Monday, January 27, 2025

Uncommon Communicators: Churchill, Reagan, Trump


After four years with a mumbling fool stumbling around in the role of “president,” we have a strong communicator back in the White House.  The difference is striking.  

While President Trump was simultaneously signing executive orders and answering questions from the press on his first day back on the job, he suggested to those in attendance that he might have taken more questions in those first few hours than Joe Biden had taken during all four years in office.  The assembled journalists seemed to quietly concur.  Joe’s handlers spent every minute protecting him from even the most trivial journalistic inquiries; President Trump handles hostile questions while juggling ten other things at once.  Consequently, the first hundred hours of Trump’s restored presidency were historic

President Reagan was the “Great Communicator,” and no honest listener could doubt that deserved appellation.  Reagan’s unique combination of eloquence, strength, and wit made him a formidable adversary for anyone who got in his way.  Reagan could be pithy or expansive as the occasion demanded, and some of his sharpest verbal attacks required only a few words.  He summed up his entire Cold War strategy in just four: “We win; they lose.”  It worked.

President Trump achieves much with concise rhetoric, too.  Only six days after Republican backstabber Mitt Romney lost a winnable election to Barack Obama in 2012, Donald Trump signed his name to an application seeking trademark approval for his four-word strategy for igniting a political revolution: “Make America Great Again.”  

That’s a fascinating glimpse into his long-term thinking.  Before Romney repeatedly tried to sabotage Trump’s campaign and presidency, he begged Trump for an endorsement.  Trump obliged and privately gave Romney some advice on how to win the 2012 election.  Romney trumpeted Trump’s endorsement but ignored his counsel.  After watching Romney crash and burn, Trump surveyed the damage and scrawled out a simple message.  The rest, as they say, is history.  Trump used MAGA as a rallying cry for pursuing Reagan’s clear objective: “We win; they lose.”  It worked, too.

Clarity is the key.  That cannot be said enough!  In contests of immense moral significance, nothing is more critical to success than clarity of vision, direction, and purpose.  You cannot lead a country to victory by appeasing those who wish to destroy it from within.  

President Reagan did not try to placate American Marxists with squishy messages about socialists’ “good intentions.”  He denounced the Soviet Union as an “evil empire,” promised to consign communism to “the ash heap of history,” defended America as “the last best hope of man on Earth,” and called for a “crusade for freedom” around the world.  

Similarly, President Trump is not willing to appease propagandists in the press by calling criminal illegal aliens “newcomers” or “undocumented immigrants” or “unauthorized citizens.”  He calls those who murder, rape, and thieve inside our borders “evil invaders” who should never be tolerated.  

Words matter!  They frame concepts in our minds and push the contours of public debate.  And in a world in which Orwellian word games are so pervasive that prominent newspapers falsely define men in skirts as “women,” verbal clarity is paramount.  Decades of “political correctness” have pushed the West toward the crumbling ground of nihilism’s abyss.  Moral renewal and national purpose require leaders who are willing to champion what is right and fight what is wrong without wilting before critics who insist on framing black-and-white conflicts as vexingly gray.

How was President Trump able to withstand a decade of Establishment attacks and succeed nonetheless?  As was true of President Reagan, in matters of great moral struggle, President Trump bravely leads.  He describes the threats against America clearly.  He never equivocates.  He never accepts defeat.  Once Trump outlines an objective, he pursues it doggedly.  

For young readers who might dare to follow President Trump’s example in the years to come, pay close attention.  You cannot lead anybody unless you believe what you say.  And you have no business leading anyone unless you do what you say.  You cannot carry the weight of history from your knees.  As the quintessentially American adage goes, unless you stand for something, you will fall for anything.

One reason why the presidencies of Reagan and Trump feel linked is that both men have been America’s backbone during a modern era when most of the White House’s other occupants have embraced moral invertebracy.  Would Reagan’s rhetorical gifts have translated to today’s social media landscape?  I suspect that the “Great Communicator” would have adapted and thrived.  

Someone who would have certainly thrived today is that great WWII leader from the other side of the Atlantic, Sir Winston Churchill.  In fact, although Trump cuts an entirely American figure, his communication style is much closer to that of the boisterous Churchill than the mannerly Reagan.  For periods of Churchill’s life, the press and his peers in Parliament considered him a bombastic and self-serving showman.  He was a man unafraid to change his mind but also an opinionated pugilist who tossed verbal haymakers in very public fights.  Sound like anyone we know?

As an avid writer who used the press to his advantage and as an early adopter of mass media with a skillful talent for self-promotion, Churchill would have relished being a leader during the age of social media.  People often joke that no matter how unusual the subject, there is invariably a “Trump Tweet” from the past that covers the topic.  If Churchill had an “X” or “Truth Social” account during his time, a similar joke would have surely taken hold.  

Aside from sharing Churchill’s love for the spotlight, however, Trump also manifests his indefatigable spirit.  

After the German Blitz on the United Kingdom but before Pearl Harbor and America’s entrance into WWII, Prime Minister Churchill addressed students at the Harrow School about the “stern” days they faced together.  Encouraging the boys to be resilient, he charged them to “never give in!  Never, never, never, never — in nothing, great or small, large or petty — never give in, except to convictions of honor and good sense.  Never yield to force.   Never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy.”  

Churchill’s exhortation to the young students in the autumn of ’41 has come to exemplify his famous tenacity.  Yet an American hearing those words could be excused for mistaking them as something President Trump might have said, too.  At a time when so many people in the U.K. have been taught to think of Trump as some kind of dangerous “authoritarian” who threatens European norms, it might be edifying for Brits to consider the similarities between Churchill’s language and Trump’s.

In that same speech to Harrow School students, Churchill argued, “These are not dark days; these are great days — the greatest days our country has ever lived; and we must all thank God that we have been allowed, each of us according to our stations, to play a part in making these days memorable in the history of our race.”  Churchill’s unflinching belief that Britain would persevere and overcome her enemies — his assertion that “dark days” should be seen as an opportunity for greatness — is almost Trumpian in form.  Churchill simply wanted to make the U.K. great again.

Trying times require uncommon communicators.  They must be willing to identify problems without fear of backlash.  They must be willing to fight for what is right and to vanquish what is wrong.  They must speak clearly and persuasively — and raise their voices to match any that threaten to drown theirs out.  They must hold the moral high ground and resist attempts to drag them down.  They must overcome dark and troubling days and seek great days still ahead.  

If people see in Trump a reflection of Churchill and Reagan, it’s because where they once walked, he now treads.



X22, And we Know, and more- Jan 27

 



Trump and His New Frenemies, Abroad and at Home - Victor Davis Hanson

 In an address to the World Economic Forum, President Trump criticized Europe's regulatory and environmental policies, advocating for U.S.-led free-market capitalism to enhance Western prosperity.


President Trump recently gave a video talk to the World Economic Forum (WEF) assemblage in Davos.

He expressed fondness for Europe. He praised many for their attendance—and then tore into the evils of hyperregulation, high taxes, radical environmentalism, and the DEI/ESG commissariat of both the prior Biden administration and indeed the European Union.

One might have thought the attendees’ heads would have exploded when Trump referred to oil as “liquid gold.” And he topped that by referring to the venerated Green New Deal as the “Green New Scam.”

“I terminated the ridiculous and incredibly wasteful Green New Deal—I call it the ‘Green New Scam,’ withdrew from the one-sided Paris Climate Accord, and ended the insane and costly electric vehicle mandate.”

But then a strange thing happened.

The questions from international bankers and financiers that followed were not all that critical. In fact, one could characterize them as curious and carefully encouraging.

So, what prompts the polite European reception to such green and economic heresy?

A careful hearing of Trump’s entire speech would reveal it was not confrontational as much as aspirational. He was trying to envision a new European partnership—albeit one under American leadership.

“Under our leadership, America is back and open for business . . . So, you know I’m trying to be constructive because I love Europe. I love the countries of Europe.”

The U.S. economy has grown to nearly twice the size of the European Union’s since its inception more than two decades ago. Indeed, over 20 years, the gross domestic product of both was roughly comparable.

European energy costs are constantly soaring, especially given radical green restrictionism and the disruption of the Ukraine War.

There is further European recognition that their economies, like those of Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan, hinge on American policies, economic, cultural, and social—and especially access to U.S. markets and consumers.

In this regard, Biden’s hard pivot to green globalism, fiery rhetoric about eliminating internal combustion engines, natural gas, and gasoline fuels, coupled with woke/DEI policies, proved not just disastrous at home; it also weakened the position of Euro realists abroad.

During the Biden years, Western allies abroad felt they had to fall in line with a strange, quirky new America.

Under Biden, the U.S. seemed to rush well leftward of even Europe—undermining European traditionalists, free-marketers, and economic and cultural conservatives who had been slowly gaining ascendance.

The wounded European money people at Davos were essentially saying to Trump that socialism may be an affordable, temporary boutique diversion in traditional capitalist America. But in an already inert, static, neo-socialist Europe, such an American hard shift to the left has proved disastrous.

So, it was in such a Davos moment that the global financial grandees were politely stunned at Trump’s call for a new golden age of American-led, freer market capitalism.

He promised not just to ensure lower interest rates, fiscal sobriety, fewer regulations, lower taxes, smaller government, and less state intervention in the economy, secure borders, and an end to illegal immigration. He went further to promise that these methods would ensure greater Western prosperity, security, and freedom, both American and European.

Trump trashed past American censorship, political orthodoxies, deficit spending, inflation, and high interest. He summed up the Biden four-year detour as culpable and wrongheaded.

“President Biden totally lost control of what was going on in our country.”

Stranger still, Trump located his pitch in ecumenical terms—of a strong U.S. seeking to help Europe reemerge to fulfill its natural potential.

Indeed, it was past time for the proverbial American and European “West” to stick together in a dangerous economic world of Chinese mercantilism, Russian aggression, and a new political and military axis of China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea—with countries like India and Turkey keen to see which alignment comes out on top.

Most of the bankers at Davos, in fact, wished Trump to double down on his promises.

Patrick Pouyanné, CEO of TotalEnergies, was not worried about Trump’s grandiose plans to expand fossil fuel production. Instead, his concern was only whether Trump could guarantee Europe could buy lots of his gas.

When he asked Trump point-blank whether he would honor his promise to ship massive amounts of liquid natural gas to Europe, Trump gushed back, “I would make sure that you get it. If we make a deal, we make a deal; you’ll get it.”

Another European banker apparently was also worried not about too much Trumpism but apparently not enough:

“We very much welcome your focus on deregulation and reducing bureaucracy. So, my question is: What are your priorities in this regard, and how fast is this going to happen?”

How fast?

Trump’s veritable messaging is now something like “Make Europe Great Again” (MEGA)—and most certainly not the old Obama idea that the US is merely one unexceptional nation, equal to all others.

Nor is Trump’s vision anything like the Biden effort to absorb failed European ideas about taxes, regulation, borders, and energy and then amplify such dreary statism with an American veneer—and boomerang the disastrous agenda back across the Atlantic.

Instead, the Trump idea is to make Europe and the U.S. both stronger economically and militarily. He wants to supercharge the U.S. economy and offer Europe avenues to join the ride.

In that regard, Trump’s Davos speech was the foreign policy counterpart to his domestic appeal to tech giants like Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, and the CEOs of Apple, Google, and other Silicon Valley conglomerates.

Under Biden’s growing statist octopus, its tentacles were starting to reach out and wrap around his once-loyal multibillionaire supporters—in order to strangle them.

They were always, of course, somewhat uneasy about Biden’s tax increases, redistributionist multi-trillion-dollar deficits, hyperinflation, and resulting high interests.

But what now terrified them was the increasing candor of the envisioned Biden eight-year agenda. Joe, in his role as a waxen effigy, would supposedly continue the ‘ol’ Joe from Scranton’ cover to facilitate another four years of an even harder Bernie Sanders/Elizabeth Warren/Squad/Obama socialist blueprint.

In other words, the neo-socialist Biden government would not just take profits from them on the back end with taxes and fees. But now it would also restrict and control on the front end what an entrepreneur would be allowed even to do—and how, when, and where he could innovate to make products and profit as he thought best.

Implied—and indeed feared—was that an army of thirty-something zealous, know-nothing government ideologues and bureaucrats would divide up business concessions. And they would offer slices of allotments to tech lords, based on their own fealty to the administration and their hard-left credentials.

So future tech winners and losers would not be determined by talent or market successes but by ideological purity—the usual historical framework where toadies, the mediocre, and the status quo triumph over mavericks, the fearless, and the unorthodox.

So, finally the tech giants, like the vestigial Euro capitalists, figured that Trump would unleash their animal spirits—and in a way more radically than any prior president.

The aim would not merely be to enrich them. He would also enlist them to make their countries preeminent in 21st-century globalist arenas such as biotech, artificial intelligence, cryptocurrency, cyberwarfare, drones, and lasers.

Read Trump’s Davos speech and the subtext is that the only impediment to Western success is Western fear and loathing of it.

Trump counts on the excitement of a shared adventure to free the West from its crabby naysayers as a moral and uplifting experience far preferable to the current nihilist slouching to statism and stagnation.

 


https://amgreatness.com/2025/01/27/trump-and-his-new-frenemies-abroad-and-at-home/

Attorneys Challenge Bank Of America’s Claims It Doesn’t Discriminate Against Conservatives

 After President Trump publicly called out Bank of America’s CEO, the company strenuously denies it has ever refused service to Americans who disagree with Democrats.

After President Trump called out Bank of America’s CEO Thursday for debanking conservatives, the company strenuously denies that it has ever refused service based on Americans’ political or religious beliefs. But free speech lawyers say the company can’t just deny its record of doing exactly that.

On Thursday morning, a newly inaugurated Trump spoke to the World Economic Forum via livestream, taking questions from CEOs of some of the world’s largest companies. During his response to Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan’s question about the effect of executive orders on the economy, Trump told Moynihan to stop debanking people who disagree with Democrats.

“I hope you start opening your bank to conservatives, because many conservatives complain that the banks are not allowing them to do business within the bank and that included a place called Bank of America,” Trump said, after talking about his efforts to cut inflation. “They don’t take conservative business. And I don’t know if the regulators mandated that because of Biden or what, but … I hope you’re going to open your banks to conservatives, because what you’re doing is wrong.”

On Friday, Bank of America spokesman Bill Halldin told The Federalist, “We’re not changing our policy, because we never refuse to provide service based on religious or political beliefs.”

In an emailed statement, Halldin reiterated, “We serve more than 70 million clients and we welcome conservatives. We are required to follow extensive government rules and regulations that sometimes result in requirements to exit client relationships. We never close accounts for political reasons and don’t have a political litmus test.”

Alliance Defending Freedom’s 2024 Viewpoint Diversity Score Business Index found that 69 percent of large financial companies’ policies allow them to deny service based on customers’ religious or political beliefs.

Signature Bank, Deutsche Bank, and a Florida bank denied service to Donald Trump in 2021. In her memoir, Melania Trump says her bank accounts were canceled and her son Barron was unable to open an account after the family left the White House. Donald Trump Jr. also says he’s been debanked. In 2021, the payments processor Stripe cut off its business with the Trump campaign.

Bank of America is the United States’ second-largest bank, after J.P. Morgan Chase. It holds more than $2.5 trillion in assets and serves 69 million customers. Halldin also noted, “We serve about 120,000 faith-based organizations around the country and in 2023 matched nearly $6 million to faith-based organizations that received contributions from our employees.” That’s $6 million out of approximately $25 million per year the company matches in employees’ charitable donations.

Lawyers for the nonprofit free speech firm Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) dispute Bank of America’s claims. They say evidence does suggest at least some parts of the enormous company have indeed refused service based on customers’ religious or political beliefs.

Take the case of Indigenous Advance, a Tennessee-based American charity that feeds and teaches impoverished Ugandan children. Bank of America closed its accounts in April 2023 with letters stating, “upon review of your account(s), we have determined you’re operating in a business type we have chosen not to service at Bank of America.”

It took pressure from Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti and more than a dozen other Republican attorneys general, as well as national media coverage, for Bank of America to explain the cancellation months after the fact, said ADF lawyer Michael Ross. Even then, Ross said, the company’s explanations for the cancellation have shifted and conflicted.

Bank of America told The Federalist it canceled the accounts because the bank only serves U.S. businesses and doesn’t bank with organizations that engage in debt collection. Indigenous Advance is a charity, not a business, and Ross said it has never engaged in debt collection.

BoA’s response to state attorneys general cited a website showing Indigenous Advance helping Ugandans find employment at a call center that does debt collection. ADF Vice President of Corporate Engagement Jeremy Tedesco says that is an entirely separate entity from the two American charities whose accounts Bank of America closed.

“Here, Bank of America claims — four months after the account closures and after refusing to provide our clients with any information about the closures despite repeated attempts — that Indigenous Advance Ministries does debt collection,” Tedesco said in an email to The Federalist. “But it does not. A separate, for-profit company provides that service. Therefore, Bank of America’s after-the-fact, debt collection canard — even if it could be believed — cannot explain the bank’s closure of the Indigenous Advance Ministry account, let alone its closure of Servants of Christ’s account, a Memphis church that donates to Indigenous Advance.”

While Indigenous Advance works in Uganda, it is a U.S.-based organization, Ross and Tedesco pointed out. So is the Memphis church Servants of Christ, whose BoA accounts were also canceled after the church donated to Indigenous Advance, Ross noted.

“The ‘country we don’t serve’ excuse is new,” Ross said. “Last year it was, ‘They don’t do business with small companies overseas.’”

“This is just how debanking works,” Ross continued. “They take these vague and subjective policies like ‘reputational risk,’ and then they can cancel the customer based on whatever reason they want, including discriminatory reasons, then hide behind that reason and give conflicting or shifting explanations when media pressure arises.”

Christian podcaster Lance Wallnau also reported last spring that Bank of America froze his account under an accusation of money laundering. He says he had to complete an audit to regain access to his funds.

Testimony to Congress in 2023 said that, without requiring a warrant or any legal process, Bank of America provided the FBI a list of people who made any transactions in Washington, D.C. with a BoA payment card between Jan. 5 and 7, 2021. This flagged tens of thousands of Americans as potential domestic terrorists and opened numerous completely innocent Americans to federal investigation simply because they happened to be somewhat near a small number of individuals rioting at the U.S. Capitol.

During the Biden administration, regulators pushed all big banks to flag as “domestic terrorists” any Americans who shopped at sporting goods or Christian stores. Asked about using artificial intelligence or regulation to flag Americans for speech or gun ownership, a Bank of America spokesman told The Federalist “it’s complicated” and sometimes may involve national security regulations, but that if the bank ever decides to “exit a relationship” it doesn’t do so solely based on AI: “There’s a person involved in that.”

Other massive banks, including J.P. Morgan Chase, have records of canceling accounts and denying payment processing to Christian and conservative organizations. In 2023, Chase canceled the accounts of former Sen. Sam Brownback’s religious charity, the National Committee for Religious Freedom, without explanation. It has also denied payments to or closed accounts for Gen. Michael Flynn Jr., Defense of Liberty, and the Arkansas Family Council. According to RealClearMarkets, Chase told Brownback it would reinstate his charity’s accounts “if NCRF provided the bank with a list of its donors, a list of political candidates NCRF intended to support and the criteria it used to make such determinations.”

Earlier this year, Tennessee passed a law banning big banks from discriminating against customers for their religious or political beliefs. Florida has also passed a similar law. Ross said banks should end vague and unclear “reputational risk” policies that allow them to discriminate against Americans for their speech and beliefs, and make it a policy to always explain exactly why any accounts face closure.

“Bank of America should be scared that customers are trying to hold them accountable and get transparency on this issue,” Ross said, thanking Trump for raising the concern publicly. “I don’t think it’s going to die down until we get some real movement from them.”

https://thefederalist.com/2025/01/27/attorneys-challenge-bank-of-americas-claims-it-doesnt-discriminate-against-conservatives/

Never Forget Who Democrats Are, Hold Them to Their Own Standards


You’d think adults could conduct themselves like, well, adults. Yet, when those adults are liberal Democrats, you’d be better off dealing with a teenage girl (no offense to teenage girls). They have no ability to think rationally, believe incredibly stupid and obviously false things, engage in double standards, cry like they just got dumped for the first time, and pursue petty vengeance against anyone who disagrees with them like a jilted lover. Actually, teenage girls are more rational than Democrats, and Republicans need to not only remember what they do but give them a giant dose of it right back. Hold them to their own standards.

Everything from the lying to the pettiness, these people truly are awful. Trump broke them, but they had to have had this in them in the first place. Never forget that. 

Those people at family gatherings who can’t stand your existence, the people who know who don’t show up to weddings, funerals, memorials or holidays are not busy – decent people prioritize the personally important over the political. Democrats can’t.

What Democrats tried to do to Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is a prime example. It’s one thing if they think he’s not qualified and make that case, but they tried to destroy him personally. I’m not his biographer, nor do I particularly care about his past, but he has been open about infidelity and how he found God and changed. If his behavior was after that time, they’d have a case. But it wasn’t; it had been unambiguous before. 

If there is no forgiveness for past failings, there is no point to…anything. There would be no grace, no growth. Maybe that’s how the left feels – it would explain a lot about how they are – but normal people aren’t stuck on stupid; they grow.

Democrats tried to humiliate Hegseth for no other purpose than to humiliate him and his family. Disgusting is the only word that comes to mind. They couldn’t challenge him on the issues facing the Pentagon, so they went for the personal. 

Honestly, it’s a testament to Pete’s character that he didn’t even seem tempted to try to claim any of his behavior, real or imagined by Democrats, had anything to do with post-traumatic stress. Three combat tours and what can only be imagined that goes along with that would impact and change anyone. Never once did he even imply it; he simply took the abuse and smears while remaining focused on his goal – which is what a good soldier does.

Every nominee to President Trump’s Cabinet who’s had a hearing should have had a vote already. Still, they don’t because Democrats decided to “run the clock” by refusing to waive the 30 hours of floor debate each nominee can be subjected to. This isn’t new; they’ve done it before. However, the outcome is already known, and many Democrats will vote for them. The only reason to do this is to be petty. 

The longer the Justice Department goes without a confirmed Attorney General makes no difference; it’s simply an annoyance. It’s the equivalent of what you’d expect from your brat sibling in the back seat of the family truckster as they repeat everything you say in a mocking tone; it should not be something adults elected to the United States Senate.

But the title does not dictate behavior; politics does. Suppose the country has to go without a complete government in place; to hell with it. The partisan Gods must be fed. 

Don’t let Democrats off the hook on anything in the future. Every moral failure, no matter how long ago, needs to be explored thoroughly and in public. Suppose spouses or children are humiliated in the process, oh well. If entire departments of our government have to sit without leadership and something horrible happens, let that be on them. 

Beyond that, they should be treated according to the type of behavior they offer conservatives. Conservatives don’t generally lie about liberals because the truth of them is bad enough – Joe Biden’s senility, anyone? But if they’re going to stick with proven lies till the day they die, why should we not at least repeat unproven rumors?

If they want to play politics with spouses and children who’ve done nothing wrong, then Nancy Pelosi’s husband using her insider knowledge to trade stocks and out-perform the market should not only be a talking point, it should be the subject of advertisement on television. If a Republican’s family is fair game for humiliation for its own sake, then every drug bust or arrest for violent storming of a state capitol is up for grabs, too. Looking at you, Tim Kaine. 

Bludgeon them with it constantly. Reduce them to their mistakes and their worst days only. Do you think they’d show you or your family any grace or understanding? Hell no. 

They created this medicine, give them massive doses of it until they overdose or beg for mercy, and then only consider letting up. Make them hate being on the business end of their tactics as much as they hate anyone who won’t conform with what they deem acceptable thought, then make them hate it even more. Hitler never really had to live under the boot of fascism; don’t let this iteration of progressives get away with that again.