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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
34 w

PM will be ‘pushing’ Donald Trump for an exemption on steel and aluminium tariffs
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www.brighteon.com

PM will be ‘pushing’ Donald Trump for an exemption on steel and aluminium tariffs

Follow NewsClips channel at Brighteon.com for more updatesSubscribe to Brighteon newsletter to get the latest news and more featured videos: https://support.brighteon.com/Subscribe.html
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34 w

Small business owner reacts to Trump win: 'You couldn't smack the smile off my face'
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www.brighteon.com

Small business owner reacts to Trump win: 'You couldn't smack the smile off my face'

Follow NewsClips channel at Brighteon.com for more updatesSubscribe to Brighteon newsletter to get the latest news and more featured videos: https://support.brighteon.com/Subscribe.html
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
34 w

“Who knows what would’ve happened”: Patty Smyth’s regret about turning down Van Halen
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faroutmagazine.co.uk

“Who knows what would’ve happened”: Patty Smyth’s regret about turning down Van Halen

"Oh, man." The post “Who knows what would’ve happened”: Patty Smyth’s regret about turning down Van Halen first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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34 w

Femtard "Male" YouTubers Can't Cope with Kamala Loss Either!  ?
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Femtard "Male" YouTubers Can't Cope with Kamala Loss Either! ?

⚠️ Order your shirts here: https://www.markdice.shop Save 20% off everything this week by using promo code VICTORY at the checkout! ⚡️ Join my exclusive Locals community here: https://markdice.locals.com/support ? Order my new book from Amazon here: https://amzn.to/40vEC9U ? Sponsor me through Patreon here: https://Patreon.com/MarkDice Order my book "Hollywood Propaganda: How TV, Movies, and Music Shape Our Culture" from Amazon: https://amzn.to/30xPFl5 or download the e-book from Kindle, iBooks, Google Play, or Nook. ? Order my book, "The True Story of Fake News" ➡️ https://amzn.to/2Zb1Vps ? Order my book "The Liberal Media Industrial Complex" here: https://amzn.to/2X5oGKx Mark Dice is an independent media analyst and bestselling author of "Hollywood Propaganda: How TV, Movies, and Music Shape Our Culture.” He has a bachelor's degree in Communication from California State University and was the first conservative YouTuber to reach 1 million subscribers (in 2017). He has been featured on Fox News, Newsmax, the History Channel, E! Entertainment, the Drudge Report, and news outlets around the world. This video description and the pinned comment contains Amazon and/or other affiliate links, which means if you click them and purchase the product(s), Mark will receive a small commission. Copyright © 2024 by Mark Dice. All Rights Reserved.
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34 w

Desperate Democrats Learned Nothing Last Week
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spectator.org

Desperate Democrats Learned Nothing Last Week

If you were under the impression that a nationwide drubbing and the collapse of their electoral coalition would cause the Democrats to reconsider their long march to the left, think again. Instead of listening to the unmistakable message voters sent them by reelecting Donald Trump and handing the Republicans a Senate majority, they are desperately casting about for ways to frustrate the will of the electorate. They are, for example, putting pressure on Supreme Court Justice Sonya Sotomayor to retire immediately so that President Biden can nominate a replacement who could be confirmed by the lame duck Senate before the new GOP majority is sworn in next January. This means the electorate doesn’t want the government “Trump-proofed.” This seems crazy, even by increasingly unhinged Democrat standards, but a report in Politico confirms that it is indeed the subject of serious discussion: “This isn’t simply some flight of fancy happening among progressive activists online. It’s a conversation members of the Senate are actively engaged in … The conversations have gone far enough that a possible replacement has been bandied about: D.C. Circuit Judge J. Michelle Childs, who was on President Joe Biden’s SCOTUS short list.” The good news is that time constraints and certain irascible Senators will probably scuttle the scheme. Moreover, as the Economic Times points out, it would require Justice Sotomayor to submit a “conditional” resignation: One Democratic senator suggested that Sotomayor could resign with conditions, allowing her departure only when a replacement is confirmed. However, the idea brings challenges: a conditional resignation does not guarantee that Sotomayor’s preferred nominee would be confirmed. Moreover, Democrats are already grappling with a packed legislative schedule, making the prospect of pushing through a Supreme Court confirmation difficult. The party would also need to ensure enough Senate votes for a swift process, which may be hard, especially with unpredictable votes like that of retiring Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia. This is an accurate summary of the scheme’s challenges, but it misses the point. A conditional resignation would effectively allow Sotomayor to veto any successor that doesn’t pass an ideological litmus test. This would be profoundly undemocratic. Retiring justices don’t get to choose their own successors. Only elected officials possess the power to do so. That such a scheme is being discussed at all is exactly why the voters soundly rejected the handpicked Democrat presidential nominee, four Democrat Senators and a thus far indeterminate number of Democrat House members. Exit polls published by NBC News show that more Republicans than Democrats believed democracy was “very threatened.” This brings us to unconstitutional attempts by the Biden-Harris administration to “Trump-proof” its foreign policy failures and its metastasizing regulatory regime. Regarding the former, Politico describes the effort thus, “Despondent Biden administration officials are mulling how to protect their national security priorities before president-elect Donald Trump returns to the Oval Office in January. Whether it’s sending funds to Ukraine or imposing new sanctions on extremist Israeli settlers, an array of options are on the table.” Never mind that many voters cast ballots for Trump so he would halt Biden’s dangerous foreign policy blunders. As to the regulators, the Washington Post reports: In just the past two days, the administration has finalized plans to limit oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and to save an imperiled bird — the greater sage grouse — by restricting drilling, mining, and livestock grazing across nearly 65 million acres of its habitat in 10 Western states. Officials have met behind closed doors to wrap up work on a study justifying the administration’s pause on approvals of new liquefied natural gas exports — a pause that Trump has promised to end … The administration also moved this week to restrict fossil fuel exploration on Alaska’s North Slope, by narrowing the scope of an oil and gas lease sale [in ANWR]. This outrageous regulatory overreach is precisely why the voters gave the Biden-Harris administration the bum’s rush. Americans understand that the high cost of energy is a core driver of inflation and that our dependence on foreign energy sources is a national security problem. According to the Interior Department itself, “The U.S. produces enough domestic energy to provide for 84 percent of its demand, but continues to rely on foreign energy, primarily oil, to make up the difference.” What sane administration would restrict domestic production of energy when we rely on often unfriendly foreign producers for 16 percent of our energy needs? This is nuts and the voters are well aware of it. Yet, even after last week’s resounding rebuke of such policies, the Biden-Harris administration is moving as fast as possible to prevent President-elect Trump from responding to the will of the voters. As the New York Post reports, he has already received the highest raw popular vote count in 2024 than any Republican in history — and the counting continues. This means the electorate doesn’t want the government “Trump-proofed.” They want the Democrats to get the hell out of the way and let the man do the job he was elected to do. Yet, neither the White House nor its congressional accomplices are listening. They have learned nothing from their humiliating defeat. Long may they languish in the wilderness. READ MORE from David Catron: Early Turnout: Harris Falters Among Black Voters Whoever Yells ‘Fascist’ First Loses The post Desperate Democrats Learned Nothing Last Week appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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34 w

Trump Victory Is the American Counter-Reformation
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Trump Victory Is the American Counter-Reformation

Something beautiful happened last week. The bells of Notre Dame rang for the first time since a terrible fire consumed the magnificent cathedral, originally completed in 1260 for the glory of God, five years ago. To a poetic mind, the chimes reverberated the cheering across the Atlantic after the landslide electoral victory of Donald Trump. Christendom may be dying in Europe, but Tuesday in America, it expanded. Catholics…. learned in time just how immoral the Left can be, celebrating child murder and mutilation while crushing religious liberty. Cultural observers like me had predicted this presidential race would partly be a battle of the sexes. Not so much of men versus women but of real men and traditional women of all races versus angry witches and their male lackeys. And, boy, did the four candidates ever represent their different sides. You had a tough guy tycoon and a self-made ex-Marine going up against a DEI-pick minority female and an imp. Naturally, the regime media tried to paint the latter pair as the second running of Hillary and Bill Clinton. Only for the first time, the press had an uncensorable obstacle — Elon Musk’s X platform — that exposed the Democratic ticket for the clown show it was. And previously forbidden mockery followed. Normal people recognized Kamala Harris as an empty pantsuit and Tim Walz as a creepy weirdo. The media effort to turn their ridiculous spouses into male and female role models only increased conservative scorn. Yet they still thought they could win with their old reliable weapon — abortion, or rather the conservative threat to it. Hence, their usual messengers screeched the false alarm of a federal abortion ban right up to the moment of decision. “Take a look out the window. It’s raining women,” Michael Moore posted on his website early Election Day. Moore’s additional threat to Trump will long be a self-own classic. “So, Donald, if you’re reading this, that’s why there’s so many women packing the polls today,” Moore wrote. “It’s a tsunami. We arranged it. Don’t ever mess with us again — we the commies, the Gays, the Jews, all those complaining women plus Al Roker (Al Roker?), Taylor Swift, Colin Kaepernick, Lizzo, Stephen Colbert, and 27 others — we are the cabal who controls the weather (Al Roker?) and we’re not sorry we’ve wrecked your day.” Oddly enough, this appears to be the last post on Moore’s website. For what happened later that day and throughout the night, Moore and his ilk could never have foreseen. Because the concept of real men, normal women, and the true faith are so repulsively alien to the Left. Yet the combination of the three changed history to save America for the foreseeable future. Michael Moore was half right. Women did turn out for Harris, but only by a seven-point majority, 53 to 46 percent, according to an AP survey. And young women under 30 shifted 11 points toward Trump since 2020. This was easily surpassed by men, with 54 percent going for Trump.  More than half of men under 30 supported Trump, the reverse of 2020. Trump also doubled his share of black men. And he won half the Latino male vote. What could possibly account for such a Democratic disaster? The answer is something that unites, not separates, men and women of different races, and at an increasingly younger age. Something far beyond liberals’ comprehension, even while they pathetically ridicule it. Something that explains Trump’s staggering gains among Latinos and the Democrats’ mortal loss of them. The answer is Christianity. Ridicule believers enough and you pay a heavy price, like Harris-Walz just did. A CNN exit poll found 63 percent of Protestants and other Christians went for Trump, only 36 percent for Harris. This, despite a concentrated leftwing effort to bastardize the religion into a progressive force (read Megan Basham’s invaluable Shepherds for Sale: How Evangelical Leaders Traded the Truth for a Leftist Agenda). Catholics voted 54 percent to 44 percent for Trump over Harris, which radically altered the 50/50 split with Biden in 2020. They learned in time just how immoral the Left can be, celebrating child murder and mutilation while crushing religious liberty. And my state led the way this election in defeating evil. I live in Key Biscayne, Florida, a small island off Miami. It’s rich in families, many with more than three kids. Often, I walk to or past my parish church, St. Agnes, to the sight and sound of wholesome young people of both sexes right outside it — the majority of them Latin like me — listening to gospel music. When the priests in Mass spoke out against Amendment 4, an infernal act that would have codified abortion on demand, they took it to heart. Amendment 4 went down in flames, along with pro-marijuana Amendment 3 and Kamala Harris. Florida voted 56 percent to 43 percent for Trump. And we won’t have to hear that grating voice and cackle for the next four years. Matt Walsh tweeted, “Every leftist who unironically used the term ‘Latinx’ played a part in making this happen. Thank you.” Now, not only a statist blockade but a secular cloud has been lifted from this country. The result may be as durable as the Counter-Reformation that saved the Catholic Church from Protestant divisions in the mid-1600s. Among President Elect Donald Trump’s many intentions for making America great again is a subtle yet welcome one. “We will proudly say Merry Christmas again,” Trump said at one of his last rallies as a candidate. And thanks to his election, it will be. Want to know the real story behind the Trump electoral landslide? Read my shockingly timely new political thriller, The Washington Trail, available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and wherever fine mysteries are sold. READ MORE from Lou Aguilar: We Can Be Heroes for One Day — Election Day The Last Halloween for Democrat Witches     The post Trump Victory Is the American Counter-Reformation appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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34 w

Undoing Biden: Trump’s First-Month Agenda
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Undoing Biden: Trump’s First-Month Agenda

Revoke Biden’s Orders and Memoranda Beginning on January 20, 2025 President Trump will have the opportunity to repair the damage that Joe Biden and Kammy Harris have done in the past four years. But the next four years will pass quickly, so Trump has to start on his first day and keep charging ahead. Hamas still holds about one hundred Israeli and three U.S. citizens as hostages. Biden did nothing to gain their release. Trump can force it. The Dems will have their own agenda. If they get a majority in the House — which seems unlikely at this writing — they’ll impeach Trump by Saint Patrick’s Day. The agenda for Trump’s first month begins on Inauguration Day. The simplest and best action Trump can take is to revoke all of Biden’s executive orders and presidential memoranda. According to Ballotpedia. Biden has signed 142 executive orders and 221 presidential memoranda. (That number may increase between now and Inauguration Day.) Both of those actions direct federal officials to take — or refrain from — certain actions that are at least purportedly in their power. The difference between them is that EO’s have to be published while the presidential memoranda don’t. Trump should revoke every one of Biden’s executive orders and presidential memoranda. Some of them are the means by which Biden opened our borders. Revoke them all. Every. Single. One. Trump’s staff should have a document accomplishing that ready for his signature on Inauguration Day. Also on Inauguration Day, Trump should have legislation in hand that would authorize and fund construction of the wall across the Mexican border. It should also close our borders to all but legitimate commercial traffic, legal immigration, and tourists with proper visas. That bill, which should be HR-1 if Republicans keep the House, should be sent to the House and Senate for consideration beginning that day. Nothing — other than cancellation of the Biden executive orders and presidential memoranda — can be done immediately but much can be done or at least begun within the first month of Trump’s new presidency. Biden has supposedly made the civil service Trump-proof. He has done that by converting a lot of political appointees — who are usually called “Schedule C’s,” political but not senate confirmed — into regular civil service jobs. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La) has already posed a good solution to that problem. Transfer all of them out of D.C. to places they may not wish to be and essentially force them to quit rather than be reassigned. Why not Minot? When I was a young Air Force captain that was the place the colonels always threatened me with reassignment if I screwed up. Fortunately, I didn’t. Mid-level politicals, used to being wined and dined at Café Milano in Georgetown, won’t be eager to be reassigned to Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota, which will have plenty of room for them (and more can be built). The average temperature at Minot is a balmy 17ºF in January. (The average low is -2ºF). Have fun there, boys and girls. That will take time, but they can all be reassigned immediately out of political power until that is accomplished. Personnel is Policy I remain hopeful that Trump’s new cabinet will be filled with the right people, but the augurs say otherwise. As I wrote last week, the people in charge of the transition and picking new people for Trump 47 need to have the First Law of Governance —  personnel is policy — as their guiding principle. Unfortunately, the Trump transition team is in the hands of billionaire investment banker Howard Lutnick and Linda McMahon, who was a top executive in World Wrestling Entertainment before she became Small Business Administrator in Trump’s first term. Neither apparently is guided by “personnel is policy” and we — and Trump — will suffer accordingly. (READ MORE from Jed Babbin: For Trump, Personnel Decisions Will Be Crucial) Trump said the other day that he wouldn’t invite either Nikki Haley or Mike Pompeo into his new government. Trump views Haley as disloyal so her banishment is understandable. But Pompeo was a terrific secretary of state. Exiling him isn’t a good idea. No House members should be considered for cabinet posts. The Republican majority — if there is one — will be so slim that no one should be removed from it. As for senators, only those whose state governors are Republicans should be considered. Republican governors can appoint Republicans to a senator’s unfinished term but House members — even those in “safe” Republican seats — are too much of a risk in the special elections that will follow. The next thing Trump should do, once he has a good team in the Pentagon, is to renew the old Defense Guidance process from the Reagan days. In Defense Guidance, a strategy is outlined by the White House and the Pentagon budget derived from it. He may have to go through the highly-politicized “Quadrennial Defense Review” but Defense Guidance should be its foundation. Get real warriors to help devise the strategy and cut out all of the Biden nonsense that saps U.S. military strength. Trump must quickly reverse the Biden policy of allowing transgender people in the military and compel the military — by firing all the generals and admirals who have bought into it — to drop Biden’s “wokeness” policies that have made our military a divided mess. Reversing Biden on NATO, Ukraine, Middle East Trump can also immediately reimpose the economic sanctions on Iran that he had in his first term. Those sanctions brought ruin to the Iranian economy. Iran is reportedly plotting to assassinate Trump. For a host of reasons that needn’t be rehearsed here and regardless of that, Trump should, by a secret presidential directive, task the CIA to cause the overthrow of that evil regime. Dealing with Europe and NATO will be much harder. They buy gas from Russia via the two Nordstream pipelines that still are operational. We can sell all the gas Europe needs but Russia will always reduce the price until we cannot compete. Trump will certainly keep the pressure on NATO nations to spend more on their own defense. But European Union nations — which are also NATO members — are stuck in their own mess, welfare states that are highly resistant to more defense spending. Trump’s renewed pressure on them will force them to spend less on welfare and more on defense but their progress will be very slow. The wars in Ukraine and Israel will be even harder to deal with. Trump’s running mate, Vice President-elect J.D. Vance, led senate opposition to more aid to Ukraine. Trump can’t let Russia take all of Ukraine but his inclination is, as reported elsewhere, to make a “peace” with Russia that allows it to keep the Crimea and areas elsewhere in Ukraine. Ukrainian President Zelensky will resist any territorial concessions to Russia. Russian President Putin may be willing to compromise (temporarily) but his forces — reinforced by North Korean cannon fodder — are still winning the fight. Putin has no reason to compromise. As for Israel, Trump was — and will be again — the best ally Israel ever had in the White House. Gone will be the Biden threats of cancelling U.S. financial and military aid unless Israel force-feeds the Gaza population. But Trump can, and we expect he will, threaten Iran, Hamas, and Hizballah. The Qatari government, which has harbored the Hamas terrorist leaders for years has, because of Trump, told the Hamas leaders to get out. Trump, as noted above, can help by threatening Hamas and Hizballah with U.S. military action. Such action may be unnecessary because most of the leaders of Hamas and Hizballah have been killed by Israeli forces and hundreds of their terrorists are reportedly surrendering. Hamas still holds about one hundred Israeli and three U.S. citizens as hostages. Biden did nothing to gain their release. Trump can force it. We dodged a big bullet on Election Day. It wasn’t that we celebrated Trump’s win as much as we breathed a sigh of relief that Kamala Harris wouldn’t get the chance to finish ruining our country. Trump, if he has great cabinet and sub-cabinet members, has a really good shot at making America great again. READ MORE from Jed Babbin: What Great Allies We Are Après Sinwar The post Undoing Biden: Trump’s First-Month Agenda appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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34 w

Kamala’s Loss Leaves Obama Seething
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Kamala’s Loss Leaves Obama Seething

Editor’s Note: Barack Obama, who served as the 44th President of the United States, spoke at a post-election gathering of black voters. Matt Manochio of  The American Spectator was present and submits this transcript of Obama’s brutally honest speech. African American men, as your undisputed leader and messianic father figure, I, Barack Obama (he/him), am disappointed in the 24 percent of you who disrespected me by voting for Donald Trump. As my former pastor Jeremiah Wright would say, God damn America. I say that daily, but say it now out of rage rather than habit because of your selfishness. African/South Asian/Jamaican-American Vice President Kamala Harris was destined to be our next historic president until she started speaking and voters listened. Not everyone possesses my gift for oration. Kamala’s inability to speak substantively should not have disqualified her, given the state of our public education system. Frankly, Kamala should not have had to speak at all. When I reluctantly installed her — er, I mean, when Kamala became our nominee from the grassroots up — the American electorate simply should’ve forgone November’s election and handed her power. However, the United States has this quaint notion that Democrats should debase themselves by explaining their ideas to the hoi polloi rather than being empowered to implement them outright. This forced Kamala to concoct core beliefs beyond forcing Catholic hospitals to abort babies. Any heartfelt values she focus-grouped shouldn’t have mattered because her marginalized status and that D next to her name has always meant minorities (African Americans, specifically) would blindly vote for her. Enough of you signaled you wouldn’t, forcing my hand. Do you think I wanted to fly from Martha’s Vineyard to your housing projects to lecture you? I have better things to do, like producing Netflix documentaries about me. “You’re thinking about sitting out or supporting somebody (Trump) who has a history of denigrating you, because you think that’s a sign of strength, because that’s what being a man is? Putting women down?” I scolded you in Pittsburgh. “That’s not acceptable.” The Democratic party has plenty of masculine role models for you to emulate, like Jonathan Capehart or my wife. But Trump? Have you yet to realize your place by now? We swoop into your neighborhoods every two to four years to remind you to vote Democrat so we can make your lives marginally better while keeping you dependent on us. But no matter how poorly we run your crime-ridden cities, you must blame Republicans, and you vote for us. “But Mr. Great President,” you might tell me, “my groceries cost too much and were cheaper under Trump.” I haven’t stepped foot in a grocery store in years — someone does that for me. But regardless of how expensive your food is, we Democrats make sure your welfare benefits are on your EBT cards. Since when has that not been good enough for you? What more could Kamala have done to treat you like respectable, mature adults? Once she realized African American men were abandoning her, she offered you marijuana the way Mortimer Duke dangled a bottle of alcohol in front of Billy Ray Valentine in Trading Places: “Whiskey! All you want!” If asking for your vote in exchange for drugs doesn’t express how much she cares about you, nothing does. Still, you betrayed me. My friend and former Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson was just as distraught upon realizing you began thinking for yourselves. “As different demographic groups become further integrated into our society, they start caring about all of the other issues that everyone else does,” Johnson said forlornly on MSNBC. “Whether it’s the economy, crime, whether it’s border security.” Johnson described the Democrats’ nightmare scenario, which apparently occurred: Even though Kamala did a terrific job securing the border, many counties on the border, some of which are overwhelmingly Hispanic, voted for Trump.) Because I am not Hispanic, I cannot credibly chastise the 45 percent of you who voted for Trump. I will leave that to intellectual heavyweights like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) or that useful idiot on The View. But I agree with Joe Scarborough and the Rev. Al Sharpton that Hispanic and African American men who don’t vote for a mixed-race Democratic woman are misogynistic racists on par with George Wallace or David Duke. African American men who voted for Trump, I awoke November 6 and stood on my mansion’s seaside balcony, a steaming-hot latte in hand. I averted my eyes from the sun’s glare off the Atlantic Ocean, and I thought, America faces waters rougher than the waves crashing into my yacht because you ignored me. While you disappoint me the way a naughty son bedevils his father, remember that I care about how you vote. And I will remind you of this four years from now. In the meantime, stay off my lawn. READ MORE from Matt Manochio: Kamala Harris’s 60 Minutes Interview, for Real Matt Walsh’s Am I Racist? Properly Reviewed The post Kamala’s Loss Leaves Obama Seething appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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34 w

Now We Move Forward, With Malice Toward None
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Now We Move Forward, With Malice Toward None

There was a moment of civility following the election, with both the president and the vice president calling the president-elect to congratulate him on his winning campaign and assure him of their full cooperation in the transition. He reportedly accepted it gracefully. Go big, then … offer Jack Smith and Alvin Bragg … new positions in traffic courts. The factions should leave it at that, courtesies, cooperation, politics, competitive as always but without the end-of-times hysteria. Politics ain’t bean bag and never has been, just review the hatred — not to mention an armed rebellion — George Washington, father of the nation, put up with. But in America, you must know even very bad moments are not the end of anything, and even when they are, they are also the beginning of something. The truth is, though, some people just will not quit. Matt Walsh, one of the funniest observers of our odd times, explains in a recent skit how some innocent sarcastic comments of his on the Project 2025 bogeyman were taken literally by down-melts, some of whom expressed without irony a wish to make him dead. It is not only here: the sharp and witty Elizabeth Moutet, writing from Paris for the London Telegraph, reports on paranoiac Euro reactions to Trump’s win. Which is not to say the stakes are not high. The campaign marked the clashing moment in what has been for many years a spirited debate about the nature of American society and the place of government in sustaining, or changing, it. Two pieces written during the campaign, James Piereson in the New Criterion and Chris DeMuth in the Wall Street Journal, lay out what conservatives have been saying about the urgent need to let the air out of the Washington blob and reduce the size and reach of the federal government, which must include restoring the  balance among its branches. In this regard, the best indicator of the incoming administration’s success may turn out to be a devaluation in the real estate market in Washington D.C. and the surrounding Maryland and Virginia counties, which are among the richest in the country. By all rights it should be happening while the nation experiences a bullish stock market, and a job-creating economic expansion. There is no call, whatever the urge, for schadenfreude. Comity would in fact be welcome. The Republic faces enemies, within and without, that wish us devastating harm. We ought to be able to agree what these enemies represent, who they are, what strengths they have.  Then we can agree on prudent strategies to confound them without doing damage to our liberties, our way of life, and our system of government. In the past we have made mistakes in this area. John Adams, second president and one of the greats, was perhaps overbearing with the Alien and Sedition acts, however well intended. They were never applied to the degree the far worse disloyalty and treason laws of the Woodrow Wilson (28th president and one of the worst) administration. Internal and foreign security can be achieved without prejudice to liberty within a broad consensus. After all, we have had such consensuses in the past, marred at times by boneheaded execution, but we can learn and improve by studying history, ours and others’. We Define Our Enemies And we should, because if we cannot agree on the threat, it is difficult to see how we can avoid another eruption of partisan strife with the concomitant insults, as well as the abuse of federal agencies and the courts, which as we have seen lowers the people’s esteem and trust.  So, let us begin with a list of enemies that all can agree on. An enemies list should be made up not of national or ethnic or cultural groups, because then you miss the tree for the forest, of worse, the tree you see misleads you regarding the forest.  You define enemies by what they do.  Murderers would make the list, and other sociopaths, such as pickpockets. Here’s a better way to put it: an enemy is anyone who breaches the accepted moral code. But do we have one?  That is the big question now. One way to let the code reveal itself in practice would be to go big on magnanimity. With malice toward none is one of the classic phrases in the American language, and rightly so. Magnanimity, absence of malice and charitable impulse, requires empathy and the will to serve and protect others. Donald Trump understands this: his dismay at the shortcomings of our culture, our press, our legal system, our political system, and much else in our society and nation motivated his entry into politics and propelled his disruptive victories over a failing status-quo. Notwithstanding fits of temper that had deplorable results, notably in the aftermath of the 2020 election, he is what Southerners used to call a champion, a battler who establishes a rapport with his people because of a demonstrated willingness to defend them, speak for their cause. The good humor and especially the connection with voters he achieves repeatedly are the marks of a man with a heart, a beating heart and, this matters too, a heart that he knows he sometimes must close. Go big, then: rather than punish anyone, offer Jack Smith and Alvin Bragg — to take two sorry examples of persons toward whom another man would feel bitterness — new positions in traffic courts. Judge Merchan might be assigned as a public defender in a precinct next to a red light district, where he could learn to exercise some compassion to tone down the show-me-the-man-I’ll-find-a-crime vindictiveness that seems to be his forte. Leaders of the opposition party ought to be invited as soon as possible to meet with the new president that he might hear their perspectives as well as their most dire fears and grandest hopes.  My own suggestion would be a nice lunch somewhere, low key and casual, though with correct dress required. The host would sit and listen and say nothing except the occasional quiet “yeah” or “yeh, innarestin'” or “umm, never thought of that” with the slightest accent on “that”; and then, “Well, thank you ladies and gentlemen, have a nice rest of the day, goodbye.” The gestures of the moment must include the “charity for all” part of Abraham Lincoln’s revered line. Beginning with a major dinner party for the liberated January 6 hostages (with meaningful financial compensations) and others, like Daniel Petty, the president can show that American justice cannot work if it is based on politically-defined categories of victims and oppressors. Re-Value Work Charity, to last, must involve a new dedication to the value of work.  Teach a man to work, and more to the point in a land of opportunity like ours, remove the obstacles to gainful work, and the need for in-kind or monetary charity will be much reduced.  Welfare for the truly needy is fine, as is public education and essential health care, but the private sector is, or should be, the leader in these areas as it should be in most other areas of life in a free society. The aim, expressed by conservatives for as long as there have been governments trying to corner the market for compassion, is to build character, self-reliance, and to remove obstacles to opportunity.  If we can explore space and find cures for cancer and make double rye whiskeys — all of which and much more we have done — by God we ought to figure out welfare reform. I myself, for example, know many fantastically gifted cooks who could give McDonalds a run for its money — which by the way would be good for McDonalds — in the fast eats business.  And they never ask for help, only the lowering of barriers to entry. Enterprise, a thousand-ship Navy, the best Air Force in the world — America will be safe, America will be sound, there will be no percentage in changing genders, no need to fret over time clocks between pitches on the baseball field or serves on the tennis court, no reason to steal from CVS stores, priests will be kind and rabbis will be wise, pastors will be steadfast in faith and teachers will be strict and patient and, yes, kind.  Screw up and succeed, fall and rise again: in America, nothing is impossible. READ MORE from Roger Kaplan: Reflections on the End of an Election Cycle Are We About to Replay the Alger Hiss Affair? The post Now We Move Forward, With Malice Toward None appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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A Tuition Bump Can Ensure a Strong Military
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A Tuition Bump Can Ensure a Strong Military

The United States employs about 1.3 million soldiers, sailors, airmen, marines, special operations personnel, and other active service military members. The security of the entire nation, as well as the security of allies, global shipping lanes, and airspaces depends directly on these individuals who comprise less than 1 percent of U.S. adults. The low tuition reimbursement rate for active military members is made even more stark when compared to Pell Grants. It is no hyperbole to say that our lives depend on these men and women who serve the nation. The service that our military personnel provide is even more extraordinary when we realize that they volunteer for duty. In 1968, the U.S. had 3.5 million active service members, but that number dwindled precipitously after 1973 when the draft ended. Today, everyone in uniform is there by choice. Despite the commitment and sacrifice of military personnel, the nation’s support of them is lackluster. According to the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD), the starting monthly pay for enlisted personnel is $2,261 after an initial six-month period, though this can vary depending on location, skills, etc. A primary reason individuals join the military is the tuition benefit that the military provides. According to Indeed.com, education and training benefits are the second main driver of enlisting after a sense of duty. Tuition benefits for veterans are very good. Thanks to the Post-9/11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act of 2008 (Post 9/11 GI Bill), veterans have all tuition and fees covered at public institutions and up to $28,937 at private schools. In most cases, veterans’ tuition benefits are transferable to dependents. Tuition benefits for active military members, however, are far below the average rate of tuition in the U.S. Active military members are reimbursed only $250 per credit hour up to an annual cap of $4,500. While the average cost of tuition increased 65 percent from 2000 to 2021, the active military tuition reimbursement rate has not changed since 2002. Today, the average cost of one credit hour at public four-year institutions is $456, and it is nearly three times that amount at private schools. Many colleges and universities cannot afford to honor the $250 reimbursement rate, so given the modest salaries of active military and the low tuition reimbursement rate, members of our armed forces have increasingly limited choices of schools to attend. The low tuition reimbursement rate for active military members is made even more stark when compared to Pell Grants. Pell Grants are need-based financial aid administered by the U.S. Department of Education. The maximum Pell Grant amount that a student can receive in 2024 is $7,395, which is 64 percent more than the maximum tuition reimbursement rate for active military personnel. Hence, the men and women who actively defend the United States everyday receive fewer tuition benefits than those who demonstrate need but provide no military service to the country. There is a relatively simple three-step solution to this problem. First, the Department of Defense receives about $800 million annually for tuition reimbursement. However, it only uses about $600 million for that purpose. The remainder of the funds goes toward training and other activities. If the Department of Defense used all the money it receives for tuition assistance for that purpose, it could increase the tuition reimbursement rate to $300-350 per credit hour. The second step in the solution is for Congress to allocate more resources for active military tuition. It might seem as though $800 million is a lot of money. It is, until it is put into a broader context. The 2024 Department of Education budget is $79.1 billion. $24.6 billion is allocated for federal student aid programs that do not impact the military tuition reimbursement rate. If Congress added $500 million to the Department of Defense budget stipulating that it must be used for tuition reimbursement, it would allow the active-duty tuition reimbursement rate to increase to at least the average cost of a credit hour at public universities. The third and final step in the solution is to tie annual increases in the active military tuition reimbursement rate to the consumer price index. This would ensure that another 22 years do not go by without an increase. It is in the best interest of every American to have a strong military. Since the U.S. has a completely voluntary armed forces, we must ensure that we continue to attract strong, capable, and dedicated individuals who want to serve and protect the nation. A small investment in the benefit that drives many to enlist would go a long way to ensure that the country remains protected for many years to come. READ MORE: Wokeness Is Responsible for the Military Recruitment Crisis It’s Time to Fix Incompetence in the Pentagon The post A Tuition Bump Can Ensure a Strong Military appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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