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YubNub News
YubNub News
34 w

President Trump and Kari Lake Lead in Arizona Amid Polling Controversy
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President Trump and Kari Lake Lead in Arizona Amid Polling Controversy

With just a week left until election day, President Trump and Senate hopeful Kari Lake are topping Arizona polls! This comes from Data Orbital and Atlas Intel. Turns out outlets like Reuters and Ipsos…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
34 w

Trump: Combat Would Dampen Cheney’s Warmongering; Media: Trump Wants Her Killed
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Trump: Combat Would Dampen Cheney’s Warmongering; Media: Trump Wants Her Killed

AP Images Liz Cheney .paywall-container {position: relative;display: flex;flex-direction: column; min-height:60px;} #paywall_overlay {position: absolute;top: 0;left: 0;right: 0;bottom: 0;display: flex;align-items:…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
34 w

Kamala’s Dismal Jobs Reports Drops Days Before Election
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Kamala’s Dismal Jobs Reports Drops Days Before Election

Just four days out from Election Day and the jobs report arrives. And it landed like a lead balloon. Only 12,000 jobs were created last month. It’s clear that this report reflects poorly on Harris,…
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
34 w

Herbert Spencer: A Revaluation of This Classical Liberal Thought Leader
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Herbert Spencer: A Revaluation of This Classical Liberal Thought Leader

Herbert Spencer was once considered a towering figure in Western intellectual life. The ideas expounded by this “eminent Victorian” philosopher were imprinted on the minds of an entire generation of thinkers. While his reputation started to decline after his death in 1903, Spencer was still considered important enough to warrant a whole chapter in Will Durant’s immensely popular book The Story of Philosophy, originally published in 1926. Despite wide acclaim, Spencer’s reputation suffered a precipitous decline in subsequent years. This resulted in his fading from the cultural debates of the 20th century, even though many of his ideas were still functioning “behind the scenes.” Recent times have not been any kinder to the memory of this formerly respected thinker. Indeed, if they evoke him at all, contemporary academics tend to treat Spencer as a crude social Darwinist: He coined the phrase “survival of the fittest” in his 1864 work Principles of Biology. In reality, his views are far more complex and deeper than many of his modern-day detractors would care to admit.  In fact, Spencer was a self-identified political liberal of the old-school variety. Thus, the canard that he was the promulgator of a ruthless social Darwinism is more caricature than reality. Far from being a supporter of the status quo, he ruthlessly castigated the British aristocracy for its unearned wealth, its laziness, and its political incompetence. Furthermore, he also considered the landed nobility to be essentially backward — treating their rural roots as one of the sources of a retrograde militarism, which threatened to drag Britain backwards socially, morally, and politically. Consequently, Spencer opposed the spirit of imperialism so characteristic of British Victorian society, considering it injurious to future progress. He felt that the British Empire was unfairly enlarged at the expense of the natives of the conquered lands. Natives that he considered to have been ruthlessly despoiled of their legitimate patrimony and needlessly massacred in retaliatory military actions.  Spencer’s views on welfare were not those of a ruthless apologist for cold-hearted capitalism. Rather, his standpoint was based on a sober analysis of the poverty issue. While he did believe that many members of the improvident poor were genetically disposed to a permanently inferior existence due to general moral ineptitude, he was not opposed to their receiving aid from private individuals. However, he felt that government efforts to the same end simply led to massive pauperization of the affected class rather than to its betterment. The root causes of poverty were ignored in favor of bureaucratic nostrums. This was in keeping with Spencer’s belief in the general inefficacy of government outside of certain basic spheres, such as the quick administration of justice. Poverty, in his view, could be alleviated much more efficiently through private rather than public means. In his 1851 work Social Statics, Spencer ruthlessly castigated the wasteful land management exercised by Britain’s ruling class and indicated that, in a morally just world, property would be nationalized. He later dropped this declaration from the 1892 revised edition of the book, which led to a literary feud with the radical American journalist Henry George. He accused Spencer of being a traitor to the liberal cause. This was a misunderstanding. Spencer had always advocated that private property was the best option for societal stability in a world where most ideals were not realistically achievable. Indeed, he was not alone in this  view. Spencer’s contemporary Charles Dickens, an impassioned critic of many aspects of Victorian society, refused to opt for a revolutionary solution to social concerns in his novels Barnaby Rudge and Hard Times. In A Tale of Two Cities, his novel set during the French Revolution, Dickens equally excoriates the abuses perpetrated by the prerevolution nobility and the brutalities executed by the revolutionaries.  The Spencer–George debate also highlighted the former’s growing estrangement from a liberalism that was shifting away from a skepticism of big government and moving toward support of legislative activism as a means of creating societal change. In one of the British philosopher’s most famous works, The Man Versus the State, the dangers of creeping statism are presented in convincing detail. Indeed, in his prescient denunciation of incipient state socialism and its stultifying communal effects, Spencer anticipates not only the works of Hayek but also Czesław Miłosz’s important book, The Captive Mind. Spencer was concerned that collectivism, along with a revitalized militarism, threatened to “rebarbarize” British society and thus destroy all the progress that had been achieved in recent centuries toward a more complex, less regulated civilization.  Spencer’s influence was wide-ranging, often appearing in unexpected places. The future Cuban national hero José Martí described Spencer and Simón Bolívar as the “two guiding lights of Latin America.” In addition, Martí’s 1884 essay The Future Slavery is a response to Spencer’s The Man Versus the State and endorses the latter’s pessimistic  evaluation of a potential future socialist entity. Ahad Ha’am, the founder of cultural Zionism, was inspired by Spencer’s view that societies evolve organically by cultivating their collective will to live through gradual adaptation to adverse circumstances. Spencer was also a key figure in the development of the Italian school of economics as exemplified in the opposing ideologies of Maffeo Pantaleoni and Francesco Saverio Nitti.  Herbert Spencer is an important thinker whose myriad studies on a variety of subjects established him as one of the 19th-century’s foremost savants. However, since the 1930s, he has been consigned to the memory attic of Western civilization’s collective consciousness as a quaint relic of a bygone time. Despite this neglect, the quality and incisiveness of his many writings are a clear rebuttal to the often confused ramblings of contemporary postmodernist discourse. It is time to revive interest in Herbert Spencer. READ MORE from Erik Arnold: La Dolce Vita: The Moral Dichotomy of the Middle Class Nietzsche in the Shadows The post Herbert Spencer: A Revaluation of This Classical Liberal Thought Leader appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
34 w

Trump’s Plan to Support America’s Caregivers
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Trump’s Plan to Support America’s Caregivers

Vice President Kamala Harris’s proposals to expand Medicare for in-home care and fund community services may sound noble, but they’re little more than Band-aids slapped on a system buckling under inflation, crime, and immigration chaos. While Harris champions these temporary measures, caregivers face a relentless assault from policies that have made their lives harder in almost every way. In a refreshing shift, former President Donald Trump recently addressed caregivers in his Madison Square Garden speech where he announced his support for a “tax credit for family caregivers who take care of a parent or loved one.” Trump observed that these caregivers “add so much to our country and are never spoken of, but they will be spoken of now.” This tax credit is an important step toward providing caregivers practical support — a measure that Harris’s proposals entirely overlook. Harris recently remarked, “There are so many people in our country who are right in the middle. They take care of their kids and they’re taking care of their aging parents, and it’s just almost impossible to do it all.” But Harris’s broad strokes miss families caring for loved ones with mental health challenges, special needs, or addiction. These families don’t need more words; they need relief from skyrocketing costs, surging crime, and shrinking access to public services — all issues this administration seems determined to ignore. As a caregiver for four decades, I don’t expect handouts, but I do expect policies that make life at least marginally easier, not harder. A 2020 report by the National Alliance for Caregiving and AARP showed that 53 percent of caregivers had to cut back on work or leave the workforce altogether to meet caregiving demands. Grocery prices are up 20 percent this year, and gas prices have doubled since 2021, leaving caregivers stretched thin and often unable to afford basic necessities. Meanwhile, crime is a constant threat. Every trip out has an element of risk, especially for those caring for elderly or vulnerable family members. Imagine navigating this job in cities like Chicago, Denver, or San Francisco, where rising violence and theft have become the norm. For caregivers, even a pharmacy run can turn dangerous. And then there’s the strain of unchecked illegal immigration. Public services, Medicaid, and healthcare facilities are overloaded, forcing American caregivers to compete for resources in cities already stretched to the breaking point. Harris’ initiatives ignore this, as though pretending the problem away will make it disappear. If Harris — or anyone in her administration — wants to understand the reality caregivers face, they should spend a day in an ER where caregivers wait in crowded rooms, hoping to see an overworked doctor. These caregivers aren’t just stressed; they’re barely hanging on, physically and financially. The tragedy lies in how current policies trap caregivers in cycles of economic insecurity. Instead of sidestepping the problems with more temporary programs, the administration could support permanent tax credits, job training, and incentives for employers to offer flexible work-from-home options. Family caregivers bring diligence, adaptability, and creativity to the workforce, yet policies designed without them in mind force these skills to go underutilized and unappreciated. The cost of professional care is also soaring, with the average hourly rate for home health aides hitting $27.30 per hour this year — a 9 percent increase from last year alone. For caregivers, burnout isn’t a looming threat; it’s a daily reality. Yet with costs rising across the board, temporary relief falls flat, failing to address the core issues threatening caregivers’ ability to survive. Trump’s proposed caregiver tax credit is an important step toward addressing the economic impact of inflation, crime, and resource scarcity on caregivers. If we’re serious about supporting family caregivers, we must go beyond short-term fixes and tackle the broader issues that make caregiving a nearly impossible task in today’s America. We all have a stake in this issue because, if you love someone, you’ll probably be a caregiver. And if you live long enough, you’ll need one. It’s time we stopped with the Band-aids and gave caregivers the support they actually need. Peter Rosenberger hosts the weekly radio program Hope For the Caregiver. His latest book, A Minute for Caregivers – When Every Day Feels Like Monday, is available at PeterRosenberger.com. READ MORE:  More Dolls Than People: This is What Population Decline Looks Like The Final Choice: Civilizational Arson Versus Civilizational Sanity The Best Possible Outcome for Democrats: A Trump Win The post Trump’s Plan to Support America’s Caregivers appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
34 w

“You Are NOT Sick You Have Been Poisoned with Chemicals & Radiation” Dr. Robert O. Young
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“You Are NOT Sick You Have Been Poisoned with Chemicals & Radiation” Dr. Robert O. Young

from DrRobertYoung: TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
34 w

?#BREAKING: THEY TURNED THE LIGHTS OFF ON VOTERS!
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?#BREAKING: THEY TURNED THE LIGHTS OFF ON VOTERS!

?#BREAKING: THEY TURNED THE LIGHTS OFF ON VOTERS! ⚠️Power blackout ⚠️ Voters in Levittown, Pennsylvania forced to vote using cell phone flashlights ⚠️ 6 hour wait to vote Is this considered a fair and transparent election process? pic.twitter.com/E39l3WNEZh — HustleBitch (@HustleBitch_) November 1, 2024
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
34 w

Dems Panicked That Secretive Government Censorship Agency Will Be Terminated If Trump Wins
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Dems Panicked That Secretive Government Censorship Agency Will Be Terminated If Trump Wins

from Revolver News: With its censorship capacity limited and reputational cancellation attempts no longer working the way they once did, the regime has largely resorted to a combination of lawfare (and potentially assassination) to go after Trump and his supporters in the 2024 cycle, a deeply troubling phenomenon about which we’ve written extensively. With Elon’s […]
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
34 w

Lara Logan Election BOMBSHELL:
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Lara Logan Election BOMBSHELL:

Lara Logan Election BOMBSHELL: Deep State Planning Massive False Flags & Targeting Of American Populist Leaders — High Level Intel Sources Confirm@laralogan pic.twitter.com/6nzyNjfuLK — Alex Jones (@RealAlexJones) October 31, 2024
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
34 w

? Spain canceled a weapons deal with Israel.
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? Spain canceled a weapons deal with Israel.

? Spain canceled a weapons deal with Israel. ⚠️HAARP weather weapon unleashed days after. Just a coincidence right? pic.twitter.com/ClqbJMpxQt — HustleBitch (@HustleBitch_) October 31, 2024
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