A Democrat’s Guide To Winning The 2022 Midterms In 7 Easy Steps – The Federalist

All reports indicate that Republicans are going to clean house at the ballot box this November, in an indictment of the Biden administration and Democrat-led Congresss failures over the past two years. But all hope is not lost for the incumbent party. Heres a helpful crash course in all the things Democrats should definitely be doing between now and November to reclaim their legitimacy as a party and win voters hearts.

Parents just love knowing that their kindergarteners will be taught to question and explore a smorgasbord of sexual identities, and to categorize their toddling classmates as either colonizers or victims based on the color of their skin.

Democrats this fall should definitely yell gay! at the top of their lungs, and throw temper tantrums in the direction of anyone who tells them they cant encourage elementary schoolers to swap sexes and hide it from their parents. They should also run campaign ads with Disney drag queens talking about how badly they want to talk about sex with voters children. Billboard campaigns inviting all child groomers from red states to come to blue ones are another great way to win hearts and minds.

People love paying more money for gasoline, as evidenced by the proud Biden stickers they keep slapping onto gas pumps to show their appreciation. They love it almost as much as being shamed for driving their gas-guzzlers to work, church, school, and social gatherings. Having politicians whose fancy limousines are financed on the taxpayers dime urge you to drop $56,437 on a Tesla makes the process even more enjoyable.

Parents love being told that they should stay out of their own kids education almost as much as they like knowing their kids are being turned into little sex-confused racists with Z pronouns and deformed genitals. Siccing the Department of Justice on parents who dare to show up to school board meetings and calling them domestic terrorists is a foolproof way to win votes from the many, many normal Americans who understand that parents have no right to interfere with the states raising of their children.

People with light skin (especially poor, working-class ones or recent immigrants) love being told theyre racist colonizers at fault for everything wrong with America. Americans with darker skin love being told theyre victims who will never be able to succeed thanks to a racist system that holds them back. Normally these statements would be considered stereotypes, but dont worry, its not a stereotype if it helps achieve equity. Just like actual discrimination in the name of achieving anti-discrimination is a totally sensible and admirable tactic.

Also, Hispanic Americans love to be called Latinx. And Asian Americans love having their kids discriminated against in the name of racial inclusion. Do more of this.

In a poll published by Politico, even focus groups listed as Black Base, Always vote for Dems, Ages 25+ and Youth Base; Always vote for Dems, Ages 2539 voiced concerns about crime and specifically the repeat offenders who are let back out on the streets by Demcorats soft-on-crime bail policies. Clearly, people want fewer cops in their cities to curb rising crime rates.

Instead, theyre looking for unarmed social workers to respond to their 911 calls or, even better, no one to respond to those 911 calls at all. Calling 911 if your house is broken into, after all, comes from a place of privilege.

Voters also love having their cities filled with homeless druggies who are enticed by government-sponsored free drugs and alcohol. The only thing better is if you can get radical antifa rioters to take over police stations and set up autonomous zones in local downtowns.

Who doesnt love having the threat of nuclear war with Russia hanging over their heads? Americans arent actually worried about inflation or their kids educations. What they really want is for their compassion and sympathy for struggling people in Ukraine to be manipulated in order to escalate tensions with a nuclear power and drag the U.S. to the brink of war in Europe.

Bring Back the Good Old Days of the Cold War is a winning campaign slogan, and extra brilliant because it not only invokes the foreign affairs of the 1970s but also the decades economic policies.

Youll never need to engage with another argument or explain another policy again if you just follow this simple rule. Remember how well it worked for Terry McAuliffe! Bonus points if you stage a fake tiki torch display but only if you then take credit for it after the entire internet makes fun of you. (Note: your opponent does not have to be white for this rule to work! Just call them white adjacent or something. Democrats dont discriminate.)

Elle Reynolds is an assistant editor at The Federalist, and received her B.A. in government from Patrick Henry College with a minor in journalism. You can follow her work on Twitter at @_etreynolds.

Originally posted here:

A Democrat's Guide To Winning The 2022 Midterms In 7 Easy Steps - The Federalist

Opinion: In Quebec, the only thing deader than sovereignty is federalism – The Globe and Mail

Quebec Premier Franois Legault responds during question period on Feb. 22 at the legislature in Quebec City.Jacques Boissinot/The Canadian Press

It is never a wise idea to read too much into the results of a single by-election, no matter how neatly they fit into your preferred narrative of the political lay of the land.

That is why Quebec Premier Franois Legault should avoid crowing too loudly about his Coalition Avenir Qubecs victory on Monday in a Montreal-area riding that the Parti Qubcois had held almost uninterruptedly for four decades.

In the end, the PQ held its ground in Marie-Victorin, winning an almost identical share of the popular vote as it did in the 2018 election. The CAQ increased its share by six percentage points, obtaining 35 per cent to the PQs 30 per cent.

Considering the extraordinary resources the CAQ poured into winning the riding sending most of Mr. Legaults top cabinet ministers to campaign door to door with CAQ candidate Shirley Dorismond, an ex-vice-president of the Quebec nurses union the partys victory in a low-turnout by-election was underwhelming.

After all, it followed a provincial budget that included sending $500 cheques to almost every Quebecker, a goody that did not go unnoticed in Marie-Victorin, where household income hovers below the provincial average and most residents are renters.

Nor could Marie-Victorin voters have been indifferent to Mr. Legaults mid-campaign declaration that they would have more influence in the National Assembly if they chose a candidate to sit on the government benches.

When you have a CAQ MNA who comes from the government, it is a lot easier to transfer local files to ministerial colleagues, Mr. Legault said in a March 17 radio interview. Maurice Duplessis, the pre-Quiet Revolution Union Nationale premier, could not have said it better.

Frances presidential election will make divisions worse, whether Emmanuel Macron wins or loses

Chrystia Freelands federal budget is a missed opportunity

Still, Mr. Legault seemed to take special pleasure in defeating his former party in a riding where the Yes side won more than 60 per cent of the vote in the 1995 sovereignty referendum. Across Quebec, Mr. Legaults 10-year-old CAQ has stolen PQ voters with a Duplessis-style nationalist platform that treats the Canadian Constitution as a minor detail. He effectively runs the province as an independent country, without having to give up federal transfer payments or the loonie.

For voters, it comes down to this: Why vote for an openly separatist party, and all the potential chaos that could entail, when the CAQ already provides the next best thing to independence with none of the inconveniences that sovereignty implies?

Mr. Legaults strategy is working, for now. The CAQ is strongly favoured to win a second term in October. None of the four opposition parties represented in the National Assembly is polling above 20 percentage points on a provincewide basis. Among francophone voters, the CAQ had a 32-percentage-point lead over its closest rivals in a March Leger Marketing poll.

The CAQs main opposition in the fall election could turn out to be the Quebec Conservative Party, which has surged past the PQ and Quebec Liberal Party among francophone voters in recent polls. The QCP, led by former radio host ric Duhaime, has tapped into populist anger over pandemic restrictions and the CAQs heavy-handed governing style.

Its candidate in Marie-Victorin, actor Anne Casabonne, compared COVID-19 vaccines to a pile of excrement. She managed to win more than 10 per cent of the vote in a riding that typically leans centre-left. In the right-leaning Quebec City region, the fall election is shaping up as a two-way CAQ-QCP race.

The biggest loser in the by-election was by far the provincial Liberal Party, which has held power for most of Quebecs history since Confederation but which captured less than 7 per cent of the vote in Marie-Victorin on Monday.

Leader Dominique Anglade has repositioned the QLP as a progressive alternative to the far-left Qubec Solidaire, scrapping the partys traditional centre-right focus on the economy. She has alienated the QLPs anglophone base by waffling on Bill 96, the CAQ legislation aimed at strengthening protections for the French. Anglophone leaders denounced an amendment to the bill introduced by the QLP that would require students in English junior colleges to take three regular courses in French. Talk is rife about the creation of a new anglophone-rights party that would challenge the QLP for the English vote in October.

The days when the QLP under premiers Robert Bourassa, Jean Charest and Philippe Couillard stood out as an unapologetically federalist defender of all things Canadian are good and well over. No one is quite sure what it stands for now.

The result is that no party in the National Assembly stands up for Canada. That is bound to matter, sooner or later.

Keep your Opinions sharp and informed. Get the Opinion newsletter. Sign up today.

Originally posted here:

Opinion: In Quebec, the only thing deader than sovereignty is federalism - The Globe and Mail

5 Reasons The Biden Budget’s Supposed ‘Deficit Reduction’ Is A Fraud – The Federalist

Surprise, surprise: Joe Bidens budget wasnt worth the wait.

The administration finally submitted some of its fiscal proposals to Congress last weekseven weeks after the statutory deadline of the first Monday in February. Even then, major portions of the budget were not posted on the Office of Management and Budgets website last Monday afternoon, with a note saying additional documents would get posted later in the week.

The administration tried to spend the weekend ahead of the budgets release promoting its plan for a billionaires tax. The proposal, which some tax experts have criticized as both unworkable and unconstitutional, served one useful purpose: It attempted to distract from the fiscal gimmickry that the administration believes constitutes deficit reduction.

Even the press picked up on the absurd nature of the White Houses claims, in a Monday morning background briefing with reporters:

My core question is: A lot of the budget experts are saying, you know, look, the reason the deficit is falling is because the expiration of inherently temporary economic programs, and its kind of absurd for the administration to be taking creditfor the decline from inherently temporary economic programs.Can I get a response to that?

Attempting to take credit for deficit reduction because Democrats plans to pass even more tax-and-spend legislation have run aground on Capitol Hill doesnt represent the only gimmick in Bidens budgetor even the biggest.

The budget includes two separate, but equally important, ten-year budget numbers. The first, the current-law baseline, reflects potential fiscal outcomes if the budget stays on auto-pilot absent additional changes. By contrast, the proposed budget assumes all of the administrations proposals for both tax and spending get enacted into law.

Take a look at both sets of numbers from the budget proposed this week and the budget Biden proposed last May, and the differencesand lack thereofbecome obvious:

May 2021 budget: Current law deficit of $13.176 trillion; proposed deficit of $14.531 trillionMondays budget: Current law deficit of $15.466 trillion; proposed deficit of $14.421 trillion

Regarding the current law budgetthat is, the fiscal policies we already haveBidens performance is nearly $2.3 trillion worse than last year. The budget Biden wants would reduce the ten-year deficit by only $110 billion, or only 0.7 percent, compared to what Biden himself proposed just last May.

When it comes to Bidens floundering proposals to expand the welfare state, the budget includes the following footnote:

The Budget includes a reserve [fund] for legislation that reduces costs, expands productive capacity, and reforms the tax system. While the President is committed to reducing the deficit with this legislation, this allowance is shown as deficit-neutral to be conservative for purposes of the budget table. Because discussions with Congress continue, the Budget does not break down the reserve among specific policies or between revenues and outlays.

In other words, the budget just assumes that creating massive new entitlements would be fully paid for. That assumption comes despite Congressional Budget Office analyses showing that extending these entitlements in full over a decadewhich Democrats want to dowould total nearly $5 trillion, far more than they have proposed in tax increases to offset that spending.

The budget includes another whopper of a footnote:

Reflects budget deficit reduction compared to a baseline that does not include the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022 (Public Law 117-103), which was enacted after the baseline was finalized. Deficit reduction relative to a baseline that incorporated that legislation would be significantly greater. [Emphasis added.]

In other words, because Congress just passed, and Biden signed into law two weeks ago, a bill with billions of dollars of earmarksto say nothing of other unnecessary spendingpractically all of Bidens supposed deficit reduction has already vanished.

The budget assumes inflation will total 4.7 percent for the fiscal year ending September 30, and then fall to a mere 2.3 percent for the fiscal year starting on October 1estimates that a reporter rightly called not realistic.

On the background call with reporters, Council of Economic Advisers Chair Cecilia Rouse revealed that printing and other deadlines meant the budgets economic estimates were locked in as of last November 10. As a result, more recent developments, like expanded federal spending and the Ukraine invasions effects on oil and food prices, obviously did not get taken into account when formulating the fiscal plan.

But Rouse went on to claim that we expect thatas we continue to work through the challenge of the pandemic, that we will keep economic activity going, supply chain pressures will ease, the extraordinary measures [i.e., the Federal Reserve printing money] will start to roll off as well, and we expect the economy to normalize. This is exactly what the Biden administration predicted this time last year, but it didnt happen.

The Medicare Hospital Insurance Trust Fund is already effectively insolvent and faces losses of an estimated $457.8 billion between now and 2030. Yet Biden proposed few if any meaningful reforms either to Medicare or Social Security, other than the typical rhetoric about reducing fraudan important issue, but not one that will prevent politicians from having to make tough political choices.

Any long-term budget and fiscal proposal, whether by a Republican or a Democrat, that does not tackle our entitlement crisisparticularly Medicare and Social Securitycannot pass the credibility test. On that count, Bidens budget doesnt even try.

View original post here:

5 Reasons The Biden Budget's Supposed 'Deficit Reduction' Is A Fraud - The Federalist

Jury Refuses To Convict Men Entrapped By FBI In Whitmer Kidnapping Plot – The Federalist

A jury refused on Friday to convict any of the four men standing trial for supposedly plotting to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer after strong evidence that the FBI tricked them into the plan.

After 20 days of trial, jurors determined that Daniel Harris, 24, and Brandon Caserta, 33, were not guilty of felony charges of conspiracy to unlawfully seize, confine, kidnap, abduct and carry away, and hold for ransom and reward, or otherwise, the Governor of the State of Michigan.

Jurors could not agree on the fates of Adam Fox, 38, and Barry Croft Jr., 46, so the men left the trial with no verdict and with the possibility of being brought to trial again.

Prosecutors representing the U.S. Department of Justice argued that the group of men were anti-government extremists who schemed to violently take down Whitmer for her role in promoting Covid-19 tyranny in Michigan. They exchanged lighter prison sentences for testimony from two other men found guilty of participating in the Whitmer kidnapping racket, helping absolve the government of any blame in the case.

When news of the alleged plot surfaced, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and corporate media smeared the men accused of wrongdoing as white supremacists. Some journos blamed the plot on President Donald Trump even though some of the men involved were openly anti-Trump.

If the president read his intel briefings and understood the dogma of white nationalist groups, hed realize that language like LIBERATE MICHIGAN! is read as tacit permission if not explicit encouragement for militias to take action,Politicos chief political correspondent Tim Alberta wrote.

Defense attorneys, however, countered the government and medias attempts to pin the plot on Harris, Caserta, and others with evidence that the FBI deliberately hatched the plot and manipulated the men into joining the motley crew led by government informants.

District Court Judge Robert Jonker tried to stop the defense from raising issues of entrapment until after the government argued its case but rescinded his decision after it became clear that the FBIs involvement in the ploy could explain the defendants participation.

As Julie Kelly, a senior writer at American Greatness, documented in her work exposing the FBIs corruption, more than a dozen FBI undercover agents and informants were involved in the kidnapping caper and even paid tens of thousands of dollars by the government for their role.

These agents and informants served in the key leadership positionsof the militia group,trained the militia membersin military tactics, activelyrecruited participants,and fundedmuch of the militias activities.

The FBIs plot to entrap the men draws strong parallels to the intelligence agencys attempts to charge and convict a group for occupying federal land in Oregon. Brothers Ammon and Ryan Bundy were ultimately found not guilty of conspiracy and weapons charges in 2016 when evidence that the government used at least a dozen confidential informantsto exacerbate the occupation.

Jordan Boyd is a staff writer at The Federalist and co-producer of The Federalist Radio Hour. Her work has also been featured in The Daily Wire and Fox News. Jordan graduated from Baylor University where she majored in political science and minored in journalism. Follow her on Twitter @jordanboydtx.

The rest is here:

Jury Refuses To Convict Men Entrapped By FBI In Whitmer Kidnapping Plot - The Federalist

Wind Company Fined Millions After It Pleads Guilty To Killing 150 Eagles – The Federalist

On the same day Democrats demonized oil producers on Capitol Hill, a wind power company was ordered to pay more than $8 million in fines after its operations killed at least 150 eagles across eight states over the last decade.

The company subsidiary of ESI Energy, NextEra Energy, was sentenced in Cheyenne, Wyo., Wednesday to three violations of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act on wind farms in Wyoming and New Mexico, each based on the deaths of golden eagles due to blunt force trauma from being struck by a wind turbine blade, according to a press release from the Department of Justice.

Rather than be charged in the deaths of all 150 birds, which included Bald Eagles, the company only bears penalties for killing several golden eagles after its guilty plea. In addition to the $8 million-dollar payout, the company will be required to implement sweeping changes costing up to $27 million at wind farms where eagle deaths occurred in Wyoming, New Mexico, Florida, California, Colorado, Arizona, Michigan, Oregon, North Dakota, Illinois, and Kansas.

The Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act makes it illegal to kill or harm the birds with fines up to $100,000 for individuals and $200,000 for organizations, complemented by possible jail time on the first offense. Under the agreement struck with the Justice Department, however, ESI Energy will be charged $29,623 for each eagle fatality under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. While companies may apply for permits to escape responsibility for unavoidable deaths, the company did not possess the permission needed and dismissed warnings in Wyoming and New Mexico that their turbines could kill the birds, according to court documents reported on by the Associated Press.

Bald Eagles were delisted as an endangered species in 2007.

The Justice Department will enforce the nations wildlife laws to promote Congresss purposes, including ensuring sustainable populations of bald and golden eagles, and to promote fair competition for companies that comply, said Assistant Attorney General Todd Kim of the Justice Departments Environment and Natural Resources Division in a DOJ press release. For more than a decade, ESI has violated those laws, taking eagles without obtaining or even seeking the necessary permit. We are pleased to see ESI now commit to seeking such permits and ultimately ceasing such violations.

The deals announcement comes as Democrats aggressively push to replace reliable energy in the form of coal, oil and natural gas with wind and solar, even as power prices skyrocket from White House suppression of fossil fuel production.

On Wednesday, House Democrats cast blame on the major oil companies represented before the Energy and Commerce Committee for the record-breaking gas prices amid 40-year inflation. The Biden administration, however, remains apathetic on thousands of drilling permits with reported plans to delay oil leases in the Gulf of Mexico for a third consecutive year. The overt hostility to fossil fuels by an administration doing everything in its power to avoid unleashing the nations vast oil and gas reserves has killed the industrys financial incentive to pledge billions to ramp up operations.

The environmental consequences of wind power remain often overlooked amid focus on emissions from fossil fuels organically brought down by decades of market innovation. Although the number of birds killed by wind turbines is comparably small to those killed by cats and windows, their remote locations make rarer birds more susceptible to the spinning blades.

One solution touted by environmentalists is the intermittent shut down of turbines at times when the danger to birds is higher. Yet this only elevates the unreliability of wind power as a viable alternative to fossil fuels, as wind already produces a fraction of the electricity generated by conventional resources.

Tristan Justice is the western correspondent for The Federalist. He has also written for The Washington Examiner and The Daily Signal. His work has also been featured in Real Clear Politics and Fox News. Tristan graduated from George Washington University where he majored in political science and minored in journalism. Follow him on Twitter at @JusticeTristan or contact him at Tristan@thefederalist.com.

Go here to read the rest:

Wind Company Fined Millions After It Pleads Guilty To Killing 150 Eagles - The Federalist

It’s Time To Stop Feeding The Exalted Presidency Federalist #2 – The Federalist

For more than a century, presidents have expanded the powers of the executive branch while Congress holds the door open. Compounding the problem, an increasing number of Americans see the person who occupies the presidency as an avatar with whom they should place their value, their hopes, and even their sense of purpose.The result has been disastrous.

Embracing a monarchical spirit in everything but name has pulled people away from tending to their local communities, fueled cults of personality, and done great harm to the checks and balances designed to protect our political system.

Borne by the overreaches of the Nixon administration, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. began referring to the executive branch of the American regime as the imperial presidency. Lamentably, despite a few brief interludes, weve witnessed the nations chief executive transform into something worse: The exalted presidency.

Leaders of the White House have become messianic figures to their political and media allies; their missteps and failures are explained away by a majority of their voters, and they receive more and more delegated power from a cowardly U.S. Congress that continues to shrink from its constitutional duties.

How we fix this will be an integral part of any attempt to restore balance to our republic. Indeed, reversing this trend is one of Americas best hopes to roll back the growing sense of disunity that plagues society. First, however, we need to know what we have to return to, and why we should.

Just as the ancient Romans overthrew their last king in favor of a republic in c. 509 B.C., the American Revolution was a denunciation of monarchy in total, not merely a rejection of King George III. Our Founders rightly identified monarchs as emblems of corruption, recognizing that one-man-rule as a way of governing was fundamentally wrong and incompatible with a society that values freedom.

As when Lucius Tarquinius Superbus was deposed, rule by kings was the normal state of affairs for the vast majority of the world when the Declaration was signed in the summer of 1776. One of the seminal characteristics of both the Roman and American republics was their courageous and firm understanding that they were choosing to be set apart from the ways of other nations.

The American government was designed to be representative of the will of the people and granted legitimacy via their enlightened consent. Safeguards, checks, balances, and divisions of power were established to deter both the dominance of a passionate, intemperate mob and of a single individual.

Although the esteemed Roman senator Cato the Elder spoke for the Roman Republic, his words apply all the more to our own American Republic two millennia later:

The reason for the superiority of the constitution of our city to that of other states is that the latter almost always had their laws and institutions from one legislator. But our Republic was not made by the genius of one man, but of many, nor in the life of one, but through many centuries and generations.

In republics both ancient and modern, reason and historical evidence repeatedly prove the greatest threat to liberty comes from concentrated power.

Americans used to hold tightly to a deep-rooted, enduring suspicion of concentrated power of any kind especially when it crept into the presidency. Unfortunately, that well-earned wisdom didnt last past the 19th century. By the 20th century, as George Reedy writes, the presidency had taken on all the regalia of monarchy except ermine robes, a scepter, and a crown.

In his work The Spirit of the Laws, Montesquieu rightly observes, There can be no liberty where the legislative and executive powers are united in the same person.Forty years later in Federalist No. 46, James Madison echoes his concern:

The accumulation of all power, legislative, executive, and judiciary in the same hands may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny.

With its origins dating back to Progressive President Theodore Roosevelt, the innocently named yet insidiously pernicious stewardship theory of presidential power threatens to further weaken the already eroded safeguards barely holding our republic together. In his 1913 autobiography, TR offers up his justification for the more hands-on Progressive approach he took while occupied the Oval Office:

I acted for the public welfare, I acted for the common well-being of all our people, whenever and in whatever manner was necessary, unless prevented by direct constitutional or legislative prohibition.

For TR, the president was to be a steward of the people bound actively and affirmatively to do all he could for the people and not to content himself with the negative merit of keeping his talents undamaged in a napkin.

Yet his successor, William Howard Taft, took up a position far more in line with the original intent of the Constitution and vision of the separation of powers desired by the Founders. In 1916, in the book Our Chief Magistrate and His Powers, Taft writes:

The President can exercise no power which cannot be fairly and reasonably traced to some specific grant of power of justly implied and included within such express grant as proper and necessary to its exercise.

Unlike TR, who viewed the presidency as an office imbued with nearly limitless undelineated powers, Taft explains:

There is no undefined residuum of power which he can exercise because it seems to him to be in the public interest. The mainspring of such a view is that the Executive is charged with responsibility for the welfare of all the people in a general way, that he is to play the part of a Universal Providence and set all things right the wide field of action that this would give to the Executive one can hardly limit.

Barely five years leaving office, TRs belief in a powerful presidency filled with a grandiose persona was the template exploited by arch-Progressive Woodrow Wilson.

During the span of just two administrations, the occupant of the Oval Office went from executing laws to writing them corralling the whole U.S. government to do his will.

Wilson expanded on TRs blank-check stewardship approach, believing America needed a leader who could arouse and harness lies waiting to be stirred. For Wilson, whole masses of men were to be like clay in the hands of a Great Leader:

The competent leader of men cares little for the interior niceties of other peoples characters: he cares much-everything for the external uses to which they may be put. His will seeks the lines of least resistance; but the whole question with him is a question of the application of force. They have no thought for occasion, no capacity for compromise.

As Charles Kesler has noted, in 12 of the 14 instances the Federalist Papers mention the word leader or leaders the word is used negatively associating leaders with demagoguery, factionalism, and vice.

Since the United States is, at its core, a nation founded on self-government and small-r republicanism, Wilsons insistence that the country ought to be led by a great Leader of Men is not only misguided but a complete departure from Americas philosophical and political moorings.

During the last century, weve allowed the presidency to be turned into precisely the entity that Wilson wanted it to be, a turn of events that should fill us with shame. Wilsons vision of the presidency was taken up by FDR in 1932 through his New Deal program, then further expanded by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964.

By the time of the election of Barack Obama, the presidency had not just assumed Johnsons Great Society manta of being the source of all future healing promising not just to end poverty, but abstractions like loneliness itself but had become a full-blown celebrity outfit catering to egotistical personalities surrounded by legions of adoring and undyingly loyal cheerleaders.

Oprah Winfrey dubbed Obama The One. Columnist Mark Morford called Obama a Lightworker, an attuned being to help usher in a new way of being on the planet.Ezra Klein couldnt contain himself after the 2008 Iowa Caucuses, saying of Obama, He is not the Word made flesh, but the triumph of word over flesh, over color, over despair.

Not to be outdone by his fawning admirers, Obama himself claimed to be able to repair this world and fundamentally transform the United States of America, and audaciously proclaimed his triumph marked the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal.

As for the successive administration, Hogan Gidley, the former national press secretary for Donald Trumps re-election campaign, referred to Trump as the most masculine man to ever hold the White House. Senior advisor Stephen Miller called Trump the most gifted politician of our time and the best orator to become president in generations. In his most recent book, writer Victor Davis Hanson goes so far as to liken Trump to Achilles, Augustus, Martin Luther, and Julius Caesar (meant as a compliment).

Trump himself asserted theres nobody bigger or better at the military than I am, maintainedat his 2016 Republican National Convention speech that only he could fix what ailed America, and proclaimed he was a Presbyterian Christian who never asked God for forgiveness.

The humility and grace of statesmen like George Washington or Abraham Lincoln is a tall order for anyone to emulate, but both Obama and Trump fell far short of the humble dignity the office of the presidency demands. Consequentially, the imperial presidency became an exalted one. With the levels of worshipful praise that weve witnessed during the last two presidencies, the detrimental nationalization of our politics shouldnt shock us one bit.

Criticisms of Obama or his policies, no matter how justified, were reflexively cited as proof of ones conscious (or unconscious) racism, essentially shielding Obama from tangible condemnation.

Plainly, any broad-brush insults or attacks on large, heterogeneous segments of the American population should be denounced. Yet, similar to the reflexive racism defense lobbied at Obamas detractors, in Trumps late-presidency and now ex-presidency periods, criticism of Trumps actions or policies is routinely cited by Trumps die-hard defenders as evidence of ones supposed disdain for the 74 million Americans who voted for him.

Like the Obama racism! retort, this has the effect intended or not of heading off any condemnation of Trump at the pass. Truly, if criticizing president X means you hate all those who voted for X becomes a permanent, reoccurring defense, then engaging in serious political debates or holding Americas chief executive to account will be nearly impossible.

Both catch-all, cover-all rebuttals Youre just racist! and You just hate his voters! are antithetical to the discourse intended by our Founders to keep our republic functioning. We have no kings here. Presidents, like any other politician, should be applauded when they do good and decried when they err. Indeed, as Lord Acton reminds us, There is no worse heresy than that the office sanctifies the holder of it.

No one is supposed to be above the law or above criticism and reproach presidents least of all. Because of the immense power and influence they wield, the president should be the most critiqued and prodded citizen in the country, if for no other reason than it will make them better at the gravely serious job before them.

Regrettably, however, while were only in the second full week of Joe Bidens tenure, it looks like the exalted presidencyis set to continue with the 46th president.

Of course, the legislative branch needs to get back to the business of legislating rather than delegating its powers to the other branches. Congresss decades-long dereliction of its Constitutional duties have added to the bloated largess of the administrative state and enabled them to dodge taking stances on difficult but pressing issues while posing for photo ops and fishing for viral social media clips.

The executive branch needs to get back to taking care that the U.S. Constitution and the laws of the nation are being faithfully executed rather than abusing executive orders as a way to bypass Congress from the legislative process entirely.

Yes, in the final analysis, what we need is for the separate branches of our republic to re-assert and re-assume their proper roles as envisioned by the Founders and articulated in Articles I, II, and III of the Constitution. The brilliant political machinery of the American republic isnt broken. Whats broken is our capacity for self-rule.

Little by little, weve come to expect less of ourselves while placing more of our purpose and hopes with whoever resides in the White House.

The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves, that we are underlings.(Julius Caesar, Act I, Scene III)

Even strong leg muscles will atrophy after decades of neglect, requiring crutches in order to walk. After surrendering the responsibility of self-government for so long, the presidency has become the crutch where we rest the burdens that used to be shouldered by our communities, our families, and our places of worship. The problem is, however, that the harder we lean on this crutch, the harder it is to get back up on our own two feet, and the more we sink into a posture that looks a whole lot like servitude.

As Schleisinger Jr. wrote back in 1973, When presidents begin to succumb to delusions of grandeur, when the checks and balances inside themselves stop operating, external checks and balances may well become necessary to save the republic. Realistically, however, as most such measures would require constitutional amendments, for the time being, it seems highly likely any sort of major reforms to the office of the presidency will continue to exist only in the realm of political what if fantasyland.

Instead, the solution must come from us.We the people must be the check on the presidency. We the people must demand Congress take back its role as the preeminent branch of government. We the people must starve presidents of the attention and absolute loyalty they now crave. We the people must roll back and curtail the unbridled reverence of the presidency that has warped the Oval Office.

Through the power of our collective voices and votes, we the people must begin to rescind the exalted presidency, and rediscover our quintessentially American antipathy towards monarchs no matter if their official title isnt king but president.

Read the original:

It's Time To Stop Feeding The Exalted Presidency Federalist #2 - The Federalist

The Real Greenhouse-Gas Polluter Isn’t The United States, It’s China – The Federalist

With President Biden signing a series of executive orders aimed at combating climate, he appears more than willing to sacrifice both the economy and good-paying American jobs to theoretically reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Bidens climate czar, John Kerry, seems to believe America must have Chinas cooperation to succeed in emissions reduction.

Yet, according to the latest United Nations Emissions Gap Report 2020, Biden and Kerry couldnt be more wrong. In truth, the United States has done more for reducing GHG emissions than China ever has, and China is neither a leader nor a reliable partner on this issue.

The United Nations Environment Programme releases the annual Emission Gap Report to assess the gap between projections of greenhouse emissions in 2030 and where they should be if countries implement their climate mitigation pledges. In a sense, the report yearly nags nations to move toward the temperature goals of the Paris Agreement.

The objective of the accord is to reduce man-made greenhouse gas emissions to limit global warming to 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, or 2 degrees Celsius. Former President Obama committed the United States to the Paris Climate Accord in 2015, and regarded the Paris Climate Accord as one of his legacy projects, even refusing to issue a permit to the Keystone XL pipeline.

Obamas reasoning? That the pipeline would generate so many GHG emissions it would jeopardize Americas commitment to the Paris Accord, even though his own State Department found no evidence to support such a claim after conducting five studies in seven years.

The Heritage Foundation estimates the United States commitment to the Paris Accord would cost the average American family of four $20,000 and the national gross domestic product $2.5 trillion by 2035 while achieving an insignificant amount of reduction in global temperature.

In 2017, President Trump pulled the United States out of the Paris Accord, an action he explained to be both in Americas economic interest and wont matter much to the climate. He also vowed that under his administration, the United States would continue to be the cleanest and most environmentally friendly country on Earth.

Needless to say that his decision was widely condemned by environmental activists, progressive groups, celebrities, corporate America, and many of our allies. Kerry called Trumps action an abdication of leadership and self-destructive.

Now, the verdict is in not from any right-wing source, but the latest climate report released by the United Nations. In combating GHG emissions, theres nothing but good news to report about the United States.

The United States overall GHG emissions have been in decline (0.4 percent per year) over the last decade, while those of China continue to spike up, growing at an average of 2.4 percent per year. Although the GHG emissions on a per capita basis in the United States is still the highest in the world, the number is coming down sharply while those of other major economies such as China and India are trending up.

Whats especially noticeable is GHG emissions in the United States continued to go down even after the Trump administration withdrew from the Paris Accord. The continued reduction came when the United States was experiencing a booming economy and the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline was underway.

The first lesson from the U.N. climate report is that the United States is on a good trajectory to address climate-related issues and has made consistent and meaningful progress. As a nation, the United States does not have to sacrifice its economy and the jobs of American workers to protect the environment. Unfortunately, however, President Biden has already ignored this lesson, with his Day One executive order directing the United States to rejoin the Paris Accord.

In contrast to the good news out of the United States, the U.N. report presented some glooming news for those who remain within the Paris Accord: global greenhouse gas emissions continued to grow for the third consecutive year in 2019. Although GHG emissions are expected to come down in 2020 mainly due to worldwide lockdowns in response to the coronavirus pandemic, the EG report believes such a one-year reduction will have an insignificant impact on global temperature.

The main culprit of this worsening trend is China, a nation that emits more than one-quarter of global GHG emissions and has per capita emissions that are around 40 percent above the global average. Indeed, Chinas annual GHG emission is almost equivalent to the sum of those of the United States of America, EU27+UK, and India.

Despite all of the evidence indicating China is the biggest polluter of this planet, Chinas leader, Xi Jinping, knows how to talk the green talk to appeal to left-wingers in the west while doing nothing they actually want on this issue.

When the United States withdrew from the Paris Accord in 2017, Xi wasted no time in offering China as an alternative to the United States. He cast himself as the new leader on climate change. He said: The Paris agreement is a milestone in the history of climate governance. We must ensure this endeavor is not derailed China will continue to take steps to tackle climate change and fully honor its obligations.

The Global Energy Monitor estimates that China will need to reduce its coal power capacity by 40 percent over the next decade to meet its climate goal as stated in the Paris agreement. Yet the opposite happened. Since signing up for the Paris Accord, China has built more new coal plants inside China than any other country, just as its coal plant capacity is expected to increase 10 percent by 2025.

Additionally, the Chinese government made building coal-fired power plants abroad a top priority within its controversial global infrastructure program, Belt and Road. According to Edward Cunningham, a specialist on China at Harvard University, China is building or planning more than 300 coal plants in places as widely spread as Turkey, Vietnam, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Egypt, and the Philippines.

Some accuse China of exporting pollution to boost its economy. Besides environmental concerns, the National Public Radio reported that more than 25 percent of coal plants outside China that are under construction by Chinese contractors are financed by Chinese state-owned financial institutions. Poorer nations that cant pay back their Chinese loans may have to trade their strategic assets to China to pay off their debt.

While the facts on the ground contradict Xis lofty rhetoric, they havent prevented Xi from making an even loftier promise at last years U.N. gathering, Xi pledged that China would be carbon neutral by 2060.

Although todays Chinese government has a long history of making promises it has no intention of keeping, it hasnt stopped some leftists in the west from taking Xis empty promise at face value once again. In exchange for Chinas cooperation on climate change, some on the left are willing to pretend they do not notice the gross human rights violations the CCP has committed, such as the genocide of Uighur Muslims in Xinjiang.

When defending the controversial European Union-China investment agreement, which some critics say compromised the EUs human rights credibility, Ursula von der Leyen, president of the EU-Commission, specifically mentioned one of the motivations behind signing on this deal is to protect our climate under #ParisAgreement. She never mentioned Uighurs or Hong Kongers in her Twitter thread.

Unfortunately, Kerry seems to share Ursulas faith in China. Kerry reportedly believes cooperation with China is the key to progress on climate change and that climate is by far the most important issue in the relationship between the United States and China. This is the same belief he held as secretary of state under President Obama. He couldnt be more wrong.

The worst part is that Beijing is fully aware of Kerrys eagerness to strike a deal on climate change and will take advantage of it. Beijing certainly hopes a negotiation on climate change will distract the United States from focusing on other strategic areas that are far more important to the Communist regime, such as Beijings long-desired reunification with Taiwan. According to The Atlantic, even some of Kerrys liberal colleagues are worried: Chinas diplomacy is a constant search for leverage, and Kerry will deliver a load of it in a wheelbarrow right to their front door every day.

Lets hope President Biden will at least learn from this U.N. report that China is neither a leader nor a reliable partner in addressing climate-related issues because its lofty rhetoric is not supported by its actions. Therefore, the Biden administrations China policy should reflect facts on the ground rather than wishful thinking, and never sacrifice national security nor the U.S. economy for Chinas empty climate promises.

Read more:

The Real Greenhouse-Gas Polluter Isn't The United States, It's China - The Federalist

Dems Tried To Use COVID Relief Bill To Pass Amnesty For Illegal Aliens – The Federalist

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi denied House Democrats requests to include amnesty for illegal immigrants who served as essential workers during the pandemic in President Joe Bidens $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill.

President Biden proposed comprehensive immigration reform, which includes protections for frontline immigrant workers, separate from his Covid relief plan, and we expect that to therefore have separate consideration, a House Democratic leadership aide told Politico.

Pelosis brisk response follows a letter from 100 Democratic representatives urging the speaker and other House leaders to consider slipping in a faster path to citizenship for the more than 5 million Dreamers, Temporary Protected Status recipients, and undocumented immigrants who have helped keep Americans healthy and safe during the pandemic and are critical for our economic recovery.

As we continue to confront a public health and economic catastrophe that will soon have claimed the lives of more than 450,000 Americans [and] exacerbated deep racial, gender, and economic inequities, it is vital that we include protections for immigrant workers to secure the health of our nation and lay the foundation for a robust and dynamic economic recovery, the letter from the Hispanic Caucus read.

Just a month before the Hispanic Caucuss letter, hundreds of progressive immigration organizations issued a similar plea to Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, asking the congressional leaders to offer permanent protection and a path to citizenship to all undocumented essential workers and delivering this provision to the presidents desk for his signature.

Last year, House Democrats recognized the important contributions and sacrifices of undocumented essential workers by including in both versions of the Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency Solutions (HEROES) Act a provision offering temporary protection from deportation and work authorization to these individuals. The 117th Congress can and must do better, the letter stated.

Pelosis reluctance to include a path to citizenship for illegal immigrant essential workers, though, is not to be confused with a lack of eagerness to pass sweeping immigration reform. Since day one, the Biden administration, in conjunction with top congressional Democrats, has promised to reverse the Trump administrations actions and make it easier for undocumented migrants to take advantage of benefits reserved for U.S. citizens.

In addition to the new presidentssix executive orders concerning Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, the addition of illegal immigrants in U.S. Census totals, immediate cessation of construction on the southern border wall, and the suggestion to replace the word alien with noncitizen in U.S. immigration laws, members in the blue chambers of Congress have begun to workshop legislation focused on carrying out Bidens goal to offer amnesty to approximately 11 million illegal immigrants.

Jordan Davidson is a staff writer at The Federalist. She graduated from Baylor University where she majored in political science and minored in journalism.

See the original post:

Dems Tried To Use COVID Relief Bill To Pass Amnesty For Illegal Aliens - The Federalist

Troll Replaced ‘Trump’ With ‘Cuomo’ In Maxine Waters’ Call To Violence And Dems Lost It – The Federalist

Blue checkmarks and Democrats took to Twitter on Thursday to condemn a call for violence against Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the people in his administration.The quote in question, however, was actually a call to violence against former President Donald Trump and his supporters from U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., that a Twitter troll account called Cuomo Watch satirically modified to say Cuomo.

If you see anybody from the Cuomo Administration in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you create a crowd. And you push back on them. And you tell them theyre not welcome anymore, anywhere. -Maxine CuomoWatch, the tweet reads.

Soon after the tweet was shared, prominent New York politicians, blue checkmarks, and Democrats in other states took to Twitter to condemn the call to action.

This is appalling and dangerous. Encouraging violence must never be tolerated. Shame on whoever is behind this kind of garbage, the speaker of the New York State Assembly wrote.

This is beyond outrageous, a state senator added in her retweet. Two weeks ago we saw what happened when arsonists throw gas around. Twitter should ban this dude now!

This is dangerous, reprehensible and has no place in any public discussion. Oh, and spare me the someone else did it too excuse. Someone else saying a variation of this doesnt change the fact that this is seeking to incite violence against a public official and their staff, another assemblyman shared.

@CuomoWatch We will not tolerate threats against public officials by radical extremists in this city or state. There is no room for violence or targeting against anyone, especially public servants. Not after what happened in D.C. I will be alerting appropriate authorities, the borough president of Manhattan tweeted.

U.S. Rep. Ritchie Torres, D-N.Y., even spoke out, saying he was appalled by the call to action after living through the insurrection against the US Congress.

We must all denounce in no uncertain terms any attempt at inciting political violence, he shared in a now-deleted tweet.

Cuomos senior adviser Rich Azzopardi also spread the misinformation, retweeting peoples condemnations and even accusing Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., and her staff, without presenting evidence, of condoning violence against the governor.

When confronted about the legitimacy of the tweet and the true source of the quote, the legislators either deleted their tweets or attempted to defend their double-standard on political violence.

I see what they did, wrote state Sen. Diane Savino, but that was then and this is now, and 4 years of Trump has led to words becoming weapons. We cant just ignore them anymore, people take them as a call to violent actions.

Cuomos office did not respond to The Federalists request for clarification on whether they still condemn the comments now that they know who originally made them. Instead, in his press conference on Friday, Cuomo blamed the internet and the troll who created the post.

When you see the ugliness being fomented for selfish political reasons, everyone should condemn it. We all know who spreads the ugliness on the Internet, Cuomo says.

Many Democrats have a history of calling for violence against Trump and his supporters including Cuomo, who recently said that he wouldve decked Trump if he werent a governor.

The outrage over the modified quote also follows a report from the New York attorney generals office that found that Cuomo and his administration lied about the number of COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes following his policy that sent infected patients into care facilities during the pandemic.

Jordan Davidson is a staff writer at The Federalist. She graduated from Baylor University where she majored in political science and minored in journalism.

See more here:

Troll Replaced 'Trump' With 'Cuomo' In Maxine Waters' Call To Violence And Dems Lost It - The Federalist

How The Pandemic Raised The Stakes For School Choice – The Federalist

On this episode of The Federalist Radio Hour, CEO-elect of the American Federation for Children Tommy Schultz joins Culture Editor Emily Jashinsky to discuss how teachers unions are hurting childrens academic and social development by pushing to keep schools closed and why their anti-scientific demands highlight the importance of school choice.

Its just devastating what this is doing. Parents are trying to manage this awful situation on top of their own tragedies and issues and going on with their own work, Schultz said. Its a terrible time, and much of it is being driven by the politics of our K-12 political bureaucracy and the unions who are only serving the interests of their members and not students.

Support for school choice, Schultz said, has grown since the beginning of the pandemic, as more and more public school families, especially those with lower-income parents are increasingly frustrated with how politicized their childrens learning has become.

This is clearly a result of the teachers unions,frankly, being the best advocates for school choice just by doing everything that theyre doing here, Schultz said. They are an entirely political beast that is only interested in serving themselves rather than actually putting our students first in this education discussion.

Read more of The Federalists coverage of school reopenings, teachers unions, and the Biden administrations stance on in-person learning here.

View original post here:

How The Pandemic Raised The Stakes For School Choice - The Federalist

Why It’s Unconstitutional To Impeach Someone After He Leaves Office – The Federalist

On Jan. 22, the Wall Street Journal published Princeton University professor of politics Keith E. Whittingtons defense of the disqualification-from-future-office purpose of the Senate impeachment trial of Donald Trump scheduled to begin on Feb. 8. The day before, more than 100 legal scholars, including Federalist Society co-founder Steven Calabresi, released a statement making the same argument.

Whittingtonholds that for the Founders, a Senate trial merely to disqualify a former federal official was a traditionally understood principle imported to America from England. Likewise, thescholars argue that history, including English impeachment history as well as the intentions of the Framers of the Constitution, is the source of the alleged constitutional power to convict prior officeholders as well as current ones. What is more, a Constitution without an independent disqualification power would be a Constitution that could be easily undermined.

In support of their scholarship, neither the scholars nor the professor cites nor quotes the Federalist Papers. Yet the history and meaning of the American Constitution begins with and is dependent on those papers which, like the Constitution itself, are unique in all of human and political history. Impeachment is dealt with in eight of the 85 papers (numbers 39, 65, 66, 69, 77, 79, 81, 84). Nowhere in any of the Federalist Papers is there a discussion of or attempt to separate between the two impeachment punishments of removal and disqualification.

In Federalist No. 65, whose subject is the suitability of the Senate as the court of impeachment, disqualification is not separately considered. The subject of Federalist No. 66 is the argument that the impeachment provisions dangerously combine both legislative and judicial authority in the Congress.

Hamilton, the author, answers by pointing to the constitutional requirement that the House and Senate act separately and independently in the impeachment process. When Hamilton contends impeachment is properly assigned to the Congress, rather than the Supreme Court, disqualification is not mentioned at all. In neither paper is there a discussion distinguishing between removal from office and disqualification.

In Federalist No. 39, Madison says that the President of the United States is impeachable at any time during his continuance in office.In Federalist No. 66, Hamilton explains that the fundamental purpose of impeachment is to protect the Congress against encroachments of the executive. Obviously, there can be no such encroachments by a former executive.

It is inconceivable that the Federalist authors who were, of course, subject to the criticisms of and corrections by their fellow Founders would have left such a major constitutional power, the stand-alone power of disqualification, uncommented on. Both the assumption and the plain text of the Constitution and the Federalist Papers is that the two punishments, removal and disqualification, go together.

For Democrats intent on keeping their fierce pursuit of Trump in the public eye, the Constitution establishes more powerful means than simple removal and disqualification. Article I, 3 states that impeachment shall not extend further than than removal and disqualification, but the party convicted shall nevertheless be liable and subject to Indictment, Trial, Judgment, and Punishment, according to law. And he need not be convicted under impeachment.

In specifically discussing the presidency in Federalist No. 65 and Federalist No. 69, Hamilton points out that a former president would afterwards that is, after he is no longer president be liable to prosecution and punishment in the ordinary course of law. Hamilton highlights this dramatic difference from English law concerning the person of the king, who is forever exempt from impeachment and prosecution.

During his term in office, a president may not be prosecuted in an outside court, only charged/impeached by the House and convicted by the Senate of High Crimes and Misdemeanors. Now that he is out of office, however, and for the rest of his life, Trump may be criminally indicted in any state or federal court for anything he ever did both during and outside his presidency.

InNixon v. Fitzgerald, the Supreme Court ruled that a president is forever immune fromcivilliability for his official acts while in office. Not so, however, for non-official civil acts. InClinton v. Jones, the Supreme Court held that a sitting president may be sued for his private, non-official pre-presidency conduct. Furthermore, in the 2020 decision of Trump v. Vance, the Supreme Court ruled that Trumps tax records could be subpoenaed by New York state prosecutor Cyrus Vance Jr. while he was still in office.

Both the scholars and the professor mention that a perfidious president or other officials could commit heinous acts against the country and the government and then avoid all consequences by resigning before an impeachment trial. As already pointed out and proven by the text of the Constitution and Hamiltons discussion of it, this contention is simply false.

Such a terminally criminal former president would continue to be liable to criminal prosecution for his in-office, terminally criminal acts. What is more, it is more than obvious that American popular and political opinion would never endure an attempt by such a person to regain public office. Finally, it is also refuted by American history insofar as no public figure has ever thought to commit such acts.

The scholars and Whittington bring up the impeachment and disqualification of resigned and no-longer-in-office Secretary of War William Belknap in 1876, who was acquitted in the Senate. But historical accounts are readily available with which to conclude that a significant number of those voting for acquittal had already decided that there was no impeachment jurisdiction over a former official. Also, of course, Belknap was an appointed official rather than an elected one, much less the president.

In a separatearticle in The New York Times, Calabresi along with Norman Eisen, one of the Democratss House 2020 impeachment counsels, have cited no authority for their unique claim that after the two-thirds impeachment vote, a disqualification vote only requires a simple majority vote in the Senate. Anyone is entitled to his or her opinion about the meaning of constitutional texts, of course. Scholarship, however, requires something more.

Since retiring as an Assistant U.S. Attorney, Thomas R. Ascik has written about legal and constitutional issues on a variety of websites including The Federalist, The Imaginative Conservative, and Law & Liberty.

Excerpt from:

Why It's Unconstitutional To Impeach Someone After He Leaves Office - The Federalist

Liz Cheney’s GOP Civil War Is Here, And She’s Losing – The Federalist

On this episode of The Federalist Radio Hour, Federalist Western Correspondent Tristan Justice joins Culture Editor Emily Jashinsky to discuss his dispatch from Rep. Matt Gaetzs anti-Liz Cheney rally and what it means for the future of the GOP.

He really branded Liz Cheney as emblematic of the old way of doing things and what the Republican Party had gotten away from under Donald Trump, and what the Republican Party needs to stay away from if theyre going to be successful in the future, and the crowd loved it, Justice said. Every single person I spoke to in the crowd, they complained about Liz Cheney, not necessarily because of her impeachment vote. A lot of them said that impeachment was just the last straw, they were already upset with Cheney. They really just attacked her for being a symbol of the past.

Cheneys battle, Justice said, is not an isolated one and signals the coming of more GOP splits after years of growing distrust in D.C. elites and politicians.

Liz Cheney is in trouble in her own state. Trumpism has gripped the party, and I dont think theres a lot of space for the Republican Party to go back to the old way of doing things, Justice concluded.

Read more of Justices work here.

Read the original:

Liz Cheney's GOP Civil War Is Here, And She's Losing - The Federalist

Why Trump Should Press His Case On Voter Fraud – The Federalist

With a major shakeup in Donald Trumps legal team this weekend, increasing attention is being paid to what defense the former president will mount in his upcoming Senate impeachment trial.

Conventional wisdom is that Republican senators would prefer Trump simply argue that it is unconstitutional to impeach a former president. Reportedly, they do not want him to argue he was not guilty of inciting a riot, and most certainly do not want him to argue that there was, in fact, widespread election fraud.

One can understand why these senators would rather rule only on the narrow issue of the constitutionality. It is far less contentious than the other two arguments, and why even bother with them if the first argument makes them moot?

But for Trump, who has already lost his largest platform on Twitter, the ability to lay out the case on why he didnt incite a riot and that there was widespread fraud may seem irresistible. It would be far riskier, but there is still a very good chance he would be acquitted, maybe by a closer margin possibly with some annoyed votes in his favor, but acquitted nonetheless.

On all three counts, Trump has very reasonable arguments to make. And given that so many in the media have already made up their mind that he is obviously guilty, he would have a very low bar to cast doubt on that guilt. So lets look at each defense on its own.

The constitutional question of whether you can convict a former president in the Senate appears to be a legal 50-50 ball. There are experts on each side of the question. Both make reasonable if contradictory arguments, and neither can really claim certainty. This makes it an easy out for Republican senators, and its why they dont want to look any further.

As far as the question of incitement, Ive made a longer argument in these pages, but it boils down to the idea that Trumps actions were way too broad and indirect to be considered an incitement. Now, those in favor of conviction point out that the legal standard, which almost everyone agrees Trump did not meet, doesnt matter here. Thats true. The Senate can define it anyway they want, but they still need a standard by which to do so, and more importantly they will setting that standard in an official capacity.

If Trumps speech was incitement to riot, then what is the limiting principle? Was Rep. Maxine Waters inciting people when she told them to get into Trump officials faces in 2018, all while she was pushing the big lie of Russian collusion?

American political discourse is replete with fighting metaphors and lying. We also now know that the rioting had started a mile away from Trumps speech before he finished speaking and that elements were pre-planned. The case for incitement is far weaker than the media would have you believe.

Finally comes the most controversial potential defense: that there really was massive voter fraud. To many this seems like a Kamikaze defense, but it might not be. Republican officials have been pressured since the riots to say that there was no widespread voter fraud. The idea seems to be that if they refuse they are also complicit. Its absurd, of course, as this past election was one of the sloppiest in recent memory. That happens when you change the rules on the fly.

There are plenty of important irregularities in the election that really do need investigation. That is why Sen. Josh Hawley and Sen. Ted Cruz launched a symbolic effort to refuse certification in order to shine a spotlight on these irregularities. The problems were real. They exist. Are they enough to overturn the results? It appears not, but that really isnt the point, the point is we need to fix them anyway.

Too many Republicans are being shamed now into not making a very important argument about election security. It would be the most Trump thing in the world to show up at the Senate and fight the fight they refuse to. And again, Trumps bar would be low. We have been assured there was no fraud, no major problems in mail-in voting. Just a handful of examples would put the lie to that.

Trump seems poised to get a win when the votes are cast in his trial. The question is how big the win will be. I dont think you answer that question based on how many votes he gets. I think you answer it based on how broad the scope of his acquittal is. Trump doesnt want to win on a technicality; he wants to win on the merits. A fighter doesnt hide behind constitutional controversy, he says, You tried me. I won.

There is every reason Trump should press all three arguments. Together they represent his best possible case, a three-pronged attack on every element of the charges against him. Even he wins with a smaller margin, by fighting the whole thing and winning, he will emerge much stronger than choosing otherwise.

David Marcus is the Federalist's New York Correspondent. Follow him on Twitter, @BlueBoxDave.

Read this article:

Why Trump Should Press His Case On Voter Fraud - The Federalist

The Biden Administration Just Made Peter Strzok’s Wife A Top SEC Official – The Federalist

President Joe Bidens Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced it hired Melissa Hodgman to lead the agency as its acting director of the Division of Enforcement last week.

Melissas dedication to investor protection, broad experience in the Division, and proven track record of collaboration and creative problem solving make her ideally suited to this role, SEC Acting Chair Allison Herren Lee celebrated in a statement. As Associate Director, Melissa has overseen a wide range of complex and programmatically important matters, and has been a leading voice in the Division on critical issues of diversity, hiring, and labor-management relations.

Hodgman, according to the agency press release, has been with the SEC since 2008 as a longtime bureaucrat engaging in a wide range of litigation. Hodgman is also married to another, better-known longtime Washington bureaucrat, Peter Strzok, made famous for his role in the FBIs deep-state Crossfire Hurricane operation, which featured a witch hunt investigation that sought to incriminate President Donald Trump.

Before being fired from the FBI, Strzok rose to prominence when it was revealed that Strzok had conspired with an FBI colleague-turned-mistress over the course of the investigation, as they tried to oust the elected president. Text messages that emerged in the summer of 2018 from an Office of Inspector Generals report revealed the two began conspiring the summer before Trump even won the November election. Page resigned from the FBI, only to later be hired by MSNBC, while Special Counsel Robert Mueller removed Strzok from the Russia investigation.

The pair had since become widely mocked by the president when railing against the Russia hoax and became the subject of the theatrical play FBI Lovebirds: UnderCovers, which was performed at the Conservative Political Action Conference last year.

See the original post here:

The Biden Administration Just Made Peter Strzok's Wife A Top SEC Official - The Federalist

Millennials Meet Mortality With The Death Of Dustin Diamond – The Federalist

Actor Dustin Diamond passed away this week at the age of 44, just weeks after being diagnosed with stage four lung cancer. Diamond was best known for his role as Screech Powers on Saved by the Bell, a character he portrayed for 13 years.

Diamond died just three weeks after his initial diagnosis of stage IV lung cancer, according to his publicist. As tragic as any death is, particularly at such a young age, articles dedicated to his memory and in honor of his body of work may be few and far between. A look at Diamonds career, shaped by a single role on a teen TV show that aired more than 30 years ago, would not be an obvious inspiration for entertainment writers.

But Screech Powers was not just a forgotten TV side character; he was a cultural touchstone for almost everyone born in the late 70s and early 80s. Ever youthful, nave, and optimistic for whatever the world may have for him, Screech represented the spirit of 90s kids. He got pushed around, he got teased. But his tenacity and love for life always kept him in the winners circle.

Saved by the Bell, however one may feel about the overall quality of the show, was definitive programming for my age group. We all dreamed of being beautiful like Kelly, or effortlessly cool like Zach. It was one of the first shows specifically aimed at young teens and its success was achieved by striking a perfect balance between kid-dom early adulthood themes.

Screech was the foil of the show who was seldom the center of a story but was required to make other characters look either good or bad, depending on how they treated him. He represented all of our little brothers and sisters: an annoying drag, but the person we loved the most in the world. And it was those character traits and Diamonds goofy, hopeful grin that kept him on the show, in every iteration, far longer than any other character.

Diamonds curly brown hair, wide toothy grin, and child-like wonder remained with him throughout his run on the show. His youthfulness was not by accident, he was several years younger than any of the other cast members, more likely to be the age of the kids watching the show.

Like Screech, we watched the show and admired the older, more adult characters. Co-star Mario Lopez referred to Diamond as a fun, goofy little brother. We wanted to emulate them, to impress them, to be accepted by them. But perhaps it was Screech we were relating to. We were the wide-eyed pre-teens ready for new experiences and Screechs willingness to embarrass himself in search of answers and friendship was admirable.

Many of us grew out of Saved by the Bell before the final version of the show, The New Class, went off the air in 2000, 12 years after first meeting Screech. Diamond remained in the role from age 11 to 23, returning post-college years to portray an assistant at the high school.

After the end of Screech, Diamond infrequently worked as an actor, finding himself in the news for less savory reasons. Like many child actors before him, Diamond slid in and out of obscurity, reaching for a comeback through professional wrestling, publishing a tell-all book, and even releasing a sex tape.

He spent time in jail after a violent bar altercation. Rumors of drug addiction and depression swirled, and Diamonds career was further pocked after being snubbed from a Saved by the Bell reboot that began airing last year. Diamond was supposedly in discussions about joining the reboot in its second season when his illness was revealed in early January. And, in just a matter of weeks, he was gone.

His passing is a watershed moment for millennials, who are now forced to accept the fact that we are not in our immortal youth any longer. Death came for one of us just as we prepare for middle age. Every generation meets a moment when they realize they are mortals, that they cant outrun death, and that eventually, they run out of chances.

Its now time for acceptance that, never again, will we be able to watch a Saved by the Bell rerun without a sense of sadness and loss not only for Diamond, but for our own youths. And as time marches on, none of our nostalgic culture will remain untouched.

For millennials, our moment of mortality has arrived.

Follow this link:

Millennials Meet Mortality With The Death Of Dustin Diamond - The Federalist

On ‘WandaVision,’ We Begin to Get Some Answers – The Federalist

(warning: spoilers ahead)

The big question so far on WandaVision has been, What exactly are we watching? Well, in episode four, we began to get some answers. Granted, it is a Marvel show so we also got more questions, but we did get some answers too, along with the appearance of two Marvel Cinematic Universe sidekicks, and a better idea of what S.W.O.R.D. is.

Todays WandaVision, amusingly titled, We Interrupt This Program, gives us some of the backstory on what exactly is going on. The episode begins with a chaotic scene. In a hospital room, we see Monica Rambeau re-materialize after The Avengers bring her back from The Blip, the MCUs name for the 50 percent of living beings that disappeared with the snap of Thanoss fingers in Infinity War.

She runs around in a panic looking for her mother who was apparently about to be discharged from cancer treatment. After finding a doctor who recognizes her, Monica is informed that her mother died three years ago when the cancer came back, which was two years after Monica up and vanished along with half of the universe.

This is the first time weve seen the immediate aftermath of the heroic sacrifices The Avengers made at the end of the Infinity Saga. Now we see just how traumatizing it must have been for people to vanish from existence for five years only to return to a world they didnt necessarily recognize.

After Monica leaves the hospital, she makes her way back to the headquarters of S.W.O.R.D., where she works, only to find her key card doesnt function anymore. She encounters the director of the organization, a role that used to be held by her mother. He sends her on a mission to aid the FBI in a missing persons case in rural New Jersey.

At this point, Monica finds agent Jimmy Woo, played by Randall Park, who we last saw in Ant-Man and the Wasp as the FBI guy in charge of keeping an eye on Ant-Man. Woo is now trying to track down a source he had in witness protection who was hidden in Westview, New Jersey. Monica learns that no one in the town seems to be reachable, and the sheriff, who is stationed outside the towns city limits sign, denies the town even exists.

Monica and Woo send a S.W.O.R.D. drone into the town only to watch it disappear. Monica then walks up to the towns border and sees an energy field that looks a lot like an old-fashioned television screen did if you got too close. She touches it and gets sucked into the town.

Twenty-four hours later we see the next MCU sidekick join the party, Darcy Lewis, played by Kat Dennings. The last time we saw Darcy was in the first two Thor movies. Here shes being called in by S.W.O.R.D. to investigate the town. Upon examining it, she finds that the town is broadcasting an old television signal.

Darcy proceeds to have the government goons set up an old TV so she can see the broadcast a broadcast that happens to be what weve been watching through the first three episodes of WandaVision, and we learn that its Darcy whom we saw at the end of some of these episodes watching them with us on an old television set.

We then see Woo, Darcy, and the S.W.O.R.D. team investigate the anomaly and try to figure out whats going on. They begin to identify the people cast in Wandas delusion, and it turns out many of them are just normal citizens who somehow got dragged into this sitcom fantasy. Darcy also asks the question weve all been wondering about Vision since the first minute this show started, Isnt he dead?

In an earlier episode, we heard what sounded like Woo trying to talk to Wanda through the radio. Now in this episode, we get to see how that moment came about. Darcy and Woo cobble together a plan to try and talk to Wanda through the radios they can see on screen. They also send a man dressed in a biohazard suit through the sewer to try to reach Monica. Hes the one who appeared as a random beekeeper in the first episode. Thats what her delusion changed him into.

We also get to see the rest of the scene from the last episode where Wanda figured out that Monica was not who she appeared to be and ejected her from the town. It turns out she did that quite violently by sending Monica through the walls of her house, the fence in her yard, and flying through the air at breakneck speed. The thing is, the S.W.O.R.D. observers dont see that scene; they just see Monica disappear as we did in the previous episode. That leads Darcy to posit that someone is censoring the broadcast from them and not letting everyone see what is happening.

Then were left with the most disturbing of images as we approach the end of this episode. Wanda, slightly shaken from her delusion by Monicas mention of Ultron, but not entirely, sees Vision enter their home. Instead of the Vision weve seen who is miraculously alive, well, and remarkably human, we see the dead Vision we last saw in the fields of Wakanda after Thanos ripped an Infinity Stone straight from the sythezoids head. Hes still talking to her, but hes clearly not alive, with vacant eyes, and a large hole in his head.

Its a jarring, unnerving, and very disturbing break from the happy-go-lucky sitcom world weve been immersed in through the first few episodes.

Then, its gone.

Wanda returns to her world where she and Vision are alive and well in a 1970s sitcom with two bouncing baby boys. Then we get perhaps the most interesting exchange between the title characters weve had yet. Vision, seeing the upset nature of Wanda, says, We dont have to stay here. We can go wherever we want.

Wanda, beginning to piece together what is going on, with tears in her eyes, says, No we cant. This is our home. Vision says, Are you sure? and Wanda answers, Dont worry darling, I have everything under control.

Then we cut to Monica, who is on the grass outside Westview, exactly where we left her at the end of the last episode. She is surrounded by government agents. Darcy and Woo run up to Monica, who is still dazed on the ground, and ask if shes okay. Monica says, Its Wanda. Its all Wanda. The episode closes with Wanda and Vision cradling their babies while watching TV on their couch as Jimmy Hendrix sings Voodoo Child.

My working theory has been that Mephisto is the villain behind all this nonsense weve been seeing in WandaVision and that he would be the central villain of the next few Marvel movies, but the way this episode ends raises interesting questions.

Will Wanda herself move from being a hero, a member of The Avengers who saved the universe from the evils of Thanos, to a villain herself? Could her immense grief at the loss of her lover, Vision, drive her to become a crazed supervillain?

Could Wanda be the next big baddy of the MCU? Maybe well find out more next week on WandaVision.

Brad Jackson is a writer and radio personality whose work has appeared at ABC, CBS, Fox News, and multiple radio programs. He was the longtime host and producer of Coffee & Markets, an award-winning podcast and radio show with more than 1,500 episodes. Brad covers all things edible and cultural for The Federalist. You can find him on Twitter and Instagram at @bradwjackson.

Read the original:

On 'WandaVision,' We Begin to Get Some Answers - The Federalist

Some States May Already Be Close To Herd Immunity From COVID-19 – The Federalist

The coronavirus epidemic is surging and taking with it the economy, our ability to gather with friends and family, and our hopes for the future. We need to get it over with. But in the midst of the explosion in new cases, some states are experiencing declines in the number of new cases while other states are witnessing increases.

Changes in the rate of infections have been attributed to political affiliation, defiant lifestyles, and irresponsible leadership. But there may be a simpler answer. Some states may be running out of people who have not already been infected.

Experts estimate that at least two-thirds of the population need to have neutralizing antibodies in order to reach herd immunity. Two-thirds of the 325 million people in the United States is about 218 million people. You can get antibodies that neutralize the virus in one of two ways: taking an effective vaccine, which is only being starting to be administered, or having been infected with the coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

About 19 million people in the U.S. have had confirmed cases of COVID-19. But confirmed cases may be the tip of the iceberg. Although estimates vary, the Centers for Disease Control believes that about eight people have been infected for each one person with a documented case. If we multiply the 19 million known cases by 8, it is possible that about 152 million people are already immune. Yet the proportion of people who have been infected and the rate of new cases varies significantly by state.

Using publicly available data sources, I estimated the number of people who might have immunity in each state. The simple calculation multiplies the number of known cases in each state by 8. Then, I divided the number of expected immune people by the state population. The numbers vary dramatically across the country, with North Dakota topping the list at 92 percent in contrast to the least affected state, Vermont, at a mere 7 percent.

A very crude estimate suggests that new cases should begin trending downward when about 60 percent of the population has been infected. My rough estimate showed that five states are likely to have more than 60 percent of their populations previously infected (North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, Wisconsin, and Nebraska) with three others (Utah, Rhode Island, and Wyoming) approaching 60 percent.

In each of these states, the recent trajectory for new cases is declining. States where the seven-day rolling averages aretrending upward tend to have a lower rate of previous infections: South Carolina (39 percent), Texas (36 percent), Massachusetts (34 percent), California (32 percent), West Virginia (29 percent), the District of Columbia (28 percent), and New York (17 percent).

We have good reason to believe that a previous infection provides immunity. The two new vaccines are estimated to be about 95 percent effective in preventing infections. However, those who have suffered a previous infection may enjoy greater than 99 percent protection.

True, there have been a few cases of COVID-19 survivors who became reinfected. But reinfection is very rare. There are only 31 documented cases among some 81 million people who have been infected.

In two large vaccine trials, people taking the active vaccine were 95 percent less likely than those getting a placebo to get COVID-19. But those injected with placebo were still 200 times more likely to get COVID-19 in comparison to the rate of reinfection among COVID-19 survivors.

To be clear, I am not advocating that people deliberately get exposed to coronavirus. It is simply too large a gamble. COVID-19 can have devasting consequences, including death. That is why so many people oppose achieving herd immunity through careless life choices.

But unfortunately, many people have already become victims of the coronavirus. If they survived without lasting effects, they are not likely to get a new infection. In the states where the virus has hit hardest, we may be running out of people who are likely to get a new case of COVID-19.

We are a big country with the unified goal of defeating the coronavirus. But we are also a federation with 50 states. One size does not fit all, and we must recognize that our state leaders face very different situations.

It is possible that some states may be approaching herd immunity, even without a vaccine. Others remain highly vulnerable. For now, all states should continue to advocate for prudent behavioral approaches to masking, distancing, and hand washing.

State leaders might use the information on previous infections, perhaps augmented by new surveys on antibody prevalence, when they evaluate how they can best prioritize their limited vaccine supplies. Since previous infection may offer protection equal to or better than a vaccine, it makes no sense to give two doses to someone who hasalready been infected.

In North Dakota, that would free up at least 180,000 doses enough to give the first injection to nearly a quarter of the population. Leaders could also be better armed to face equally fraught decisions, such as how to ease restrictions and when to open public schools. With prudent use of resources and data-based planning, a return to normalcy may be in our future.

Republished from RealClearPolitics, with permission.

Robert M. Kaplan, Ph.D., is a faculty member at Stanford Medical School Clinical Excellence Research Center, a former associate director of the National Institutes of Health, and a former chief science officer for the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

View post:

Some States May Already Be Close To Herd Immunity From COVID-19 - The Federalist

Make America Beautiful Again: The Executive Order You Might Have Missed – The Federalist

On this episode of The Federalist Radio Hour, Director of Classical Architecture at Catholic University James McCrery and President of the National Civic Art Society Justin Shubow join Senior Editor Christopher Bedford to break down President Donald Trumps recent executive order promoting classical and traditional architecture in Washington, D.C.

There is a requirement that federal buildings be beautiful, that they command the admiration of the American people, and that there should be a particular regard for classical and traditional architecture, Shubow explained.

Thats the kind of architecture that is truly called civic and that a great civilization like ours needs and demands, McCrery added. And we dont get it.

The order, however, is not without controversy.

It has trumped up this big controversy but even thousands of traditional and classical architects are proof that thats simply not the case, McCrery said. The traditional and classical architecture is very much of our time and is very much alive and well in schools of architecture.

It is not architecture for architectures sake, McCrery added. It is architecture for the people and ultimately for our society.

Go here to read the rest:

Make America Beautiful Again: The Executive Order You Might Have Missed - The Federalist

Corporate Media’s Obsession With Fact-Checking Is To Monopolize Truth – The Federalist

In July, USA Today issued a fact-check that promoted a left-wing conspiracy theory asserting the Donald Trump campaigns use of an eagle on memorabilia featured imagery of Nazi Germany.

President Donald Trumps campaign website recently unveiled a T-shirt that has come under fire because of design similarities between its logo and a Nazi symbol, the fact-check article said, explaining the comparisons first pointed out by a leftist Jewish group and the grifters at the Lincoln Project.

The claims that a Trump campaign T-shirt has come under criticism for using a symbol similar to a Nazi eagle is TRUE, the paper concluded, offering its highest level of credibility to a leftist conspiracy tying the Trump campaign to Nazi Germany. Of course, the fact-check wasnt true.

The articles own author acknowledged the eagles use as a longtime emblem of American patriotism embedded in U.S. governmental seals for more than 200 years, more than a century pre-dating its adoption by the Nazis. In addition, the eagle has been used by numerous governments going back thousands of years to Ancient Rome.

The hysterical, ahistorical conclusion to perpetuate a favorite, hyped narrative of the Trump-era media painting the president as a 21st-century Hitler drew well-deserved mockery online. Some poked fun at the papers past illustration of chainsaw bayonets as a possible gun modification.

Townhalls Julio Rosas replaced the guns affixed chainsaw bayonet with American seals prominently featuring the eagle USA Today had painted as primarily Nazi imagery.

USA Today updated its fact check ruling days later to inconclusive following online outrage and reporting from outlets such as The Federalist. The update, however, coming a full three days later, likely missed the thousands of readers first subjected to its deceptive first conclusion.

The episode is emblematic of just about everything wrong about legacy media: its Trump Derangement Syndrome, its compulsive desire to smear Trump and his supporters as Nazi collaborators, its unaccountability. It also illustrates the dangers of a corporate media complex obsessed about fact-checking to cement a monopoly on truth, when many of its fact-checks arent truthful at all.

The USA Today story is no isolated incident of erroneous fact-checking.From 2008 to 2012, PolitiFact ran not one, but six columns promoting President Barack Obamas claims that Americans who liked their health coverage could keep it under the Affordable Care Act while also declaring 2012 Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney a liar for saying otherwise.

In 2013, PolitiFact conceded the line If you like your health care plan, you can keep it as the lie of the year, after an estimated four million Americans lost their insurance by 2014.

Theres no shortage of fake-fact checks published by corporate outlets self-righteously presenting themselves as neutral arbiters of truth. In 2013, PolitiFact conceded its 2012 lie of the year was the literal truth. In August, the fact-checkers at Snopes admitted a claim they rated mostly false as true in the same article. In December, USA Today employed a leftist college student activist to fact-check a piece of Federalist reporting she just didnt understand.

The growth of the fact-checking industry has only blossomed in the last decade, with more than 300 fact-checking groups worldwide, 58 in the United States, according to the Duke University Reporters Lab.

The corporate fact-checking movement has especially flourished in recent months, escalating their war on dissent with the help of big tech elites weaponizing their monopoly power over the 21st-century digital public square through selective censorship. Nowhere has this partnership come into better focus than Facebook and Twitters October suppression of stories revealing incriminating evidence about then-Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden involving his family business dealings.

Moments after The New York Post published its first expos detailing Bidens involvement with his sons potentially criminal overseas ventures, Facebook announced through a former Democratic staffer the platform would pre-emptively censor the story until it had been vetted by the independent fact-checkers it pays to conduct content moderation.

Several months later, reports of three federal investigations targeting the Biden family have surfaced, and questions remain surrounding Facebooks censorship in the midst of a presidential election.

Which fact-checking group did Facebook employ to review the Hunter Biden stories? Was it reviewed by the fact-checker who trashed Republicans as racist and told a Russian television network the presidents speeches should not be aired? Was it the fact-checking partner funded by China?

Did the fact-checkers ever make their findings public? Have they retracted or altered their checks after Hunter Biden acknowledged the existence of an ongoing federal investigation examining his taxes? Will the entity responsible for reviewing the Hunter Biden stories remain in partnership with Facebook going forward?

The alliance between big tech and big media to monopolize the truth presents just as much a threat to American democracy than any politician. Their weaponizing of fact-checking is their most promising mirage to confuse a susceptible public that can be manipulated to serve elite interests.

A world where leftist elites run the nations legacy institutions is no pretty picture. Its a world where critical race theory is the mandated religion, Trump is a covert agent of the Russian government, Joe Biden sees no legitimate scrutiny, there is no accountability for American corporate giants dismissing their U.S. loyalty to appease Chinese interests, and any skepticism that could undermine pandemic lockdown measures is suppressed into oblivion.

Facts matter, of course. No responsible writer would insist otherwise. But to allow left-wing institutions to develop a bulletproof monopoly on defining what is fact does more to undermine the truth than any piece of genuine misinformation floating around in the marketplace of ideas.

Follow this link:

Corporate Media's Obsession With Fact-Checking Is To Monopolize Truth - The Federalist

Hemingway: If Lockdowns Worked, California Wouldn’t Have This Problem – The Federalist

The Federalist Senior Editor Mollie Hemingway criticized Californias strict lockdown policies for not only failing to prevent a public health crisis but also disregarding scientific findings and hurting people and the economy in the process.

If lockdowns worked in terms of public health, California would not be having a problem right now, Hemingway said on Fox News Outnumbered on Monday.

The New York Times is reporting that, of these shortages in hospitals, a big part is staffing shortages, she continued. Thats because something like one out of every seven nurses is unable to work because of the lockdowns of schools. If a lot of nurses have children, and when their children arent able to be at school, that means they cant be at the hospitals.

Hemingway noted that instead of following the science about COVID-19 spread, many government officials havent thought through the repercussions of these things and chose to mandate lockdowns and shut down the economy.

A lot of governors and mayors and other government officials want to look like theyre doing something rather than actually following the science, Hemingway said.

There is no scientific basis for shuttering schools. There is no scientific basis for shuttering restaurants for the reasons that you already alleged, she continued, noting that restaurants in New York were shut down for just over a 1 percent virus transmission rate.

While states such as California and New York have turned to strict lockdowns and restrictions on activities, Hemingway said these restrictions have caused great harm to people and businesses.

The reality is this is a virus. Its going to behave as a virus, Hemingway concluded. And it is not something as simple as what we have been told will keep these things under control, whether its mask mandates or destroying small businesses so these large corporations can flourish.

Jordan Davidson is a staff writer at The Federalist. She graduated from Baylor University where she majored in political science and minored in journalism.

Read the original:

Hemingway: If Lockdowns Worked, California Wouldn't Have This Problem - The Federalist