate on problems at home, while 43% say the U.S. should be active in world affairs.

History has shown that, once the stated purpose of a military alliance no longer exists, it must be either dramatically altered or disbanded, or it will assume other purposes that inevitably lead to chaos. The hierarchy of NATO is now promoting the globalist version of DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) as the guiding policy of the alliance.

As part of that shift, they have taken the position that the first line of defense is no longer a military one but, instead, one of censoring and controlling the free citizens of the member states to make certain that “disinformation” does not affect the “proper outcome” of elections among the nations of NATO.

Through NATO, America has been the primary military protector of Western Europe for 75 years. Over that time, America’s direct expenditures (military footprint, surveillance, and military aid) within Europe have amounted to approximately $4.0 Trillion (in 2024 dollars) in addition to the nuclear umbrella and naval forces of the United States that have protected the nations of Europe for three-quarters of a century.

NATO and these expenditures were a necessity when a nuclearized and aggressively belligerent Soviet Union was the major threat to global peace, but that threat ended in 1991.

The original purpose of NATO no longer exists, and the alliance has abandoned its founding principles. Therefore, once the inevitable negotiated settlement of the war in Ukraine occurs, and if Trump is President, he must inform European countries that the United States will, over a three-year timeline, exit its active participation in NATO by removing its military presence from the continent and initiating a new limited membership in the alliance, forcing the European nations of NATO to reform the alliance and take seriously their responsibility to protect their interests.

The key factors in canceling active participation in NATO are 1) grossly unbalanced financial commitments, 2) radical policy positions, and 3) the obligations the United States has assumed under the NATO Charter, namely Article 5, which states:

The parties agree that an armed attack against one or more of them in Europe or North America shall be considered an attack against all of them and consequently they agree that if such an armed attack occurs each of them… will assist the Party or Parties so attacked by taking… such action as it deems necessary, including the use of armed forces, to restore the security of the North Atlantic area.

Because of Article 5, the United States cannot avoid becoming involved in either refereeing or actively participating in any military or security squabbles among European countries. Therefore, after America’s announcement that it is ceasing active participation in NATO, Article 5 should be amended as follows:

The parties agree that an armed attack against one or more of them in Europe shall be considered an attack against all of them and consequently they agree that if such an armed attack occurs each of them will assist the Party or Parties so attacked with the understanding that the participation of the United States and the use of its armed forces will be subject to approval by the Congress of the United States.

The process of amending the charter should have begun after the unprecedented collapse and fragmentation of the Soviet Union in 1991 and accelerated in 1993 when the European Union, with unified economic, social, and security policies, came into being. It was the ideal political vehicle for Europe to assume the burden of self-defense after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

The European Union plus Great Britain has a population three and a half times larger (512 million vs. 144 million) and a Gross Domestic Product nearly ten times larger ($20.0 Trillion vs $2.2 Trillion) than Russia's.

European duplicity combined with the American political class’s need to have an evil foreign adversary to pillory has kept an American-dominated NATO alive long past its expiration date. In their myopia, the global elites redefined NATO’s original purpose by not only expanding but conferring what was once a justifiable fear of the Soviet Union upon its significantly smaller and far less formidable successor, Russia.

Since 1991, NATO has expanded to 31 nations by adding 15 new members. All, except for Finland, were formerly independent nations occupied by the Soviet Union, including some bordering Russia. Perhaps understandably, Russian paranoia was dramatically exacerbated.

This centuries-old paranoia, the demonization by the American ruling elites, and the threat of allowing former Soviet Republics, such as Ukraine, to join NATO, combined with rampant internal corruption, undermined Russia’s democratization efforts and led to the ascension of a new Russian autocratic oligarchy led by a brutal and megalomaniacal Vladimir Putin as exemplified by his ruthlessness within Russia and the invasion of Ukraine.

In 2008, the United States and NATO duplicitously agreed to add Ukraine as a member of NATO. There were also overt discussions in June of 2021 between the Biden Administration and Volodymyr Zelensky about Ukraine joining NATO. In reality, Ukraine was never going to be allowed to join NATO.

If the United States and NATO had been honest with the Ukrainians about their actual intention of never allowing them to join NATO and subsequently armed them with sufficient weaponry to thwart a potential invasion, war could have been avoided.

The years-long mating dance between NATO and Ukraine was the pretext, and Joe Biden’s disastrous surrender and withdrawal from Afghanistan was the catalyst that precipitated Putin’s fateful decision to invade Ukraine.

After twenty-four months, the death of untold thousands on both sides and a stalemate reminiscent of World War I, Russia has been exposed as a military paper tiger with only its nuclear arsenal and immense fossil-fuel reserves propping it up as a major player on the international scene. Ukraine has been exposed to be what it has always been since its independence from the Soviet Union: a nation with a quasi-authoritarian government rife with unbridled corruption.

The nations of Europe are fully capable of dealing with Russia and other European security matters. The United States must focus on its nearly intractable domestic problems and a far greater global threat than Russia: Communist China.