Wednesday, November 27, 2024

The Wisdom of NATO entry for Poland and Ukraine


In May ’23, the Polish parliament’s upper house — the Senate — unanimously adopted a resolution on Ukraine’s membership in NATO as a key link in Europe’s defense. The resolution reads,

Ukraine’s accession to NATO should be a political decision, as in the case of Finland and Sweden – the result of a strategic analysis of challenges and threats outside the Alliance’s eastern border,” The document notes that Finland and Sweden were invited to NATO by a procedure that had never been used before. “The Senate of the Republic of Poland appeals to NATO member states to apply a similar emergency procedure to Ukraine.

It is understandable why the Polish parliament would feel strongly about Ukraine’s membership in NATO. The Polish government and by all accounts the Polish people view their country’s membership in NATO as a good thing that has greatly enhanced Polish and European security. For them, it follows logically that such a benefit should be extended to their eastern neighbor, Ukraine. However, to determine if this is wise, one should examine the histories of Poland and Ukraine from their emergence as nation states in the aftermath of WWI to the present day. 

With their defeat in WWI, the empires of Germany, Austro-Hungary, and the Ottomans dissolved. The Russian Empire had already disintegrated with the Bolshevik revolution and the signing of the treaty of Brest-Litovsk with the Germans. This treaty ceded large tracts of former Russian territory in central and eastern Europe to the Germans just prior to their defeat on the Western front.  This left the two remaining members of the victorious Entente, England and France, with a free hand to redraw the map of central Europe at the treaty of Versailles.

From the Versailles treaty emerged what we recognize as the modern states of central Europe with the most prominent addition being the nation of Poland. However, the Polish state that was drawn up at Versailles differs from modern Poland in a very distinctive way. Poland today is essentially ethnically homogenous with other national minorities estimated at no more than 3% of its total population. In contrast, a Polish census in 1931 documented the population as being 14% Ukrainian, 10% Jew, 3% Belarusian, 2% German, and 3% Lithuanian and Czech. 

WWII started with the invasion by Nazi Germany of Poland from the west and Soviet Union from the east.  During the war, its Jewish population, the largest in Europe, was exterminated by the Nazis in the Holocaust. At the end of war, Stalin, with the aid of the Red Army, installed a communist puppet regime in Poland. With the consent of his WWII allies in the West, he modified its borders making it ethnically homogeneous and excluding large minority communities, most notably Ukrainians. Poland remained ensconced in the Soviet bloc until the end of the Warsaw Pact and Soviet Union in 1991.

Like Poland, Ukraine emerged as an independent state in the aftermath of WWI with the collapse of the Russian and Austro-Hungarian empires. Unlike Poland, Ukraine’s independence was short-lived. In 1922, it was incorporated as the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic into the Soviet Union. In 1932–33, the peasantry of Ukraine suffered greatly from Stalin’s forced collectivization of agriculture that resulted in a widespread famine killing millions. Following the German invasion of Russia and Ukraine in WWII, a Ukrainian nationalist movement emerged briefly that was later to be romanticized by elements of the current Ukrainian government.

In 1991, President Yeltsin of the Russian Republic acquiesced to Ukrainian independence as part of a Faustian bargain that he made with former Soviet party bosses in Ukraine that allowed him to get his Russian republic out from under Kremlin rule. Yeltsin’s gambit was successful, the Soviet Union collapsed, and independent Russian and Ukrainian republics emerged. However, Yeltsin and his successors would come to regret the deal that they struck allowing Ukrainian independence. Yeltsin had believed that after Ukrainian independence from the Soviet Union, Ukraine and Russia would soon reunite in a strong economic and political union. However, with the collapse of the Russian economy in the aftermath of the Soviet state breakup, the newly independent state of Ukraine viewed partnership with Russia as a less attractive option and turned its gaze toward the West.

Unlike Poland, the newly independent Ukraine was not ethnically homogenous. Large concentrations of ethnic Russians lived in the eastern Donbas region, up to 20% of the total population of Ukraine. This population of ethnic Russians had closer economic and cultural ties with Russia than they did with the rest of Ukraine. This divide manifested itself as discordant internal politics from the start of Ukraine’s statehood in 1991.  It ultimately led to a schism following the Maidan uprising in 2014.  Ethnic Russians in Donbas and Crimea pursued political autonomy and a war followed with the Ukrainian government attempting to assert control over the rebellious regions.  In 2022, the war escalated with open Russia participation and its annexation of Donbas provinces, Crimea, and a corridor along the Black Sea connecting the two regions.

Since the time of Yeltsin, Russian leaders have decried the encroachment of NATO into the former Russian sphere of interest. In 1999, when Poland joined NATO, Russia was in no position economically or militarily to oppose the West on this issue. Russia was still recovering from the previous decade in which Russia’s GDP fell by an estimated 40%.  However, Russia has recovered under Putin to the point of being able to oppose NATO expansion into Ukraine. Russian intransigence on this point and the large restive Russian ethnic minority in Ukraine provide enough reasons to view NATO’s expansion into Ukraine as ill-advised.

Ukraine retaining its status as a neutral buffer state sandwiched between the West and Russia might have averted the current war.  Finland adopted a similar strategy of neutrality throughout the Cold War, but Finland never faced the same internal division along ethnic lines as Ukraine. It is now likely that the war in Ukraine will end with a ceasefire that leaves Ukraine in control of a rump state in the west and Russia in control of Ukrainian territory extending along the Black Sea coast, from Russia proper to the Crimean Peninsula — a situation reminiscent of Yugoslavia’s dissolution in the aftermath of war in the 1990s.



X22, And We Know, and more- Nov 27

 




The Weirdos Still Can't Get Over Trump Beating Kamala Like a Drum


Do you remember the “GOP is weird” attack line that lasted about 30 seconds during the 2024 election? It got some traction on Google, but Kamala’s staffers thought it was effective. It wasn’t—they were only hearing the echoes from the left-wing bubbles. 

Part of the effective neutralizing was JD Vance, a primary target, doing a media blitz and coming off as the most down-to-Earth guy to ever run for the vice presidency. The Ohio Republican sat down for a three-hour interview with Joe Rogan. Kamala ran away like a scared little girl because her limited IQ would have ended with the podcaster shredding the California liberal in front of a massive audience. With the election over, the left has ironically become their creation, or maybe it was always this way. 

And by that, I mean they’re weirdos. They fought for explicit, gay, adult content in libraries, genital mutilation surgeries for minors, and a host of other socially aberrant behavior that the electorate roundly rejected earlier this month. Yet, we’re now in the holiday season, and liberals are canceling plans with their Trump-supporting family members. 

That’s weird. If your life is consumed by Trump living rent-free in your head, you’re weird. You're weird if you can’t fathom sharing conversations about things other than politics. If you think democracy ended this month, you’re weird. The left became their own Frankenstein creations with these antics. And now we have wives claiming they’re going to have sex with their husbands’ liberal friends because they can’t cope. That’s not sane—that’s mental illness. The second layer to this irony cake is that simply unplugging would help many a lefty with their mental state. The campaign that lost this cycle would be exposed as being too online—the Democrats. It’s a voter group that’s plugged into all the wrong sources, which we saw glimpses of as liberals were the most grossly misinformed group about COVID in America. 




I come from a split household. My mom’s a liberal Democrat, while my dad is a Republican. My sister is progressive, while my brother-in-law is a Republican. My brother is on the MAGA train. My mom’s first legal vote was for Joe Biden’s 1972 Senate campaign in Delaware. And we all get along. We’re not canceling Christmas or Thanksgiving. We’ll talk politics without having strokes, enjoy our time together, and, like the rest of the country, watch my putrid New York Giants play the equally abysmal Dallas Cowboys later that afternoon. 

*That game* might cause the issues, as Uncle Matt, who will be many bourbons deep, will likely be cussing up a storm in front of his niece and nephew. But no, we’re not at each other’s throats over something that happened weeks ago. We’re not weird like other people who can’t accept election results.

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone.



Stop Dooming and Just Be Thankful Trump Won


It is right and proper to be thankful at Thanksgiving, particularly when our country has just avoided a communist nightmare of epic proportions. Take a moment to sit back and think about how bad it would be right now if we were going to have another four years of leftist rule, probably followed by leftist rule in perpetuity, as these bastards would’ve solidified their hold on power so that we could never hope to rule ourselves again. You know that was their intent because that’s exactly what they said Trump would do, and they always accuse us of doing what they are doing or intend to do. The best case, and it’s a pretty terrible case, would have been us wrenching back our freedom through some sort of rebellion against their anti-constitutional tyranny. When civil war is the best-case scenario, you’ve got a bad set of scenario options. Conservatives never look on the bright side, but this time we should. Be thankful we missed out on all that. Be thankful we reelected Donald Trump.

And part of being thankful is understanding what’s going on here. Don’t allow relatively minor disappointments to swallow our general success. There’s been a lot of dooming lately, and we need to keep things in perspective. Other than President Trump’s prior history and campaign promises, the best indication we have about how he intends to rule for the next four years is through his nominations to key positions. After all, the cliché that “personnel is policy” is a cliché because all clichés are, at their core, true. It’s a useful, but not a determinative, metric. 

We can place his selections into several categories. One is the home runs and out-of-the-park selections. He’s got a few of them, including my friend Seb Gorka, who will go back in as the senior counterterrorism advisor. I am also a big fan of the Pete Hegseth selection. Yes, I know his aggressive approach to warfare and heterosexuality frightens and confuses the effeminate losers who have failed to win a war in the last 30 years, as well as invertebrate Republican legislators, but that’s a feature and not a bug.

There are the ones that are pretty much OK. For example, I don’t think Marco Rubio is a terrible choice, though I would prefer Ric Grenell because he would’ve been an outstanding choice. Others, like Pam Bondi, are good in many ways, but they’ve got some bad stuff in their past, like support for red flag laws. Hopefully, she will repudiate that terrible position.

Then there are ones that make me shake my head. Matt Gaetz, for instance – as much as I would’ve liked to see him detonate the whole Department of Justice, it was obvious that confirmation would never happen. He just wasn’t going to get enough senators to support him. That’s the problem with being a rebel and an iconoclast – people will hate you, and occasionally those people will get a chance to blackball you. 

But there are others who I think are just terrible without any redeeming quality. That Department of Labor nominee is a big labor stooge who wants to destroy the ability of Americans to do gig work and freelance stuff. What the hell is up with that? This is a Gavin Newsom pick. Hell, Randy Weingarten is OK with her. That’s not a red flag. That’s literally all the red flags.

But the fact is that I, and probably you, think they are just terrible is kind of beside the point. Or it may be the point. After all, I, and probably you, are conservatives. We have a conservative ideology. We want to do conservative things. But Donald Trump didn’t win the election building a conservative coalition. He built a coalition that averaged out to the center of American politics 20 years ago before the left went completely insane. 

That means we conservatives are not the coalition but simply a part of the coalition. And that means we’re not always going to get what we want. Oh, I don’t like it. I don’t like it much at all, except for the fact that it allowed us to beat Harris and her coterie of communist cadres. I like that a lot. I’m very thankful for it. 

But we must realize where we are at. We are now competing as one of many factions within the Trump coalition. We conservatives are certainly a big and influential faction. Almost all the conservatives went for Donald Trump, at least the conservatives who are still conservative. The conservatives who were conservative but then stopped being conservative because of Trump’s mean tweets are now leftists. These ex-cons are so against abortion and for a strong, free America that they support the party that loves abortion and hates a strong, free America. But, as the people of Wyoming clearly said, enough about Liz Cheney.

The thing is, in coalition politics, every part of the coalition has got to get a taste. Trump had to throw a bone to the other parts of his coalition. Now, this Labor secretary will be annoying but remember that she is still under control and will probably have conservative underlings who will help stymie her worst impulses. She can’t personally decree things like the noxious PRO Act, and it can’t get through the Republican House or Senate regardless. Even if she is somewhat neutered, appointing her is patronage to the new parts of the coalition that don’t see eye to eye with you and I. That’s how politics works. Purity equals defeat.

There will be more of that, and we need to understand what’s going on even as we are thankful that things are not much worse. The simple fact is that our current coalition is not as conservative as we are. We’re just a part of it, but we are not the whole of it, and if the other parts of our coalition don’t get something out of being in the coalition, they will leave the coalition. That’s why they left the Democrat Party. They ignored groups like the working class, who were not only overlooked and ignored but actively vilified. Our new coalition partners got nothing out of being in the Democratic coalition except abuse, so they picked up and left it for ours. Trump is paying them back, which will happen more often than we like. But it must happen and we should not be shocked when Trump does Politics 101.

Welcome to the world of politics. Trump is not going to govern as a pure hardcore conservative, not only because he is not a pure hardcore conservative but because he can’t maintain his coalition governance as a pure hardcore conservative. That’s the reality of things. And it is going to be the reality of things until we build a majority that is hardcore conservative, as opposed to merely normal in the way that our entire coalition, for example, understands that you can’t be a woman when you have a penis.

So, stop dooming about what was inevitable and what is necessary. Yes, we’ve got to push Trump to be as conservative as we can. It’s not unusual for competing coalition elements to push their own agenda. Factions compete – that’s why they are factions. But let’s not freak out and cry and run around like a little female-identifying child because Donald Trump must manage a coalition that consists of much more than just us. Be thankful that our problem is that his administration is conservative, but not quite as conservative as we’d like it to be, as opposed to something that would make Karl Marx turgid.

So, enjoy your Thanksgiving. And let me throw this hand grenade down the hall: Thanksgiving is the worst meal of the year because Thanksgiving food is the worst food there is. Turkey? What the hell is that? Stuffing is like eating rosemary-infused pillow filling. Don’t even get me started on yams.

Happy Thanksgiving.



Quarter Millennial.

Quarter Millennial. or Semiquincentennial

This  creates a unique opportunity to reclaim our national self-understanding. This is of vital importance and I urge Donald Trump , and JD Vance , and others to take this seriously. 

The public mythos of America, our civil religious expression, as practiced in schools and in mainstream culture, has degraded into a story of regret and bitter self-effacement. We have become a nation of flagellants, but without the possibility of redemption. A perfect inversion of the City on a Hill. 

Our heroes have become villains; our triumphs, tragedies. The protagonists in this current version of our story are the litany of the oppressed, and all told it amounts to little more than a blood libel against the great men, if humanly imperfect, who founded and made America. 

There is great power and meaning in civic celebrations like the Quarter Millennial.

 This milestone is an opportunity to reset our national narrative and self-understanding, to reassert the prominence of certain heroes and episodes that have been maligned or neglected in recent decades. Imagine art grants from the NEA for new monuments, perhaps 250 of them around the country, to celebrate and memorialize our history, as told by us. 

The great men and women who built and sacrificed and struggled and triumphed, not merely for nostalgia's sake, but as guiding symbols for a new generation of Americans dedicated to revitalizing our nation. Imagine a revival of the Library of America via the NEH to publish a catalog of books, perhaps 250 volumes, curated by people who cherish rather than hold contempt for our legacy and traditions, works of great literature to tell the complete story of the American experience and reintroduce so much of the great writing that has been buried under the weight of petty political sensitivities. Imagine art prizes, film festivals, theater, music, a true revival of the American spirit through creative undertakings, its optimism and courage. 

A celebration of the high and the good. A celebration of the strong and the aspirational. A celebration of the healthy and the capable. I know there is a temptation to cut administrative spending wherever we can, and I assume public arts is an easy target for Elon Musk and others. But I want to encourage these decision makers to consider the possibilities here. This will all be relatively cheap, but the impact will be profound and enduring. Opportunities like this do not come around often. 

People are begging for a reset. The mandate to Make America Great Again is ultimately a question of narrative. It is asking us to reach back into the past and reconstitute how we perceive ourselves. We do this by authoring our own story. There are many great patriots who can be called to this task. We are standing back and standing by.

I saved this from some article before the election... I don't recall where...

US 250th Anniversary

The United States will commemorate its 250th anniversary, also known as the Semiquincentennial, on July 4, 2026. This milestone marks the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776. To prepare for this historic celebration, various initiatives are underway:

  • The U.S. Semiquincentennial Commission, established by Congress in 2016, is planning and coordinating the anniversary observance. The nonpartisan commission aims to engage Americans nationwide in designing the largest and most inclusive anniversary celebration in the nation’s history.

  • America 250 is encouraging Americans to share their stories and reflections on what the United States means to them. A multi-year contest invites students in grades 3-12 to submit artwork and essays answering the question, “What does America mean to you?” for a chance to win unique experiences at iconic American historical and cultural sites.

  • State-level commemorations are also underway. For example, North Carolina’s America 250 NC initiative will feature a multi-year commemoration beginning in April 2024, with a focus on 2026. The state’s activities will include educational outreach, online resources, exhibits, and commemorative events, aiming to empower North Carolinians to engage with 250 years of their rich Revolutionary history.

This significant anniversary offers an opportunity to reflect on the nation’s past, honor the contributions of all Americans, and look ahead to the future. As the country approaches this milestone, it is poised to come together and celebrate its rich history and heritage.

🎭 𝐖𝟑𝐏 𝓓𝓐𝓘𝓛𝓨 𝓗𝓾𝓶𝓸𝓻, 𝓜𝓾𝓼𝓲𝓬, 𝓐𝓻𝓽, 𝓞𝓟𝓔𝓝 𝓣𝓗𝓡𝓔𝓐𝓓

 


Welcome to 

The 𝐖𝟑𝐏 𝓓𝓐𝓘𝓛𝓨 𝓗𝓾𝓶𝓸𝓻, 𝓜𝓾𝓼𝓲𝓬, 𝓐𝓻𝓽, 𝓞𝓟𝓔𝓝 𝓣𝓗𝓡𝓔𝓐𝓓 

Here’s a place to share cartoons, jokes, music, art, nature, 
man-made wonders, and whatever else you can think of. 

No politics or divisive posts on this thread. 

This feature will appear every day at 1pm mountain time. 


Study Confirms What We All Knew About DEI, and It's Time for Us to Put It Down


There are a lot of things in America that could be considered destructive, but somewhere at the top is the "Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion" (DEI) policies that have been accepted from the corporate world, to government, and all the way to universities. The idea behind DEI is that certain people live with privilege (i.e. white men) allowing them to get a leg-up over everyone else by default, and as such, DEI policies help level the playing field by allowing people to be shoved further up the line based on their identity alone. 

DEI is effectively affirmative action on steroids, and like every identity-based program, it's done untold harm to everything it's touched. 

Through DEI, some of the most racist, sexist, and bigoted actions have been taken by corporations against certain groups of people. These actions are more outwardly seen in public-facing entities like Disney, who created entire shows and movies that not only featured message-first storytelling that nobody liked, but actors and showrunners openly accused its absent audience of social sins for not liking their propaganda. 

DEI was also endangering people's lives, as the value of identity over skill or merit saw entire businesses produce less than ideal work. This could be seen in the airline industry where Boeing planes were literally falling apart, and medical students were being given the status of "doctor" despite not measuring up to rigorous standards of being one. 

But a new study released shows us that DEI has an effect on the minds of those it's instituted around, a fact that should surprise no one. 

The Daily Wire summarized the findings of this study well: 

study from the Network Contagion Research Institute, released in collaboration with the Rutgers University Social Perception Lab, examined the effects of exposure to training that emphasizes awareness of/opposition to “systemic oppression.” Its goal was answering the question at the core of the DEI debate: do diversity programs that highlight systemic oppression actually reduce bias and improve group dynamics by “increas[ing] empathy,” or do they “increase hostility” towards those that antiracist philosophy paints as oppressive?

The study had subjects read either (1) an essay containing typical antiracist arguments about white supremacy and race discrimination, or (2) a control essay about corn production. After reading, subjects analyzed a race-neutral hypothetical interaction: a student applying to an elite university and having their application rejected by an admissions officer. Subjects who read the antiracist essay, which contained excerpts from antiracist figures such as Ibram X. Kendi and Robin DiAngelo, viewed the student’s rejection through what the study deemed hostile attribution bias, perceiving the admissions officer as discriminatory, unfair, and guilty of ‘microaggressions.’

The subjects who were primed with antiracist literature:

  • Demonstrated an increased willingness to punish the admissions officer in the hypothetical scenario, despite the scenario not mentioning the race of the student.
  • Viewed real-life court cases as discriminatory that the control subjects perceived as fair
  • Viewed entire people groups (Hindus) as more racially discriminatory after reading material on caste discrimination

In short, the DEI training that many corporations put their workers through, actually primed their brains to see racism and bigotry where there was none. It increased the likelihood that people would automatically put people into columns of oppressor/oppressed, ultimately creating racial and gender bias where little to none existed beforehand. 

DEI encourages sexism and racism. 

Again, anyone with half a brain already knew that. It was plain as day to anyone able to put two and two together, or at the very least, paying attention to the outcomes. You will know them by their fruit. 

This is an evil concept that managed to take hold in too many aspects of our nation, and our nation clearly suffered for it, but you likely won't hear any apologies from those who instituted it. They are, however, quietly ridding themselves of it. 

MicrosoftJohn DeerCoors, and very recently Walmart, have all begun moving away from DEI initiatives, thanks in no small part to threats of exposure by conservatives. 


If corporations are souring on DEI, then this is a great sign for society overall. 

DEI is dangerous. There is no way around that. It is a memetic hazard first, and an actual, physical hazard creator second. It weakens everything it touches, it corrupts everything it influences, and it destroys prosperity. 

DEI has to DIE. 



Netanyahu to Visit Hungary Amid ICC Controversy

 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has reportedly accepted President Viktor Orbán's invitation to visit Hungary.

Orbán said Friday he had invited Netanyahu to visit Hungary after several other European nations said the Israeli premier would be detained if he set foot on their soil, after the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu over Israel's war in Gaza.  


Netanyahu quickly accepted Orbán's offer, Világgazdaság reported.

"I thank Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban for the warm support for me and the State of Israel," Netanyahu said in a statement. "Against the shameful weakness of those who have lined up alongside the outrageous decision against the State of Israel's right to defend itself, Hungary — like our friends in the US — has shown moral clarity and steadfastness on the side of justice and the truth."

The ICC last week issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu, his former defense minister and Hamas officials, accusing them of war crimes and crimes against humanity over the war in Gaza and the October 2023 attacks that triggered Israel's offensive in the Palestinian territory. 


Assuring Netanyahu that he would face no risks if he visited Hungary, Orbán branded the arrest warrants a "brazen, cynical, and completely unacceptable decision." Orbán, who is often at odds with his European Union peers, has forged warm ties with Netanyahu.

"Today I will invite Israel's prime minister, Mr. Netanyahu, for a visit to Hungary, and in that invite, I will guarantee him that if he comes, the ICC ruling will have no effect in Hungary, and we will not follow its contents," Orbán said.  


Orbán was not only leader to criticize the ICC's move.

President Joe Biden said the ICC arrest warrants against Israeli leaders were outrageous.

"Let me be clear once again: whatever the ICC might imply, there is no equivalence — none — between Israel and Hamas. We will always stand with Israel against threats to its security," Biden said in a statement.

Rep. Mike Waltz, R-Fla., nominated by President-elect Donald Trump to be national security adviser, took to social media to condemn the ICC.

"The ICC has no credibility and these allegations have been refuted by the U.S. government," Waltz posted on X with The Associated Press story about the ICC's action. "Israel has lawfully defended its people & borders from genocidal terrorists. You can expect a strong response to the antisemitic bias of the ICC & UN come January." 


https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/israel-benjamin-netanyahu-hungary/2024/11/26/id/1189445/

Just About Everyone Outside Washington D.C. Supports Trump’s Plan To ‘Wreck’ The Bureaucracy


Americans are no longer willing to pay a premium to bureaucrats who only make their lives worse. 



In a recent “PBS NewsHour” panel discussion, Washington Post Associate Editor Jonathan Capehart criticized President-elect Donald Trump for selecting cabinet nominees designed to “wreck Washington.” Underlying Capehart’s critique is his assumption that Washington in its present form doesn’t need “wrecking.” The majority of Americans disagree with that assumption.

According to election exit polls from CNN, 73 percent of Americans believe the country is headed in the wrong direction. Among this cohort were 43 percent of respondents who were “dissatisfied” with the state of the nation and a staggering 30 percent who were “angry” about the situation. A voter analysis conducted for Fox News showed that 82 percent of the electorate wanted at least “substantial change,” with a full one-quarter wanting “total upheaval.” 

In retrospect, no polls were needed to see the landslide that was coming. It was evident as soon as the incumbent vice president attempted to portray herself as the change candidate. The incumbent is never a change candidate. So the voters sent Trump back to the White House to do exactly what Capehart is suggesting — to give Washington a good “wrecking.”

D.C. Does Not Reflect America

Americans have a great capacity to deal with adversity, so long as they believe we are all in this thing together. Americans no longer believe that. Rather, they sense that the American bureaucracy is in business for itself, and for good reason.

The place to start is the economic divergence between D.C. and the rest of the United States. We have touched on this unhealthy relationship previously. There are more than 3,000 counties and county-equivalents in the United States. Yet, half of the top ten, and three of the top five, wealthiest U.S. counties in terms of median household income are suburban counties of Washington, D.C. Fifty years ago, just five of the fifty richest U.S. counties were suburbs or exurbs of Washington D.C.  That number has more than tripled to 17. 

Can anyone seriously claim that the economic conditions in inner-city America, or in the (former) industrial heartland counties, or in rural America, have improved during this same time period? Of course not.

To be sure, the federal pay scale is not the sole source of this disparity. Washington draws money from throughout the United States (or just prints it) and distributes it locally through a complex network of government and government-adjacent entities, including bureaucracies, contractors, NGOs and other grantees. In Washington, the same people often bounce back and forth between these groups. The business of Washington is government. And business is good.

Yet, the bureaucracy itself bears a share of blame for the divide. The estimated median income of a single federal civil servant is $135,000 per year. By contrast, the median income of an entire U.S. household is just $80,610. And this is not a fair comparison from the standpoint of the U.S. household.

This is because median household income measures the total income from all members of the household who are employed, as well as from all of the jobs that those individuals work. Because approximately half of U.S. households have two earners, and because another five percent of workers hold multiple jobs, the worth of a single federal civil service job is substantially larger than appears on its face. 

Not only do federal employees get paid more than the average American, they also have a much better chance of keeping their jobs and, thus, their paychecks, in perpetuity. Private sector employees are three times more likely to be terminated than their federally-employed counterparts. Their employment is also more sensitive to economic conditions. Over the last year, the U.S. economy lost more than 1 million full-time jobs while federal employment increased by 50,000 positions.

It is no doubt nice to live in Capehart’s Washington. But other Americans are no longer willing to pay a premium to bureaucrats who only make their lives worse.  

D.C. Treats Americans With Disdain

While wealth in and around Washington grows, those in Washington treat other Americans like fools. We see examples of this across the federal spectrum.

One example is the Department of Defense, an agency quintessentially federal in character. The Constitution expressly provides Congress with the power to “raise and support Armies” and to “provide and maintain a Navy.” We have no problem with that. However, that the federal government is properly in the defense business does not mean that it carries out that business properly.

The Pentagon recently announced that DoD had failed its seventh consecutive annual audit. Of the 28 DoD activities audited, one received a qualified opinion and 15 others received audit “disclaimers,” meaning that the reviewers could not form accurate opinions about the propriety of the DoD accounts. Only nine activities received clean audits, while three audits remain outstanding.

Notwithstanding this abysmal performance, Michael McCord, the under-secretary of defense (comptroller) and chief financial officer, proclaimed that DoD had not “failed” the audit because it secured “about half clean opinions.” Yet there is no place outside of the Washington, D.C. bureaucracy where “about half” would be considered a “passing” grade. Don’t believe me? Go to work and perform only “about half” of your job correctly. Then see how long you keep it.

Furthermore, nine clean audits out of 25 (i.e., excluding the three that are still pending) is not “about half.” It is little more than one-third. This man is the comptroller and chief financial officer of the largest bureaucracy in human history. Yet he cannot — more truthfully, will not — honestly divide the number “9” by “25” when addressing the people he claims to “serve.” That’s disdain.

On the other end of the spectrum lies the Department of Education, a federal agency that has no Constitutional foundation whatsoever. I urge you to go back and read that document. There’s not so much as a hint of federal power over education. The Department of Education’s very existence is an implicit insult to Americans. Its raison d’etre is to take your money, tell you how to educate your children, all based on the theory that you — as ordinary Americans — cannot be trusted to figure out how to do that yourselves.        

What has the Department of Education given us for its trillions of dollars? Boys and men in girls’ and women’s sports, and electricians and pipefitters paying off college loans for the children of the Washington elite.

What has the Department of Education not given us? Better-educated children. In 2023, reading and math scores for U.S. children dropped precipitously. Yes, particularly bad bureaucratic decisions during the Covid pandemic contributed to that failure. However, even prior to Covid, heavy federal involvement in education yielded little or no results. After decades of federal spending through 2011 (totaling $2 trillion adjusted for inflation), educational achievement among U.S. children showed essentially no improvement at all, albeit at three times the per-student cost. And student performance in core areas continued to stagnate or decrease slightly right up until the Covid pandemic.

There are scores of federal departments, agencies, and administrations falling (constitutionally) somewhere between the DoD and DoE that have gleefully taken from the pockets of Americans for generations without facing any accountability, or without fulfilling the promises of their service, or both. 

To most Americans, these institutions need a good “wrecking.” And those Americans sent Trump back to the White House to make sure that government of the bureaucrats, by the bureaucrats, for the bureaucrats shall perish from the earth.



As Senate UniParty Prepares Their Defenses Against President Trump, Watch for One Remaining Announcement


The New York Times is admitting something they previously pretended did not exist, Mitch McConnell is ready to fight Donald Trump.  You guys have watched this battle before, and you guys know that John Thune is the exact same ideological construct as his mentor, Mitch McConnell.  We do not need to pretend here.

An additional aspect to watch closely.  We know the Intelligence Community, the “Six Ways from Sunday” group, are going to do whatever is needed in order to protect their equity interests from the return of President Trump.  Again, no pretending is needed.

Currently, as Senate Majority Leader, John Thune elevates to the intelligence “oversight” group known as the Gang of Eight.  Four members of the Gang of Eight (Go8) come out of the Senate, and four from the House.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, SSCI Vice-Chairman Mark Warner, and Senate Majority Leader John Thune are three of the four from the Senate.  However, we still do not know who will join Thune from the GOP side. Who will be the Republican SSCI Chairman?

Internally, Susan Collins is now Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee.  Mitch McConnell is now Chairman of the Senate Rules Committee, a specifically taken position to retain control of Senate rules (think Cloture, Filibuster and importantly, Recess Appointments via Senate schedule).

With Thune on the Gang of Eight, Collins as Appropriations (spending), and McConnell in charge of ‘rules’, who joins Thune on the Gang of Eight?

The three most likely SSCI members who could be given the role are: Tom Cotton, James Lankford or John Cornyn.  My suspicion based on the DeceptiCon playbook, and his skeptical statements about Trump intelligence nominations, would be to watch out for Senator James Lankford.

Cornyn who challenged Thune for leadership, is not currently in any of the leadership roles.  Perhaps he will be given the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chair; who knows.  Senator Cotton, a Sea Island participant, would be another stealth move.

We need to watch closely who John Thune (with McConnell directing) puts into the role of SSCI Chairman.  That’s part of the Intelligence Community weapon against the risk presented by a return of President Donald Trump.

NEW YORK TIMES – The last time President Donald J. Trump was in the White House, Senator Mitch McConnell, the Kentucky Republican who was then the majority leader, played a crucial role in empowering him and pushing through his agenda.

But Mr. McConnell, the longest-serving Senate leader, is stepping down from that post in January. This time he appears to be positioning himself to do the opposite, choosing to focus on issues that could put him at odds with Mr. Trump on policy and personnel at the dawn of his second term.

In recent days, including during a late-night session of votes on the Senate floor last week, Mr. McConnell, 82, has told colleagues that his impending exit from leadership has left him feeling “liberated.”

He has signaled skepticism about some of the president-elect’s most divisive picks for his administration, staying mum on their selections and saying last week that the withdrawal of former Representative Matt Gaetz from consideration as attorney general was “appropriate.” And Mr. McConnell has telegraphed that as he moves to cement his legacy in his remaining time in the Senate, he plans to prioritize two issues that just happen to be subjects on which he disagrees strongly with Mr. Trump.

Mr. McConnell, whose current term ends in 2027 and who has not said whether he will seek another, has said he plans to focus intently during the next two years on advancing his interventionist strain of foreign policy, which flies in the face of the president-elect’s “America First” approach. He also wants to concentrate on preserving the Senate’s institutional independence at a time when Mr. Trump, who will have a governing trifecta in January, has made clear that he means to bend the chamber to his will. (read more)

Watch who Thune and McConnell make the SSCI Chairman.