Liberal Shoots Republicans; Democrats Blame GOP Gun Policies – The Daily Caller

This morning, someone who specifically wanted to kill Republicans sprayed more than 50 shots at a GOP Congressional baseball practice, wounding at least five including Congressman Steve Scalise (R-La.). Within minutes, the sadly inevitable Tweets began:

Yes, it is too soon.

I have never been a gun guy, and Ill leave it to others to argue gun control vs. gun rights and how they relate to issues of safety, security, and freedom.

But the rush to blame Scalises own political stances for his misfortune should shock the conscience of Americans, and I reject the idea that both sides do it. While Republicans sometimes point out the way Democrat policies (generous welfare, the minimum wage) hurt the people they are supposed to help, virtually none of us gloat and seek political advantage when Democrats face death or grievous bodily injury.

Yet during the health-care debate, I heard some liberals openly wish Republicans who supported Trumpcare would themselves suffer painful illnesses, or witness them among family members.

Were seeing the same vengeful point-scoring today.

As the saying goes, conservatives think liberals are wrong; liberals think conservatives are evil. Democrats often seem certain that Republicans choose economic policies from malice toward the poor; health-care proposals out of indifference to sick people; and attitudes toward affirmative action due to racism.

And when Republicans take NRA money (for their campaigns, not themselves) in exchange for supporting policies that objectively lead to the deaths of children, its simple greed.

The smug idea that conservatives would abandon their positions if they affected them personally is a bedrock of the liberal cultural stance. Countless TV shows have portrayed traditionalist characters who dont support gay marriage until a family member comes out. A Republican Senator in a recent off-Broadway, Church and State, sees the light about gun control after a shooting at the elementary school his children attend. Liberal newspapers trumpet confessionals by women who were pro-life until they got pregnant.

Todays tweets are particularly obnoxious when they offer thoughts and prayers. Thats a manifestation of what is known on the internet as concern trolling pretending sympathy for the other side to undermine its case. Anyone who really seeks prayers for Representative Scalise calls for prayers for him, and joins in. They dont attack Scalises policies and his campaign donor list while they do so.

And it needs to be said: the shooter was not a conservative. He stopped to check the political affiliation of the practicing legislator-athletes before opening fire. Seriously? Democrats have gone back to defending gun control today as a means to control their own people from murdering Republicans? Words cannot

Were already seeing conservative responses online to the blame-guns crowd, pointing out that if the shooter had not been himself shot by armed guards the event would have been a massacre. Those debates will likely continue for weeks. But its not too early to upbraid those who waited but minutes to exploit a legislative opponents tragedy to score political points. Shame on you.

David Benkof is a columnist for The Daily Caller. Follow him on Twitter (@DavidBenkof) and Muckrack.com/DavidBenkof, or E-mail him at [emailprotected].

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Liberal Shoots Republicans; Democrats Blame GOP Gun Policies - The Daily Caller

Tim Farron resigns as leader of Liberal Democrats – The Independent

Tim Farron has resigned asleader of the Liberal Democrats, following a furore over his beliefs concerning gay sex.

The politician admitted some of his comments concerning the matter could have been wiser when asked if homosexuality is a sin he had previously responded: We are all sinners.

After the matter refused to go away and surfaced again during the election campaign, Mr Farron said it had felt impossibleto be both Lib Dem leader and a Christian.

Earlier on Wednesday Lib Dem Lord Paddick, a gay former senior Met police officer, resigned from his post as the partys home affairs spokesman.

In a statement, Mr Farron said: I seem to be the subject of suspicion because of what I believe and who my faith is in.

In which case we are kidding ourselves if we think we yet live in a tolerant, liberal society. Thats why I have chosen to step down as leader of the Liberal Democrats.

He said that from the very first dayof his leadership he had faced questions about his Christian faith and that he had tried to answer with grace and patience, adding: Sometimes my answers could have been wiser.

But with the vital election campaign kicking off and the Lib Dems desperate to capitalise on any anti-Brexit feeling, Mr Farron said the issue was distracting attention from the partys message.

When the results came in last Friday the party had gained four seats, leaving them with 12 not as many as had been hoped for in the wake of the EU referendum.

Mr Farron added: Journalists have every right to ask what they see fit. The consequences of the focus on my faith is that I have found myself torn between living as a faithful Christian and serving as a political leader.

Tim Farron says it's 'bizarre' journalists keep questioning him on faith

A better, wiser person than me may have been able to deal with this more successfully, to have remained faithful to Christ while leading a political party in the current environment.

Taking to Twitter earlier in the day, Lord Paddick said: Ive resigned as Lib Dems Shadow Home Secretary over concerns about the leaders views on various issues that were highlighted during GE17.

The announcement clears the way for one of the other well known figures in the party to step forward and take on the top job.

Potential contenders include Jo Swinson, newly returned to Parliament, former cabinet ministers Vince Cable and Ed Daveyand ex-health minister Norman Lamb.

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Tim Farron resigns as leader of Liberal Democrats - The Independent

Trump and the liberal hate-fest – Washington Times

ANALYSIS/OPINION:

Almost six out of 10 American voters are angry and dissatisfied with how the media is covering politics, according to a new Quinnipiac poll. Someone has finally united us, and its through rejection of the 24/7 media (read liberal) hate-fest of President Trump.

Thats a good sign for the country, but not so much for the business of news or for the Democratic Party. Its indicators like this that should be considered seriously by the Democrats and their still failing water carriers. Their spoiled, elitist hatred for the president is not translating well for the American people.

As Obamacare continues its collapse and terrorist attacks around the world are an almost daily event, New Yorks elite remain rabidly enraged at Mr. Trump. Ironically, hes the only person so new to the political scene to not have had a hand in any of the governmental schemes currently ruining peoples lives.

Yet, its Mr. Trump who apparently should be murdered because, you know, after 144 days hes a tyrant or something. According to Rasmussen, consumer confidence is the second-highest its been in the indexs history. The market cap of the U.S. stock market has risen more than $3 trillion since Mr. Trump was elected. Small-business confidence has surged to a 12-year high. In May, the unemployment rate hit a 16-year low.

Yeah, for New York limousine liberals that amounts to a tyranny, especially because their political bread-and-butter relies on victimhood. Mr. Trump is threatening the only thing the Democrats have left suffering.

Whats a panicked gang to do? Much is being made of the New York Public Theaters play featuring the murder of Mr. Trump. Sure, its titled Julius Caesar, but we know thats an inside joke. For those not living in the pretend-world of liberals, the people in charge of the New York Public Theater are using Shakespeare simply as cover for their horrific fantasy, as its rather likely their creative process first involved wanting to kill the president, then they went scrounging around to find the fitting Shakespeare.

How clever they are, as they no doubt assure themselves.

Drowning in smug, the theater released a statement which, in part read: Our production of Julius Caesar in no way advocates violence toward anyone. Shakespeares play, and our production, make the opposite point: Those who attempt to defend democracy by undemocratic means pay a terrible price and destroy the very thing they are fighting to save.

How kind of them. Americans appalled at the presentation of the murder of our sitting president are reprimanded by our artistic betters for not understanding Shakespeare, and the message of Julius Caesar.

Newsflash for artistes: Context matters. Shakespeares intent was based on an historical personage for a reason. When you murder a living president, who is loathed by the very people making the presentation, you lose the right to point back at the original playwright who knew the difference between a historical lesson and contemporary provocation.

This is dangerous for a variety of reasons, not the least of which is the inuring of the public to the idea of violence being committed against the president. After the London Bridge terrorist attack, we were told by various media that Londoners were getting used to terrorism.

One man was lauded for keeping his beer with him as he ran from the carnage. The Associated Press headline: UK hails man who fled attack holding beer an unlikely hero.

This is what liberals everywhere want. Why? Because it keeps them from having to face the consequences of their actions. They create chaos and then have no solutions for the collapse of civil society, so the goal becomes to make obscene violence and chaos a normal, or as former Secretary of State John Kerry wished about terrorism, for it to be considered simply a nuisance.

There are many reasons why six out of 10 Americans are angry at the media, defending what the New York Public Theater has done is part of it (You ignorant fools dont understand Shakespeare), but also in purveying fake news. Former FBI Director James B. Comey told us the foundation story in The New York Times claiming Trump campaign collusion with Russia was dead wrong. CNN had to retract a story a day before Mr. Comeys testimony claiming he would deny he told Mr. Trump he wasnt under investigation. The opposite was true.

During an appearance on Fox News Fox & Friends, this columnist was on a panel that included a perfectly nice young man who, as a liberal, explained essentially that the president was unable to work because of the headlines surrounding his presidency. I responded, noting that headlines are not reality, despite the fact that for the years prior to new media and the internet, headlines and people like Walter Cronkite did control what the American people saw and heard. They did control reality.

When liberals lose that, their mask is ripped off as they produce photographs of the president beheaded ISIS-style, or a play featuring his torturous murder night after night.

But Donald Trump is the tyrant. Got it.

Tammy Bruce, author and Fox News contributor, is a radio talk show host.

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Trump and the liberal hate-fest - Washington Times

Donald Trump Jr. and Twitter users blame liberal rhetoric in wake of Scalise shooting – The Daily Dot

As authorities continue to investigate the motives surrounding the shooting of Rep. Steve Scalise and several others on Wednesday morning, some politicians and people online think theyve found the culprit: liberal rhetoric.

At least one Republican lawmaker suggested that the liberal rhetoric that has popped up since President Donald Trump took office led to the Scalises shooting at a baseball field in Virginia early Wednesday, according to the Buffalo News.

I can only hope that the Democrats do tone down the rhetoric, the Buffalo News reported Rep. Chris Collins (R-N.Y.) saying on a local radio station. The rhetoric has been outrageousthe finger-pointing, just the tone and the angst and the anger directed at Donald Trump, his supporters. Really, then, you know, some people react to things like that. They get angry as well. And then you fuel the fires.

Collins, the third-highest ranking member of the House of Representatives, continued: I can only hope maybe theres something here that would say: Lets tone down the rhetoric. We can disagree politically but we can be polite. Its gone too far.

While there have been recent incidents of left-leaning figures gaining attention for their over-the-top suggestions of violence against Trump, the president is no stranger to using incendiary rhetoric to fire up his supporters.

Trump drew fierce criticism forpraising violence against protesters at rallies during the presidential campaign and some fear his near-daily attacks on the press may cause escalation among his supporters.

Rhetoric was also blamed following the assassination attempt of Democratic congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords in 2011.

Specifically, many people pointed out that former vicepresidential candidate Sarah Palin released an online map of different districts they hoped to turn in favor of Tea Party candidates (including Giffords), which used images of gun sights.

While Twitter was buzzing with debates over gun control in the wake of Scalises shooting, others seemed to agree with Collins that rhetoric on the left was to blame.

Leading the charge was the presidents own son.

People accused Trump aide Kellyanne Conway of perpetuating an anti-Republican angle to the shooting when she tweeted #breakingnews suggesting someone asked whether Republicans or Democrats were playing baseball on the field prior to the shooting.

Her tweet was quickly denounced by Twitter users:

Meanwhile, off the evidenceof social media profiles for shooterJames T. Hodgkinson, online communities are identifying him as a radical left winger.

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Donald Trump Jr. and Twitter users blame liberal rhetoric in wake of Scalise shooting - The Daily Dot

Hulu’s ‘Casual’ Shoehorns Liberal Propaganda – NewsBusters – NewsBusters (blog)


NewsBusters (blog)
Hulu's 'Casual' Shoehorns Liberal Propaganda - NewsBusters
NewsBusters (blog)
The writers of Hulu's Casual are determined to stick in liberal propaganda wherever they see fit, as shown by Tuesday's episode, Troubleshooting.

and more »

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Hulu's 'Casual' Shoehorns Liberal Propaganda - NewsBusters - NewsBusters (blog)

Liberal WaPo Analysis Writer, Budding Author Deletes Heinous Tweet About Shooting – The Daily Caller

Malcolm Harris, who tweets at the ominous addy @BigMeanInternet and wrote a recent analysis piece for The Washington Post,deleted what may be the most heinous reaction to the morning shootings at a congressional baseball practice in Alexandria, Va.

On Friday, The Washington Post featured Harris in its PostEverything section. The New Republic featured a story by Harris in August, 2016. Salon has also publishedhis work. The story says he works for The New Inquiry. The New Inquiry site describes Harris as a writer and editor living in Brooklyn and lists a slew of his work, the most recent of which is July 6, 2016.

Harris is the author of Kids These Days: Human Capital and the Making of Millennials,which is allegedly being published by Little, Brown. In his Twitter bio, he says hes a full-time staff writer for Vox.

But there is strangely no mention of him anywhere on the site.

During the time it took me to write this story, Harris blocked me from viewing his Twitter account.

Harriss tweetabout the congressional shooting is time stampedat 5:45 a.m.

The news broke just after7 a.m. so perhaps hes in a different time zone.

The tweet has since been deleted.

Mirror note to readers: In all seriousness, judging from the lack of stability in this guys Twitter feed, authorities, not to mention friends and family, may want to look into getting this guy some help.

UPDATE: WaPo and Vox PR both wrote The Mirror to severely distance themselves from Harris. WaPo says he contributed one story. Vox says he is not a Vox employee as he claims to be in his Twitter bio. I will cover this in more detail in an upcoming story.

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Liberal WaPo Analysis Writer, Budding Author Deletes Heinous Tweet About Shooting - The Daily Caller

Northam beats Sanders-backed liberal in Va. gubernatorial primary; Gillespie wins GOP nomination – USA TODAY

Alan Suderman, The Associated Press Published 8:53 p.m. ET June 13, 2017 | Updated 19 hours ago

Lt. Gov. Ralph Northam greets voters and supporters at the Larchmont Elementary School polling place on Election Day in Norfolk, Va., June 13, 2017.(Photo: Stephen M. Katz, The Virginian-Pilot via AP)

RICHMOND, Va. Virginias establishment-favored lieutenant governor won the Democratic nomination in the closely watched race for governor Tuesday, defeating a more liberal insurgent challenger in a contest to be one of the partys standard-bearers against President Donald Trump.

Ralph Northam defeated former U.S. Rep. Tom Perriello, who ran as an unapologetic liberal crusader supported by prominent national Democrats like Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren as the best candidate to take on Trump.

The three-way Republican primary remains too close to call. The general election is expected to be an early referendum on the president and a preview of what the 2018 midterm elections will look like.

Northam, a low-key pediatric neurologist, won running as a pragmatist with states Democratic establishments firm support. He has also vowed to fight Trump, but with pledges to work with state Republican lawmakers on issues like a tax overhaul.

Virginia is one of only two states electing new governors this year, and the swing-state contest is likely to draw intense national scrutiny for signs of how voters are reacting to Trumps first year in office.

Frank Von Richter said he voted for Northam because he likes that the lieutenant governor is more middle of the road than Perriello and thinks he will work better with a Republican-controlled General Assembly. The retired Richmond resident said Northam is strong on issues like education and health care and will continue Gov. Terry McAuliffes efforts to bring more jobs to Virginia.

I think he has the ability to move Virginia forward like McAuliffe has, the 80-year-old said.

McAuliffe, who, like U.S. Sens. Mark Warner and Tim Kaine of Virginia, backed Northam, is barred from seeking a consecutive term.

Perriello made a surprise entrance into the race in January and faced an uphill climb from the beginning. He energized many new-to-politics voters who oppose Trump and promised to support a grab-bag of progressive policies, like raising taxes on the wealthy, using public funds for political campaigns or mandating union membership.

Although he received a large amount of attention and praise from prominent national Democrats, Perriello was ultimately unable to expand the universe of Democratic primary voters enough to counter Northams advantages.

Northam had been essentially campaigning for years, making key contacts with influential power brokers like prominent African-American politicians and religious leaders, and building up a large cash advantage that let him outspend Perriello on TV advertising in the closing weeks of the race.

Northams campaign ran a more traditional campaign focused heavily on his biography rural upbringing, Army veteran, pediatric neurologist as well as his endorsements from key progressive groups that make up the Democratic base like teachers and abortion-rights groups.

He will face Republican Ed Gillespie who narrowly won his partys nomination in Virginias race for governor, eking out a victory against an ardent supporter of President Trump.

Gillespie is a former Republican National Committee Chairman who had a huge fundraising advantage and enjoyed the solid backing of most state elected Republicans, but largely kept Trump at arms length during the campaign.

On Tuesday, he barely defeated Corey Stewart, a former Trump state campaign chairman who made preserving Virginias Confederate history a top campaign issue. The close results shocked many political watchers and shows Trumps enduring appeal among Republican voters in Virginia.

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Northam beats Sanders-backed liberal in Va. gubernatorial primary; Gillespie wins GOP nomination - USA TODAY

Poland’s liberal opposition is re-establishing itself – The Economist

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Poland's liberal opposition is re-establishing itself - The Economist

BC Liberal cabinet sworn in as defeat looms for minority government – CTV News

VICTORIA - Premier Christy Clark appointed a new 22-member cabinet Monday while acknowledging her Liberal minority government is likely destined to be short lived.

Clark said she told her new ministers to be prepared to govern despite a looming confidence vote in the legislature that could result in her government's defeat by the end of this month.

"We are in caretaker mode," she said at a news conference following a swearing-in ceremony at the official residence of the lieutenant-governor.

"We're not pursuing any major new policy changes, which is why it's pretty much a stand pat cabinet," Clark said. "But at the same time we do have a responsibility to be in the house, to be able to answer questions in the house."

British Columbia politicians return to the legislature on June 22 and Clark's Liberals are expected to face a united effort by the New Democrats and Greens to defeat her minority government in a confidence vote.

Last month's election did not produce a clear winner, with the Liberals winning 43 seats in the 87-seat legislature.

The Liberals won the most seats so parliamentary convention requires that Clark receive the first chance to form a government.

But the NDP, with 41 seats, and the Greens, with three seats, have signed an agreement to vote against the Liberals in a confidence vote. The Greens have also agreed to support an NDP minority government led by John Horgan on future confidence matters.

Clark's new cabinet has five new ministers including Ellis Ross, B.C.'s first indigenous cabinet minister with a portfolio as he takes over at natural gas development and housing.

Mary Polak, the former environment minister, becomes the health minister, and Jas Johal, a first-time politician and former television reporter, is the minister of technology, innovation and citizens' services.

"The new cabinet does reflect some new perspectives based on what we heard during the election," Clark said. "The team reflects the results of listening to what voters told us in the last election."

She said last month's provincial election made two things clear: people want a government that works across party lines and one that will bridge urban and rural divides.

Clark said despite the scenario that leads to her government's defeat, the Liberals will introduce a throne speech next week.

"Our job in a vote of confidence is to present a throne speech that reflects the direction we'd like the province to take," she said. "That's the government's chance to set out for British Columbians and for every member of the house where we want to take the province."

Clark also said the government will put forward a Liberal member to serve as Speaker of the legislature, but she didn't mention who that person would be.

Parliamentary tradition holds that the government side is responsible for the Speaker's position, she said. The Speaker serves as an impartial referee during debates and can be called upon to cast votes in the event of a tie.

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BC Liberal cabinet sworn in as defeat looms for minority government - CTV News

Larks drop last two games of Liberal series | Sports | hdnews.net – Hays Daily News

The Hays Larks dropped their first completed series of the summer when the Liberal Bee Jays jumped out to an early lead and held on Sunday night at Larks Park.

After the Larks won Fridays series opener 1-0, the Bee Jays took the series with a 6-5 win Saturday before a 12-5 win Sunday.

The Larks Sunday starter, Peyton Battenfield, went 1.1 innings, allowing nine runs on as many hits. He walked two and struck out one.

The visitors took a 9-0 lead to the bottom of the third when Nick Jones got the Larks on the board with an RBI single.

Ryan Kotulek relieved Battenfield and allowed Liberal to plate two more runs on in 2.1 innings of work.

Liberal plated its 12th run in the sixth before the Hays bats got going in the late innings.

Jace Selsor, Mikey Gangwish and Trevor Boone plated runs in the seventh, making it 12-5.

Battenfield was charged with the loss in his first outing as a Lark, while Jones led the home team with a pair of hits. Liberal starter Jake Harrison tossed six innings of one-run ball. The Bee Jays out-hit the Larks 15-9 in the finale with Hays committing all three of the games errors.

Saturday was a closer affair, but the result was much the same.

Liberal again jumped out to an early lead, scoring four runs off Larks starter Walt Pennington in the first.

The Bee Jays took a 4-0 lead to the fifth before Max Remy got Hays on the board with an RBI single that scored Keone Givens.

Dylan Schneider came on for Pennington to start the sixth and saw Liberal add to its lead on a sacrifice fly. Another sacrifice in the seventh made it 6-1 Liberal.

Hays again fought back, but it was too little, too late.

An Alex Weiss single made it 6-3 in the bottom of the eighth before Trevor Boone and Clayton Rasbeary made it a one-run game with RBI singles.

The Larks were unable to put the tying run on base in the ninth.

Pennington took the loss, giving up four runs in five innings, while Johnathan Soberanes led the Larks with three hits from the leadoff spot.

Liberal tallied 13 hits on Saturday to Hays 12.

The Larks continue a lengthy home stand on Tuesday when Oklahoma City comes to town to start a three-game series.

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Larks drop last two games of Liberal series | Sports | hdnews.net - Hays Daily News

Liberal’s New Child Care Deal Could Maybe Turn Into Universal Program One Day: Duclos – Huffington Post Canada

OTTAWA The new child-care deal the Liberal government has signed with most provinces might not be a universal program, but Families Minister Jean-Yves Duclos said it couldmake way for one later down the road.

"It's an aspiration and long-term vision that is coherent with universality," Duclos said Monday after he signed a multilateral agreement with the provinces and territories, except Quebec, which decided not to join, and British Columbia, which is still working through theimpact of its recent election.

Eleonore Alamillo-Laberge, 6, left to right, Bryson Boyce-Pettes, 5, and Austin Boyce-Pettes, 5, take part in a press conference and signing ceremony as Social Development Minister Jean-Yves Duclos and P.E.I. Minister of Education, Doug Currie, meet with federal-provincial and territorial ministers responsible for "Early Learning and Child Care" in Ottawa on June 12, 2017. (Photo: Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

The Liberal government spent more than a year negotiating the deal called the Multilateral Early Learning and Child Care Framework to set out the parameters forbillions in new child care spending unveiled in the 2017 budget: quality, accessibility, affordability, flexibility and inclusivity.

Many child-care advocates, who have long pushed for a national daycare program modeled after the one that Quebec has had since 1997 where every family, no matter their income, is eligible for some form of subsidized space have pointed out that universalitywas missing from the list.

Don Giesbrecht, CEO of the Canadian Child Care Federation, said he wants to see a move towards child care being affordable and accessible for everyone, because the need extends beyond vulnerable populations.

"Accessing quality child care is an issue that affects families of all types and across all socio-economic statuses," he said.

Instead, the Liberal government chose to focus on inclusivity, targeting investments in areas they think will have the most impact, such as by increasing labour force participation among single mothers,but Duclos said that can be a step along the way.

"More inclusive child care eventually means universal child care," he said in an interview. "However, to get there, we need to proceed by steps."

Duclos said if andwhen universal daycare programs do come along, it will likely not be all at once, as the recognition that each province and territory is dealing with a different set of circumstances was key to getting them on board.

Quebec opts out

Quebec already has it, which is one reason the province decided not to join the framework, although it supports the general principles and is expected to reach a deal with the federal government to get its share of the money.

Ontario, which has the highest day-care fees in the country, announced last week that it wouldwork towards a universal system.

"It's a good sign that other provinces want to have a system like this, because at the end of the day it's very good for the economy," said Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard.

Philippe Couillard, premier of Quebec, pauses while speaking during the International Economic Forum of the Americas in Montreal, Que. on June 13, 2016. (Photo: Brent Lewin/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The framework is meant to pave the way for separate, bilateral agreements to be hammered out with the provinces and territories over the next few months, which will allow a total of $1.2 billion to flow into their coffers over the next three years.

That is part of the $7.5 billion the Liberals have promised to spend on child care over 11 years, beginning with $500 million this year and increasing to $870 million annually by 2026 in order to fund spaces or improvements in provinces and territories.

That also includes funding forindigenous child care both on and off-reserve.

As The Canadian Press reported last week, the framework stipulates that any new federal funding for child care cannot be used to displace existing money, meaning that it must be put towards creating new subsidized spaces, improving quality or other areas that fall within the guiding principles.

The Liberal government also wants the provinces and territories to prioritize investments in regulated child care for children under six.

Austin Boyce-Pettes, 5, plays prior to a press conference and signing ceremony as Social Development Minister Jean-Yves Duclos meets with federal-provincial and territorial ministers responsible for "Early Learning and Child Care" in Ottawa on Monday, June 12, 2017. (Photo: Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Still, Duclos stressed the government will make flexibility a priority for the bilateral agreements, as provinces and territories will be able to choose which specific indicators they want to focus on in order to meet their needs.

The framework outlined a few of the options that could work their way into the bilateral agreements, such as making non-traditional options such as daycares with flexible or irregular hours more available, or increasing the number of children from diverse populations, such as recent immigrants and refugees, who have access to programs geared to their needs.

Duclos said that if a province decides to emphasize qualifications and training for the child-care workforce, for example, it would benefit everyone.

"We've already been signalled that in some provinces, there will be investments that will benefit middle-class Canadians, and not only lower-income Canadians," he said.

The Liberal government has set aside $95 million of its investment to go towards improving data on day care, which Duclos said could lead to more specific goals when it comes time to renewing the agreements in 2020, as each province has to report annually on its progress.

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Liberal's New Child Care Deal Could Maybe Turn Into Universal Program One Day: Duclos - Huffington Post Canada

Liberal indoctrination in our learning institutions – Montana Standard

It has been said that children are our future, and right now the vast majority of our children are being indoctrinated in our learning institutions (Middle/High Schools and Universities). These so-called learning institutions are rapidly being turned into indoctrination centers for liberal ideas. A whole host of politicians, education officials, as well as teachers/professors are constantly injecting as much liberal propaganda as they possibly can into their classroom instructions.

Instead of learning how to think, our children are continually being told what to think. The mandated Common Core being taught is nothing more than propaganda indoctrination on a massive scale. This is why more children are being home-schooled, or attending private schools, thus avoiding leftist liberals with their dummy down propaganda agenda.

Remember Horace Mann? He is considered the founder of the modern school system, who eliminated logic and rhetoric from the curriculum with express purpose of leading our young students to a state-dependent mind-set rather than a God-centric perspective.

Is there any wonder the moral compass of our country is continuing to rapidly decline? Studies show the best school system that saves the taxpayers billions are the private schools and home-schooling, as well as having one of the highest achievement levels compared to any public school liberal academia.

Overall perspective: The issue in todays education is indeed a compliant mindset and negative impression of competition and success. Review the Timms Report and see where the U.S. compares to other nations of the world in education. Liberal indoctrination takes far less effort and learning than critical thinking and gives an intellectually compliant product. After the next generation the U.S. will live in an academic cesspool while China, Japan, Germany (just to name a few) will leave the U.S. academic sewage to be the model of how to fail.

Sadly, the socialist liberal progressive, politically correct liberal idiot-logical indoctrination camps that masquerade as public schools inculcating our youth instead of instructing them on what they need to know to be productive and responsible citizens.

Lincoln once stated that America could never be destroyed from outside. He said, If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves.

Liberals have taken advantage of the apathy and complacency of American citizens and are working to insure that we never recover the skills, knowledge or wisdom that made this country what it once was!

--Kevin H. Brown, Senior Chief, U.S. Navy (Ret), Dillon.Brown retired after serving 41 years in the U.S. government; Navy Senior Chief (27 Years), DOD contractor and EPA (15 years).

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Liberal indoctrination in our learning institutions - Montana Standard

When a liberal power lawyer represents the Trump family, things can … – Washington Post

Four decades ago, soon after a president of the United States interfered in an investigation of his actions, a young lawyer named Jamie Gorelick was assigned her first big case. Gorelick, raised in a liberal Long Island household, would defend Richard Nixon as he fought the governments efforts to control his White House papers.

The work was exhilarating. But there she was, an activist for womens rights working for a president she had fought against, a president her friends considered beyond the pale. When Nixon came to her firms office and offered to have his picture taken with the attorneys working on his case, Gorelick made herself scarce.

Four decades later, Gorelick, now one of Washingtons most prominent lawyers, once again represents famous clients who symbolize much of what she and her friends have spent their lives working against. When Gorelick signed up Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump the presidents close advisers, as well as his son-in-law and daughter as clients, she knew her friends might raise their collective eyebrows. She didnt know that some of them would call her a turncoat.

For generations, the premier D.C. lawyer-fixers were lions of the bar, permanent power players in a city where influence can vanish in a moment. Men such as Clark Clifford, A.B. Culvahouse Jr., Edward Bennett Williams, Howard Baker, Lloyd Cutler and Robert Strauss smoothly glided across the great divide, amassing thoroughly bipartisan client rosters.

But now Gorelick, one of the first women to join that elite club of lawyers, finds herself under attack for taking on a share of the Trump familys legal woes. Whether that reflects the cynicism and polarization of the times, or results from the particular antagonism between the Trumps and the city they promised to drain, the reaction has been painful.

In the most public slap, Hilary Rosen, a prominent Democratic strategist and lobbyist, tweeted, Hey Jamie Gorelick, youve just poured that Complicit perfume on yourself, a reference to a Saturday Night Live parody ad that imagined an Ivanka Trump-branded scent. (Rosen declined to elaborate on the tweet, saying only, It is what it is.)

Representing Jared and Ivanka is a case of pushing the ethical envelope, helping a wealthy family on the brink of using the presidency to further enrich themselves, said David Halperin, a speechwriter in the Clinton White House and former counsel to the Senate Intelligence Committee. Gorelick is a Clinton supporter embracing the family that wanted to put Hillary Clinton in jail. People in Washington are all too willing to forgive that.

This being Washington, some of Gorelicks critics tuck their attacks behind the cloak of anonymity. Do you want to be seen as a fixer available to all or a fixer for principles you believe in? said a lawyer who has worked with Gorelick on campaigns since the Clinton and Gore era. One probably pays better than the other, but every step you take has consequences.

In a quintessentially D.C. move, some longtime friends of Gorelick contacted for this article offered complimentary comments about her on the record, and then, after asking if they could make other remarks without attribution, bashed their colleague to smithereens. Those people will not be quoted in this article, by name or anonymously, as one tiny bulwark against outright awfulness.

For the first time, Jamies getting irrational criticism from her fellow liberals, who think that if you represent anyone associated with the other side, you must be a Republican in hiding, said Alan Dershowitz, Gorelicks mentor at Harvard Law School and a friend ever since. Jamie is obviously a liberal Democrat, but this is not a betrayal. Jamie is being patriotic and heroic and consistent with the best traditions of the bar. We have to resist zealotry on both sides.

Ethically, Gorelick has every right to represent Kushner and his wife. The legal profession has celebrated attorneys who take on unpopular clients since the American Revolution. In 1770, when John Adams agreed to defend British soldiers who shot American rebels in the Boston Massacre, he invited a torrent of criticism. As he later wrote, defending the Soldiers procured me Anxiety and Obloquy enough. It was, however, one of the most gallant, generous, manly and disinterested Actions of my whole Life.

At 67, Gorelick, who served as deputy attorney general under President Bill Clinton, commands a breathtaking view of the city from her top-floor corner office at WilmerHale, the Pennsylvania Avenue NW firm where a gentle waterfall in the lobby greets power players whove found themselves in rough currents. She worked on Hillary Clintons campaign, vetting potential Cabinet members, and she was still mourning when she got a call from an old colleague, asking if she might take on the ethical questions about whether and how Kushner and his wife could work for Donald Trumps administration.

The questions seemed most interesting, Gorelick said. Whoever thinks theyre going to opine on the anti-nepotism law? And we are a very consciously bipartisan firm. However, I dont think we had anyone in the firm who was a supporter of Donald Trump.

She now also is advising Kushner as he navigates the media frenzy over the investigations into the Trump campaigns contacts with Russia.

Gorelick, a former head of the D.C. Bar, said she doesnt put my clients through a political litmus test. Indeed, people and businesses in serious trouble gravitate to her like flies to a light bulb. BP hired her after the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster. She represented the Clinton Foundation against conservative gadfly Larry Klayman. The student loan industry brought her in to lobby against the Obama administrations drive to overhaul the business.

Through it all, she has continued her work for liberal causes.

When my clients hired me, they knew who I was, Gorelick said. She has kept Kushner and his wife informed as she continues to handle matters that push back against the Trump administration.

Gorelicks firm charges as much as $1,250 an hour for its top lawyers time, but among the clients she represents for free is Tahirih Justice Center, a nonprofit that serves immigrant women who are fleeing from violence. Gorelick recently worked for Tahirih on a challenge against President Trumps plan to strip local governments of their ability to declare themselves sanctuary cities for illegal immigrants.

I sent the brief to Ivanka and Jared just so they would know, this is what your lawyer is doing, Gorelick said.

Her clients were fine with the division between what Gorelick does in her day job and what she does as a political activist. Some of her friends, not so much. And that, Gorelick said, has been hurtful. Im not an advocate for the Trump administration; I take hard cases. She said representing members of the Trump family will not hinder her from working for the Democratic cause. She even hosted family and friends who came to Washington earlier this year to march against the new president.

The Trump administration has made people unusually uneasy, to say the least, she said.

The controversy surrounding Gorelicks decision comes as Washingtons legal industry still huge but in recent years facing severe financial challenges struggles to adapt to a thin-skinned president with a long history of using the courts to press grudges. As ever, D.C. lawyers are scrambling to make connections with the new administration, but this time, that effort has caused unusual tensions.

Holland & Knight, one of the citys largest firms, lost the head of its media practice group, Charles Tobin, when he jumped last week to another firm after 16 years because, he said, I was told in no uncertain terms that I could not sue this president. As an attorney who represents media clients in conflicts with the government, Tobin said he could no longer work at a firm that wanted to be in a position to help clients do business with the Trump administration and thought that being in an adversarial position with this president would hinder that ability.

Tobin, who will now co-chair the media practice at Ballard Spahr, said Holland & Knight had no such concerns about previous presidents. I sued President Obama, I sued President Bush, I represented journalists against other administrations without any problem, he said.

Paul Kiernan, executive partner at Holland & Knights Washington office, said in a statement that the firm has a long history of representing clients, including media clients, in matters adverse to governmental agencies and officials. ... Contrary to some recent reports, the firm has not adopted a policy limiting our work on specific types of engagements.

Another Washington firm Morgan, Lewis & Bockius lost a client because the firm decided to represent Trump in his effort to comply with government ethics requirements.

Scott Wallace, a trustee of the Wallace Global Fund, a nonprofit that had spent about $400,000 on legal help from Morgan Lewis since 2011, said he terminated the funds relationship with the firm because by helping Trump handle potential conflicts of interest between his family business and his job as president, the firm had legitimized a complete non-solution that empowers and even encourages impeachable offenses.

The law firm declined to comment; a person familiar with Morgan Lewiss relationship with Wallace said the firms attorneys also helped Hillary Clinton vet her potential vice presidential candidates and continue to work for clients opposed to Trump policies.

The criticism of Gorelick is a symptom of the nations sharp political divisions, said Melvyn Fein, a sociologist at Kennesaw State University in Georgia. When you have more polarization in Washington than in a long, long time, the first reaction of many people is to double down, to insist on purity. Everybody gets so concerned about proving how pure they are that they eat their own, he said.

People in politics need both principle and flexibility, Fein said. If youre a hired gun, youre being hired for your skill, not your principles. And thats a reasonable thing in this world, to hire yourself out for your skills. That doesnt preclude having principles.

Most objections to Gorelicks decision are less ethical than political. I know a number of people who have said that anything that helps Trump in any way is heretical to my values, said Ricki Seidman, a veteran of the Clinton White House and a strategic adviser to many Democratic politicians. But I dont think personalizing the polarization has any value. If you look at it just politically, then let [Kushner and Ivanka Trump] sink. But if you care about the country, look at what Mark Warner and others are doing to bring people together. Warner, the Democratic senator from Virginia, has worked closely with Republican Sen. Richard Burr (N.C.) to craft a bipartisan approach for the Senate Intelligence Committees investigation into connections between Russia and the Trump campaign.

Many lawyers, even those who have dedicated their careers to political causes, defend Gorelicks work with Kushner, if only because in legal circles, its gauche to judge lawyers by their clients.

It wouldnt occur to anyone to criticize someone who goes to work on behalf of indigent clients, said Judith Lichtman, a longtime friend of Gorelick and for many years president of the National Partnership for Women and Families. Im the purest girl around, but what I believe is pure is different from what somebody else does. Jamie is holding her principles near and dear, because she is always honest and ethical and she devotes herself not only to her paying clients, but to people who are unserved by the legal profession.

If youre at a mission-driven non-profit, you put your principles front and center, said Marcia Greenberger, co-president of the National Womens Law Center. But in a major private law firm, there are different considerations. Theres a big difference between I wouldnt do that and She shouldnt.

Gorelicks only regret is that the political atmosphere has grown so fractious that the kind of bipartisanship that allows her to represent Kushner and still work on cases involving challenges to the Trump administration is now looked on with suspicion in some quarters.

She recalled her time on the 9/11 Commission, when 10 people appointed from both parties tried to determine why the attacks happened and what went wrong. Determined to come up with a unanimous report, the commission avoided nettlesome language.

We rejected calling what happened a clash of civilizations, Gorelick said. We rejected any notion of a war on Islam. That all came from what I would call the sensible middle. How are you ever going to get that in an environment where people insist on a kind of political purity?

She teared up, reached for a tissue, and, with her voice cracking, she added, It would be a travesty for this country to go down that road. I believe in the facts. I believe in the law. I believe if you follow that system, you will get to a fair result. I dont see that changing. Even now.

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When a liberal power lawyer represents the Trump family, things can ... - Washington Post

Think Your Liberal Governor Will Protect You From Trumpcare? You’re Wrong. – Mother Jones

If the GOP health care bill passes, even progressive states could be forced into rolling back protections for preexisting conditions.

Patrick CaldwellJun. 12, 2017 6:00 AM

A Save Obamacare rally in Los Angeles, California on March 23, 2017.Ronen Tivony/ZUMA

When House Republicans passed a controversial health care bill that would allow states to opt out of Obamacares protections for people with preexisting conditions, some GOP lawmakers sought to assure voters that few states would actually take them up on the offer. Its very unlikely that any governor of any state will remove the preexisting conditions clause, Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), a member of the House leadership team, told NPR. Thoseprotections, after all, areone of the most popular partsof the 2010 health care law;70 percent of Americans oppose the idea of letting states do away with them.

But in interviews withMother Jones, health care experts warn that Cole is wrong: If the GOP bill becomes law, many states will indeed eliminate preexisting-condition protections and/or at least some of Obamacares requirements that insurance planscovera range of standard treatments, including maternity care and mental health. And it wouldnt just be states that voted for President Donald Trump. Under the GOP bill, evenprogressive statesmight have to take drastic measures to prevent theirhealth insurance markets from exploding.

In order to win over hardcore conservatives in the House, Republican leadersadded an amendment to their Obamacare repeal legislationthat could have dramatic consequences. The amendment would allow any state to rewrite Obamacares essential health benefits. States could also end community rating, the requirement that insurance companies charge the same premiums in a given area without discriminating against folks with preexisting conditions. If a state waived community rating, insurance companies would still be required to sell insurance policies to sick people, but the insurers could charge whatever price theywanted.The likely result: Insurance would simply become unaffordable for people with expensive medical conditions.

Experts say stateswould likely face enormous pressure to adopt at least some of the waiver options. In part, that wouldarise from insurance companylobbying;the industry spent tens of millions lobbying at the federal level in 2016 alone.But the basic market dynamics created by the GOPbill would play a role as well,potentially creating an industrydeath spiral if states refuse to allow price discrimination based on health conditions. Insurers would be putting pressure on states, saying, We cant operate in this market. We wont participate at all unless you start rolling back these protections,' says says Edwin Park, vice president for health policy at the liberal-leaningCenter on Budget and Policy Priorities.

Insurance companies would face an immediate crunch if the Republican bill became law. The legislationends Obamacares individual mandate this year, removing a majorincentive for healthy people to buy insurance. The bill also reduces the amount of money the government offers in subsidies to help lower-income people pay their premiums. With less help fromthe government, healthy people would have even more reason not to buyinsurance.

Before Obamacare, state insurance markets were lightly regulated, with 47 states and the District of Columbia allowing insurers to charge sicker people higherrates. The reason was simple: Unless you compelled healthy people to buy insurance and spent money to help them afford their premiums, there was no way to make premiums affordable while also charging everyone the same rate. The GOPbill would make the math even more daunting, since it would repeal Obamacares individual mandatewhile still requiring companiesto sell insuranceto anyone who wants it.If insurers cant charge sick people more under the scenario, they will likely end up charging everyone more, which, in turn, would drive even more healthy people out of the market. That would drive premiums even higher, causing the market to become unsustainable.

Most carrierslooking at a market where you have to take all comers, and theres no mandate and theres much smaller subsidiesmost carriers are going to look at that bargain and say this is not a viable market for us unless the state takes up this waiver option, says Sabrina Corlette, a professor at Georgetown Universitys Health Policy Institute.

While insurance companies arent fans of many of the Republicans other proposed changes, the waiver options are the sort of policy that the industry has generally been asking for, notes Linda Blumberg,a senior fellow in the Health Policy Center at the Urban Institute. They wanted fewer requirements on benefits. They wanted to design and tailor benefits to particular consumers as they did before. And they wanted to be able to do medical underwriting, Blumberg says. So these waivers would be popular with the core, the mass of the industry. Its how they did business before. Its how they see that they can keep their costs down.

So far, no governors haverushed forward to say theyd eagerly ditch preexisting-condition protections. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) briefly suggested he would take a look at the waiver options, but he immediately walked that back as a backlash began to brew. But even the governors currently saying they would never touch preexisting conditions might find themselves ina different position a few years down the line when insurance companies threaten to leave the state unless lawmakers change the rules and weaken regulations.

Its a Hobbesian bargain, Corlette explains. Either you are faced with major carriers leaving the market entirelywhich means that both healthy and sick people would lose coverageor taking up these waivers that would almost certainly mean that sicker people lose access to coverage. I think many state-level policymakers will look at that bargain and say, Well, I want at least some people to get coverage, and so well take up these waivers and give insurers some ability to protect themselves against the highest of high-cost enrollees.'

And it wont just be the insurance companies asking for these changes. Aspremiums rise, healthy people could also prove to be a powerful lobbying bloc. At any particular moment in time you have more healthy people living in your state than sick people, thats just the way of the world, Blumberg says. The shear numbers disparity could sway lawmakers otherwise inclined to helppeople with preexisting conditions. When youve got the bigger chunk of your population agitating in one direction because affordability has decreased, and youve got insurers moving in the same direction to reduce their risk and be able to sell more policies to more people, its a pretty powerful combined force, Blumberg says.

When the Congressional Budget Office analyzed the GOPs bill last month, it estimated that half of Americanswould live in states that adopted a waiver to tinker with the definition of essential benefits. An additional one-sixth of the country would live in states that changed the preexisting-condition ban. The CBO projects that premiums across the country would at first rise much higher under the GOP bill than under current law20 percent higher in 2018, and then 5 percent higher in 2019. That trend would change as states begin implementing the waivers. Starting in 2020average premiums would depend in part on any waivers granted to states and on how those waivers were implemented and in part on what share of the funding available from the Patient and State Stability Fund was applied to premium reduction, the CBOs stated.

But the CBO only looked at the first decade of the laws existence. Every health expert Mother Jones contacted noted that the pressures on state markets will only grow as time goes by. The problem will become especially acute starting in 2026, when the state stability funda pot of money the bill would provide tostates to addressvarious problemstotally dries up.

You wouldnt see all these progressive states going after a waiver in year one, but within a couple of years after that I think you would, Blumberg says. The tension and frustration of consumers would start emerging quite quickly, so changes might happen in a year, or it might take a couple of years. But then youre really in a situation that is not going to make anybody happy.

Mother Jones is a nonprofit, and stories like this are made possible by readers like you. Donate or subscribe to help fund independent journalism.

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Think Your Liberal Governor Will Protect You From Trumpcare? You're Wrong. - Mother Jones

Pope Francis is not a liberal – The Week Magazine

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Two days ago I ordered for my living room a framed portrait of His Holiness Pope Francis, Bishop of Rome, Sovereign of Vatican City, and 226th Supreme Pontiff of the Catholic Church. It is evidence of what strange times we are living in that my decision to hang the pope's picture, once a staple of dining rooms and parlors the world round, will be regarded by many of my fellow Catholics as a regrettable home dcor move at best.

I am not one of those ultramontantist Catholics who pretend that every word that falls from the papal lips is a piece of heaven-sent wisdom to be cherished, but I do believe that the pope is Christ's Vicar on Earth and that he deserves our affection every bit as much as he demands our obedience. We call him by the familiar title of "Papa" because he is our spiritual father; dumping on your father in public is not a good look.

This is not to say that I am not concerned about the well-being of the Church under Francis. So far from feeling sanguine, I believe that the Church is more than half a century into her worst climacteric since the Reformation, a period of doctrinal chaos and pastoral uncertainty comparable to the Arian crisis of the fourth century. I also maintain that this crisis is the direct result of the promulgation of the Novus Ordo Mass, which I hope to see disappear in my lifetime and replaced with the old Roman Rite of St. Pius V in its ancient fullness. I am not, in other words, a happy-clappy liberal Catholic.

But neither is Pope Francis.

Indeed, I would go so far as to say that both of his predecessors, St. John Paul II and Benedict XVI, had more of the saccharine "Spirit of Vatican II" about them than Francis has. The current pope is a hard-headed practical man, with no illusions about human nature. Nor is he much of an intellectual, though his environmental encyclical Laudato si' is one of the most important pieces of theological writing to have appeared in my lifetime.

His is a decidedly peasant spirituality of intense Marian devotion. He loathes pomposity with the fervor of his ascetic namesake, St. Francis of Assisi. While he is famous for not getting on well with mainstream traditionalists like me, the so-called rigorists and doctors of the law whom he has subjected to endless (and sometimes deserved) ridicule, he clearly has a soft spot for the much-maligned Society of St. Pius X, whose founder was shamefully and perhaps invalidly excommunicated by John Paul II. His gradual reintroduction of these battered and pious misfits into the wider life of the Church is the answer to many prayers.

Much of the opposition to Francis is ostensibly a response to another of his missions of mercy, namely his streamlining of the annulment process, and what some consider his loosey-goosey views about admitting Catholics who have been civilly divorced and remarried to Holy Communion. I agree that in the hands of unscrupulous bishops in Europe and parts of the United States Francis's earnest entreaties for pastoral understanding of difficult situations could be used to justify sacrilege. But I am also realistic. Outside the neoconservative diocesan enclave of Northern Virginia where many of the pope's American critics live, the reality on the ground in many parishes in this country already resembles their fever dreams. At the parish in rural Michigan where my family attended Mass when I was in middle school, the lector most Sundays was a divorced and remarried Freemason. No one attended confession. Virtually everyone receiving the sacraments did so illicitly, with the full encouragement of the pastor. The worst has already come to pass, yet the Church somehow survives, just as Our Lord promised St. Peter it would.

These concerns about sacramental discipline would also be more credible if they were not accompanied by a frenetic, omnidirectional antipathy to Francis the man. Ostensibly traditionalist Catholic journalists subject the pope's every utterance to a kind of graspingly paranoid scrutiny; the most innocuous line from a homily is taken as evidence of a sinister mission to undermine and ultimately destroy the Church. Meanwhile, an eager chorus of anonymous whisperers echo their delusional claims and flatter them for their keen faculties of observation.

Far and away the worst piece of Francis baiting I have encountered so far is The Political Pope: How Pope Francis Is Delighting the Liberal Left and Abandoning Conservatives, a new book by an American journalist called George Neumayr. Crude, feverish, vague, poorly written, full of tabloid speculation, and hysterical prejudices with no basis in Catholic doctrine, this thinly sourced fire-breathing manifesto is, not to put too fine a point on it, one of the most absurd books I have ever read. Set aside for a moment the ludicrous conceit of treating the affairs of the Church in the crudely reductive categories of American politics as interpreted by talk radio (is Tim Kaine really "the left"?); the whole idea of a layman writing a book-length attack on the pope is ridiculous on its face, no matter how subtle its method. What could be more loathsome in the mouth of a Catholic than to repeat slanders of His Holiness made by Rush Limbaugh, a four-times-married childless serial philanderer who believes abortion is a states-rights issue?

The painful but delicious truth is that it is Neumayr and his followers who must answer to the charge of liberalism. It is they who believe that the clichs of the Republican Party have a higher claim on their consciences than the words of popes and bishops and that the hideous sorcery of neoliberal economists invalidates the Church's immortal teachings about usury, the just wage, the maintenance of the poor, and our duties to be prudent stewards of God's creation. That old saw about the mote in thine own eye has never been more appropriate.

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Pope Francis is not a liberal - The Week Magazine

Pitts: Why would a privileged, white, liberal male say that? – The Columbian

A A

Leonard Pitts Jr.

Heres a good rule of thumb for aspiring comics. Whenever you are compelled to say, Hey, it was a joke, it probably wasnt. At the very least, it didnt land like one.

Bill Maher is an accomplished comic, not an aspiring one, but he deftly illustrated that rule recently on his HBO show, Real Time with Bill Maher.

As youve surely heard, Maher was interviewing Republican Sen. Ben Sasse, who invited him to come to Nebraska and work in the fields with us. Mahers riposte? Work in the fields? Senator, Im a house n-r.

Some people including Sasse laughed. Some groaned. Its a joke, said Maher with a dismissive wave of his hand.

A day later, he issued a statement proclaiming himself very sorry.

Which is well and good, but it doesnt answer the most vital question: Where did he get the idea that word was OK for him to say?

Yes, he has a constitutionally protected right to do so; thats not at issue.

One simply wonders where he got the notion he could get away with it. Maybe its the same place he got the notion he could get away with calling Sarah Palin a ct back in 2011?

Maher, of course, is just the latest high-profile comedic fail. Kathy Griffin is still smarting from the beating she took for a jarringly offensive picture of her holding up a prop meant to look like the bloody, severed head of Donald Trump.

But ugly as that joke was, it is of a different kind than Mahers transgression.

What he did is more of a piece with Stephen Colberts homophobic quip about Trumps mouth and Vladimir Putins man parts. Or his old Ching Chong Ding Dong routine, which offended many Asian Americans.

It calls to mind Seth MacFarlanes sexist We Saw Your Boobs song at the 2013 Oscars, which appalled many women. And Daniel Toshs 2012 joke about an audience member being raped.

We are not here to argue whether those men are or are not racist, sexist or homophobic. Thats immaterial.

No, we are here to deconstruct the sense of privileged, white, male, liberal entitlement that allows them to feel they can say and do such things in the first place.

Yes, humor is rude, comedy is shock and funny is whatever works on a given night.

Yes, satire is the art of undermining an asinine belief or behavior by magnifying or pretending to agree with it.

Yes, the business of laughter is the business of crossing that completely subjective, always moving line of decorum and propriety.

And yes, occasional failure is inevitable.

Ask Kathy Griffin.

But with all that duly conceded, imagine for a moment it was Rush Limbaugh who made Bill Mahers joke or Sean Hannity who sang Seth MacFarlanes song. The right wing is known for its hostility toward African-Americans and women, so the outrage would have been visceral, immediate and loud.

Many of us would have rightly decried jokes that bully and demean marginalized peoples.

Yet that fury feels muted or altogether absent when such jokes are told by the left-leaning likes of MacFarlane and Maher.

Lacking the right wings baggage of racial and gender hostility, they escape or expect to escape relatively unscathed.

But why? Because theyre on our side? Because theyre just joking?

Those of us who are marginalized and those who simply care may want to rethink that blank check forbearance, given that a smarmy white comic feels free to declare himself a house n-r.

If your ancestry traces to slavery, you might well ask: Is this guy laughing with us or at us? And thats the problem.

These days, its hard to tell.

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Pitts: Why would a privileged, white, liberal male say that? - The Columbian

Why Good Journalism is Liberal – San Diego Free Press

Credit: Paste Magazine

By Bill Adams

Mainstream news media has long been accused of having a liberal bias. Some studies have supported this belief. Liberal bias may be inherent in news journalism for reasons that arent flattering to conservatives.

Defining Liberal and Conservative.While political views are neither immutable nor binary, certain characteristics have remained relatively consistent. Broadly speaking, liberal policies support labor, equality and a strong social safety net, strong public institutions, progressive taxation, diplomacy and the avoidance of military conflict, and protection of the environment.

Conservatives emphasize protection of business interests, military strength, lower and flatter taxation, deregulation of the economy, and privatism. Even more generally, conservatives tend to emphasize trickle-down or supply-side economics and liberals in trickle-up or demand-side (or Keynesian) economics. Conservatism, in its definition, is conservation of the status quo. It tends toward preserving the existing economic and social hierarchy.

In contrast, the first definition of liberal in the Oxford Living Dictionary, means [w]illing to respect or accept behaviour or opinions different from ones own; open to new ideas. Liberalism is often focused on change to gain parity and rights for those who are disadvantaged by the existing hierarchy.

To begin with, Journalism particularly investigative or news journalism is the investigation, understanding, and dissemination of facts and information via news media. The First Amendment ensuring freedom of the press was intended to act as a check on power and was uniquely made to empower the general public.

Similarly, the definition of liberal, with its emphasis on respecting different opinions and being open to new ideas is essentially what freedom of the press is all about; and what makes freedom of the press a threat to conserving the entrenched powers. Thus, to the extent that liberal has generally aligned with equality and speaking truth to power, journalism is an inherently a liberal endeavor.

A Washington Post opinion piece supported the conclusion that more journalists tend to lean to the left politically than to the right, quoting retired Indiana University journalism professor David H. Weaver. (For a countervailing journalist tendency, see false balance.) The piece ventured several theories for liberal bias, ranging from the source of new journalist hiring (liberal Northeastern colleges) to the location of major media outlets in liberal cities. Most of these reasons could be categorized as extrinsic causes and assume that but for these influences, journalism would appear more politically neutral.

However, the article missed perhaps the most obvious and significant reason for journalisms appearance of liberal bias. Unlike the reasons ventured in the article, which likely have some merit, the most significant reason is intrinsic to journalism. The reason itself sounds biased: Good journalism and liberal/progressive values align more closely than do good journalism and conservative values. Good journalism is intrinsically a liberal endeavor.

The broad definition of journalism simply means the occupation of reporting, writing, editing, photographing, or broadcasting news or of conducting any news organization as a business. This definition includes tabloid journalism as well as truth or fact-based journalism.

However, with the evolution of news journalism, the profession came to adopt various codes of ethics. Wikipedia notes that these codes tend to have the following principles in common: truthfulness, accuracy, objectivity, impartiality, fairness, and public accountability. Thus, the term good journalism is shorthand for journalism guided by journalistic ethics.

More in-depth understanding of issues inevitably leads to more nuanced and complex views, or views that challenge the status quo and conventional wisdom. More often than not, a fuller understanding of an issue will tend to align with liberal values. Consider the following categories:

Profiles of individuals or groups of people: A fuller understanding of a person or group, particularly those who are undergoing great difficulty, will typically result in some level of compassion. Additionally, compassion can temper or replace previously held prejudice or resentment. Thus, good journalism, to the extent it evokes compassion and challenges conventional prejudices through greater understanding will appear to have a liberal bias.

Environment: Scientific data consistently supports the need to preserve and restore the environment. Environmental conservation has consistently been more a liberal cause than a conservative one. Thus, fact-based journalism on this topic will appear to have a liberal bias.

Business and the Economy: While conservatives tend to think of themselves as economic pragmatists, the economy tends to be a much more neutral proposition. The arguments for Keynesian economic policies and Friedman or Supply-side economics dont favor conservatives. Moreover, supply-side economic policies have a poor track record for balancing the national debt or balancing the budget. Regulations are another common target of conservatives. However, any serious discussion will acknowledge that regulations are also important to sustaining the economy, protecting competition, and preventing financial disasters. Thus, good journalism in topics of business and the economy should appear relatively neutral.

Sports: Perhaps the only topic in which reporting is generally deemed apolitical.

International Affairs and Conflict: Nationalism is a substantial part of most military conflicts. Nationalism, aka patriotism, most often comes from the conservative wing. At the same time, passivism has not proven to be a good defense against the military aggressions of other countries. Thus, journalism in this topic should appear relatively neutral. Nevertheless, decisions to engage in military conflict often involve behind the scene agendas that run contrary to the popular narrative. Additionally, the carnage and human toll of war undermine patriotic narratives of heroism and purity of purpose. These topics are central to reporting on military conflicts, and thus give the appearance of liberal bias.

Generally speaking, the liberal mainstream media has not had a liberal agenda dictated from its ownership or management more often the contrary has been true. This circumstance has changed somewhat as media outlets have attempted to emulate the success of Fox News by repositioning themselves as its liberal equivalent, e.g., MSNBC.

However, for the most part, mainstream media has attempted to adhere to journalistic ethics of objectivity, neutrality, and seeking truth. Reporting has been influenced by public opinion and the topics of interest of the period. For example, in the 1980s when media often focused on topics that remain at the core of conservative beliefs excess government spending (remember the $600 dollar toilet seats) or welfare cheats they were still accused of having a liberal bias.

However, the perceived liberal bias emanates as much from the nature of journalism as anything else. At the time, those stories were as much about speaking truth to power, and thus liberal, as current reporting is about Trumps excesses.

Thus, media entities which concern themselves with journalistic ethics, objectivity, and the pursuit of truth, will always appear to have a liberal bias.

If good journalism is inherently liberal, what is conservative journalism? This is not meant to be a rhetorical question because conservative journalism is not necessarily bad journalism. It can be sincere and high-level journalism, as in the case of the National Review or the Weekly Standard. Its just not investigative or news journalism. Its opinion and analysis. In these latter two publications, its not meant to be objective reporting any more than is Mother Jones or The Nation.

In almost all major conservative media outlets, the bias comes from on-high in the organization. All conservative bias in media is dictated from the top down. Objectivity is not part of the program.

Such media outlets come in different forms. There are the aforementioned conservative intellectual publications, which focus on opinion and analysis. Then there are populist and tabloid publications. The Murdoch (21st Century Fox and News Corp.) publications like Fox News and Wall Street Journal are particularly interesting. They pretend to be objective but adhere to a strict top-down conservative agenda. The opinion and commentary sections are obvious.

Less obvious is the news reporting, in which the bias is accomplished by filtering news that is reported so that it supports the conservative agenda. Fox is famous for its laughably false claim to be fair and balanced. The Wall Street Journal recently encountered internal dissension when management sought to influence the way its staff reported on Trump.

Fox News, in particular, has been extremely successful and profitable. It applies many of the strategies Rupert Murdoch learned in his Australian and British tabloid publications, The Daily Telegraph and The Sun. Murdoch, and his former Fox CEO Roger Ailes, recognized that these strategies could be successfully combined with a populist brand of conservatism by provoking white resentment and fears.

Thus, unlike the Weekly Standard and the National Review, Fox News seems less concerned with serving an ideology than with exploiting it for profit. The country and even the Republican Partys agenda have paid dearly for Murdochs exploitation of populist conservatism.

As for publications like Breitbart or radio commentators like Rush Limbaugh or Alex Jones: no reasonable person goes to these outlets for news. They are ideological rallying sources.

Thus, in that conservative journalism intentionally as part of its program discards the journalistic ethical canons of objectivity and unvarnished truth, it is not journalism as we have come to expect from real news outlets.

Freedom of the press is a liberal value. It preserves the right to speak truth to power. It is the common citizens check on the powerful. Conservatives endeavor mightily to reframe their cause as that of the common citizen against the elites. But that unnatural distortion is never sustainable.

The current alliance of Republican billionaires and the white working class attacks educators and subject matter experts (elites), people of color, and immigrants; and thus is still an alliance of the more privileged against the less privileged. In the end analysis, conservatives always support the existing privileged class; and it is the purpose of the First Amendment to check abuses of power by that class.

In the current political climate, populist conservatism is open in its disdain for academics and scientists as intellectual elites, and racial and cultural sensitivity as political correctness, and compassion as bleeding heart liberalism. Thus, now more than ever, good journalism journalism that seeks truth and evokes understanding, tolerance, and compassion is inherently liberal.

Bill Adams is the founder and chief editor of UrbDeZine. He is also a partner in the San Diego law firm of Norton, Moore, & Adams, LLP. He has been involved with land use and urban renewal for nearly 25 years, both as a professional and as a personal passion. He currently sits on the Boards of San Diego Historic Streetcars, The San Diego Architectural Foundation, The Food and Beverage Association of San Diego County, andThe Gaslamp Quarter Association Land Use Planning Committee.

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Pointing fingers in Point Douglas: NDP blames Liberals after signs disappear – CBC.ca

The provincial New Democratic Party has filed a complaint with both the Winnipeg Police Service and Elections Manitoba, allegingthe Liberals are behind the disappearance of hundreds of campaign signs.

In a letter to elections commissioner Bill Bowles, NDP secretary Keith Bellamywrote about BernadetteSmith's campaign officegetting a complaint from a constituent about his sign being stolen.

Osvaldo Pena told CBC he saw three people near his house taking an NDP sign he had perched on his front lawn Thursday evening.

He said he was driving with his grandson around 8:30 p.m. when he noticed three men standing on a sidewalk in front of his house. Pena said the men had about eight or nine NDP signs in their hands, so he decided to confront them.

"I told them I need it back." He said that's when the men told him he'd have to buy his sign if he wanted it back.

"I said what do you mean, that's mine. He said well, there's a place where they pay $2 for the small one and $5 for the big one. And Isaid yeah, but that one is mine!"

Pena said he then reported the incident to NDP campaign headquarters who then sent a staffer out to search for the men.

He said they found the men and one said he was getting paid to take the signs to 275 Selkirk Avenue. The Liberal Party's campaign office for Point Douglas is located at 271 Selkirk Avenue.

NDP secretary Keith Bellamy says the Bernadette Smith campaign has lost 'an extraordinary' number of signs. (CBC News)

In the NDP's letter to the elections commissioner, Bellamy wrote "Our campaign staff member approached the individual and the attached link to video was filmed during that conversation. In the video, the individual in question said that he is receiving $5 for every large sign and $2 for every small sign that he delivers to 271 Selkirk Ave., the address of the Liberal Party campaign office for Point Douglas."

Bellamy estimates the Smith campaign has lost as many 450 signs at a cost of approximately $6,000.

Liberal Party presidentPaul Braultissued a statement about the allegations Sunday night, saying "The Manitoba Liberal Party does not condone the theft of campaign signs and we have not engaged in this activity."

The Manitoba Liberal Party denied the allegations. (CBC News)

"We believe this allegation is [a] last ditch attempt by the NDP to sway voters that they have lost. This allegation isis precisely the kind of behaviour that we are working hard to change. Every day we hear how much people in this area want change and this is an example of the type of politics that the people of Point Douglas have grown weary of," the statement said.

Brault said as of Sunday evening, the party hadnot received official notification from the Manitoba commissioner of elections about a complaint. He encouraged anyone who witnesses the theft of any campaign materials to contact police.

The NDP say they've lost nearly $6,000 in campaigns signs in Point Douglas election. (CBC News)

A spokesperson for PC candidate JodiMoskalacknowledges her campaign has lost signs, but not in the numbers the NDP are alleging.

"The PC campaign in Point Douglas has received a record number of sign requests during the byelection and we have had to replace approximately 100 of those signs due to theft or vandalism. Theft of election signs is illegal, and goes against the spirit of a free and fair election process. We condemn any individual or group who partakes in that type of activity," said a Moskal campaign spokesperson.

Bellamy said the signs' disappearance has hurt the NDP's Point Douglas campaign.

"It could potentially create a perception that there is less support than may actually exist, but from the campaign perspective for us it's a significant cost when signs go missing. Certainly when they go missing by the hundreds,"Bellamytold CBC News.

"In my experience this is an extraordinary number of signs. I don't want to claim that the candidate or specific people are engineering this, but it certainly seems that when you are looking at numbers in the 450 range of signs going down, that there is some consistent if notco-ordinatedeffort,"Bellamysaid.

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Pointing fingers in Point Douglas: NDP blames Liberals after signs disappear - CBC.ca

Theresa May must stand up for gay rights, reproductive rights and liberal values – The Independent

The last time this country had a hung parliament, David Cameron and Nick Clegg made brave decisions that, somewhat surprisingly, delivered strong and stable government for five years. We should not be fooled into thinking that this hung parliament is comparable. This time, the 1970s offer a better, and less auspicious, precedent.

We mean no disrespect to the voters of Northern Ireland when we point out that most of the population of the United Kingdom have reservations about some of the policies of the Democratic Unionist Party.

We can accept the logic of support for Brexit providing the glue that would keep a deal together between the Conservatives and the DUP. Although it should be pointed out that in Northern Ireland the majority voted to remain in the EU, and that the DUP is just as opposed to the imposition of a hard border between the North and the Republic as any other party. How Northern Ireland can leave the EU and keep an open border with the EU is one of those you should have thought of that earlier questions.

However, it seems that Theresa May has in mind something more than an arms-length deal intended to protect her Governments business in the House of Commons. She has sent Gavin Williamson, her Chief Whip, to Belfast to try to negotiate a full coalition, including, as we report today, a seat or seats for the DUP at the Cabinet table.

This reflects the weakness of her position after losing her majority. The DUP is the only party to which she can turn. The Liberal Democrats oppose Brexit, commendably. They thought they could secure some of their policies in 2010 and indeed they did secure significant gains for liberalism and social justice but now the gulf between them and Ms May is too wide. The only other party that could deliver a Conservative government, the Scottish National Party, has made its implacable opposition to Ms Mays party well known.

The DUP knows what a strong position it is in. Its leaders remember how unionist parties used their leverage in the dying days of John Majors government (which lost its majority through deaths and by-elections in December 1996) and more significantly after the breakdown of the Lib-Lab pact in 1978. James Callaghans minority Labour government needed unionist votes to survive. It was a complete coincidence, of course, that the number of Northern Ireland seats was subsequently increased from 12 to 17.

This is a test, then, of Ms Mays integrity. If she deals with the DUP, she must do so without compromising her Governments support for gay rights, reproductive rightsand liberal values. She must stand by the assurances she gave to Ruth Davidson, the leader of the Scottish Conservatives on Friday. I was fairly straightforward with her and I told her that there were a number of things that count to me more than party. One of them is country, one of the others is LGBTI rights, Ms Davidson said. She said that Ms May agreed to try to use her influence to advance LGBTI rights in Northern Ireland.

At that stage, however, Ms Davidson was under the impression that the Prime Minister has already made it clear that it is not going to be a formal coalition. Ms Mays position as Prime Minister is already precarious enough. If she fails to stand up for equal rights, reproductive rightsand liberal values, she will find it unsustainable.

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Theresa May must stand up for gay rights, reproductive rights and liberal values - The Independent

The Problem With Liberal Opposition to Islamophobia – Truth-Out

Afaf Nasher, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in New York, bows while speaking on the murder of Imam Alauddin Akonjee outside City Hall in Manhattan, August 18, 2016. Activists and members of the city's Muslim community condemned the attack and continued calls for the authorities to classify the killings as a hate crime. (Photo: Bryan R. Smith / The New York Times)

Between Donald Trump's Muslim ban and the murder of six Muslim men in a mosque in Qubec City, the debate around Islamophobia has again taken center stage in North American politics. On the other side of the Atlantic, anti-Islam groups like Pegida, the Front National and Wilders' Freedom Party are gaining growing public support. Central to all of this is the rise of a militant xenophobia, with hatred of Muslims as one of its cardinal principles. At the same time, anti-racist organizers are also coming together -- building our analysis, fortifying our ability to defend ourselves in the face of increasing and rampant bigotry, and mobilizing to turn the tide.

Unfortunately, however, many of the arguments against Islamophobia in anti-racist circles turn out to replicate rather than subvert the underlying logics that attack, demonize and dehumanize Muslims. Challenging the Islamophobic far-right cannot simply be about upholding the same capitalist and imperialist -- even if slightly less racist -- stances that have destabilized much of the Global South in recent decades, furthering war and displacing Muslims who have travelled to Europe's shores only to be met with an explosion of nativist hatred.

With the departure of Barack Obama from the White House, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has become a global icon of this supposedly progressive anti-racist politics. A self-professed feminist who flew in 25,000 Syrian refugees and greeted them with hugs and winter coats at the airport, Trudeau is often perceived as being emblematic of everything that fascists are not. Yet even under his government, many of the same anti-social policies that brought Donald Trump to power in the United States are now being intensified, while anti-immigrant measures remain on the books.

For this reason, it is crucial to critically assess some of the liberal arguments against Islamophobia that are often put forward by people like Trudeau, as well as by many activists who would situate themselves to the left of him. Many of these arguments, while appearing to be anti-Islamophobic, actually uphold the national security state's framing of issues. In doing so, the dominant economic and social framework that underlies Islamophobic laws and policies, and the racist ideas incorporated within it, remains in place -- thereby impeding our ability to move beyond it.

Argument 1: "Counter-Radicalization Is More Effective Than Harsh Counter-Terrorism"

When the previous Conservative government in Canada introduced a wide-ranging surveillance and policing bill -- Bill C-51, theAnti-Terrorism Act, 2015 the public outcry was swift. Bill C-51 was dubbed the Secret Police Act, and hundreds of thousands of people signed multiple petitions against it. Central to the outcry was the argument that the bill was "ineffective." The "more effective" strategy being proposed in Canada, and across Western Europe and the United States, would involve "counter-radicalization" or "counter-extremist" programs. Such supposedly pragmatic calls for counter-radicalization have gained increasing support -- including by the Canadian Liberals under Trudeau -- without any critical reflection on the deeper problems with such programs.

In a report released last February, the UN Special Rapporteur on Counter-Terrorism and Human Rights Ben Emmerson criticized the prevailing approach towards counter-radicalization as conceptually flawed and ineffective, noting that "states have tended to focus on those [areas] that are most appealing to them, shying away from the more complex issues, including political issues such as foreign policy and transnational conflicts," preferring instead to emphasize "religious ideology as the driver of terrorism and extremism."

The American Civil Liberties Union, Article 19, and the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University pointed out similar objections in a joint letter to Ben Emmerson, writing that counter-radicalization "initiatives in the United States and Europe focus overwhelmingly on Muslim communities, with the discriminatory impact of stigmatizing them as inherently suspicious and in need of special monitoring."

Trump's announcement that counter-radicalization programs in the US will now exclusively target "Islamist extremism" elicited a fair amount of outrage -- but the reality is that such programs have long subjected Muslims to disproportionate attention, even if this was not always as explicit prior to Trump's presidency. For instance, 68 percent of the 1,747 children and teenagers referred to the UK's counter-radicalization program, Channel, between March 2014 and March 2016 were Muslim, while Muslims constitute only 8 percent of the population. Last March, a four-year-old Muslim boy was sent to Channel when his drawing of a cucumber was misconstrued as a cooker-bomb.

Central to the assertions that counter-radicalization is a more effective mode of counter-terrorism is the assumption that there is in fact an existential threat to Western societies from groups of individuals wishing to cause it harm, many if not all of whom are considered Muslim. Terrorism as a concept itself remains unquestioned, and the state-sponsored project of defending "us" against "them" is legitimized -- although using an ostensibly softer touch than the hard violence of war and criminalization. Instead of developing community-based or individual-focused programs to counter radicalization, the Islamophobic laws, policies and imaginaries that represent Muslims as a fundamental threat to Western society must be dismantled.

Argument 2: "Inclusion Is the Answer"

Greater inclusion of Muslims in white-normative societies is often posited as the solution to Islamophobia -- and, from a national security perspective, to the alienation that supposedly produces the radicalization of young Muslims. Social inclusion is widely seen as a counterpoint to the exclusionary nativist rhetoric of Islamophobes and fascists. For example, the recent decision by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) to permit women wearing the hijab to join the federal police force has been hailed as a positive move against the exclusion of Muslims. Similar examples of Muslims taking on roles in policing agencies are heralded the world over.

Such arguments for greater inclusion, however, often fail to challenge or transform the problematic dynamics of the entities within which inclusion for Muslims is being sought. The RCMP, for instance, has its roots in the North West Mounted Police, the settler-colonial police force developed to surveil and attack indigenous communities. Racial and gendered violence continues to pervade the everyday practice of the RCMP, and the presence of Muslims did not dampen the force's deep-seated Islamophobia, but was actually exploited to entrap vulnerable Muslims in false terrorist plots staged by undercover agents presenting themselves as Islamic authorities. This experience parallels the FBI's use of Muslim informants to build its surveillance dragnet of Muslim communities.

Inclusion of Muslims, then, does not necessarily eliminate or reduce Islamophobia. On the contrary, inclusion may perpetuate institutional racism by recruiting Muslims into existing structures of power -- while at the same time making it more difficult to detect, since there is no overt exclusion involved. Instead of aiming for inclusion in existing power structures and institutions, the fight against Islamophobia must aim to dismantle institutions that sustain themselves through practices of racialized surveillance and criminalization.

Argument 3: "Islamophobia Plays Into the Hands of ISIS"

A common refrain heard in recent arguments against Islamophobic policies and anti-Muslim polemics is that the latter "play into the hands of the terrorists." It is widely claimed, for instance, that the hateful rhetoric espoused by Islamophobic populists like Donald Trump and Geert Wilders actually reinforces ISIS' narrative of a Manichean world divided between Islam and the West -- a world in which there are no gray zones where Muslims can live harmoniously with non-Muslims.

In this framing, Islamophobia is considered objectionable mainly because of how ISIS might exploit it, rather than for its own intrinsic violence. Islamophobic statements are represented as the trigger or pretext for Muslims' violence, rather than as something that is itself a source of violence -- like illegal and aggressive wars, extrajudicial drone killings, torture, secret detention, hate crimes, invasive state surveillance, and so on. While Islamophobia may be the immediate object of critique, it is still Muslims and their supposedly terroristic propensities that feature as the fundamental problem in such narratives.

As a result, the argument re-directs attention away from Islamophobia and back towards Muslim violence, even while claiming to do the opposite. Our gaze ends up being diverted from the structural racism woven into the warp and woof of Western liberal democracies -- a racism that has already undergirded the destruction of many Muslim societies in the name of fighting terrorism.

Argument 4: #NotAllMuslims -- "Islam Is Peace"

In response to prevailing stereotypes that Islam is fundamentally a religion of violence, promulgated by extremist far-right ideologues, Muslims and anti-Islamophobic allies often insist that Islam is a religion of peace. Both sides of the argument -- Islam means violence versus Islam means peace -- cite portions of Islamic religious texts, particularly the Quran, to demonstrate some authentic true nature of Islam and Muslims.

The problem with such readings is that they perpetuate the orientalist assumption that all actions performed by Muslims are somehow determined by scripture -- a reductionist conceptualization of Islam that does not reflect how Muslims have actually engaged with religious texts for centuries, through rich and diverse interpretive traditions. Theological and intellectual debates about interpretation that have gone on for 1,500 years are thus roundly ignored, and the vast cultural, political and social history of over a billion people that shapes Islam is subsumed in limited translations of particular verses.

Instead of propagating essentializing constructions to rehabilitate the image of Islam and Muslims, an anti-Islamophobic stance should focus on critiquing the state policies and public discourses that have made such rehabilitation efforts seem necessary in the first place: policies and discourses that criminalize, incarcerate and wage war against Muslims, while providing a cover for civilian attacks like the shooting at the Muslim community centre in Qubec City.

Argument 5: "Non-Muslims Are Also Terrorists"

To counteract the overwhelming tendency by fascists and other right-wing extremists to equate the concept of terrorism with acts of violence committed by Muslims, it is essential to point out that significant amounts of political violence in both North America and Europe are committed by non-Muslims, in the name of causes like white supremacy, anti-immigrant activism and nationalism. However, the assertion that all these various forms of violence should also be labeled terrorism, as Prime Minister Trudeau recently did for the Qubec mosque attack carried out by a self-avowed white supremacist, fails to challenge the legitimacy and cogency of terrorism as a concept.

This is undesirable for at least two reasons. First, because certain types of violence against civilians -- most importantly, violence committed by states -- still tend to be excluded from or marginalized in the definition of terrorism. The primary focus remains on non-state actors, even though states are the most significant purveyors of violence in our world.

Second, it is undesirable because many governments have claimed that the existential threat posed by terrorism requires the expansion of their own powers: through implementation of emergency laws, for example, and deterioration of the rights of individuals, through measures like preventive arrests and detentions. Broadening the category of "the terrorist" may therefore serve states -- from the American to the Syrian -- seeking to rationalize their own violence as necessary for fighting terrorism.

Instead of widening the scope of who is considered a terrorist to include white supremacists and fascists, the notion of terrorism must be deconstructed altogether: to demonstrate that the term depends on spurious criteria to distinguish some forms of violence (delegitimized as terrorism) from other, equally terrorizing forms of violence (legitimized as counter-terrorism).

Argument 6: "Muslim Women Are Not Oppressed -- They Choose How to Dress"

In North America, as in several European countries, Muslim women's attire has become a primary focus for Islamophobic attacks -- by the state as well as by individuals. In Canada, for example, the Conservative federal government that preceded Trudeau's issued a policy manual in 2011 preventing women wearing the niqab from swearing the oath of citizenship (this policy was eventually overturned by the Federal Court of Appeal). And there have been several efforts in the province of Qubec to pass legislation barring women in niqab from receiving or delivering public services. In these initiatives, the niqab and hijab are represented as inherently oppressive pieces of clothing imposed on Muslim women by religion, community and/or family. State prohibition is pitched as an attempt to save Muslim women from sartorial subjugation.

In response, arguments against niqab and hijab bans often emphasize that Muslim women actually choose to veil. In doing so, they reaffirm the problematic premise that the value and legitimacy of a person's actions should be judged by whether they are an expression offree choice: choice exercised without any limitations or restrictions. But choice -- all choice -- is of course fraught: the ability to see choices and pick between them is always constrained by one's upbringing and social context. Individuals never have full information or full agency. Choice also changes, and can be misconstrued.

Furthermore, the ideology of free choice has often been allied with imperial projects of violence. From the French colonization of Algeria to the American invasion of Afghanistan, multiple wars have been waged around the world in the name of bringing choice to Muslim women. But individual choice is not necessarily seen in all places and times as the central organizing principle of human life, as it is within liberal states. As Lila Abu-Lughod, Professor of Anthropology and Women's and Gender Studies at Columbia University, appropriately asks: "Might other desires be more meaningful for different groups of people? Living in close families? Living in a godly way? Living without war?"

Responses to anti-hijab laws and rhetoric cannot begin and end by valorizing choice. Rather, they must be about limiting the power of the state to withdraw benefits and services from its constituents as punishment for living lives that may not accord with liberal norms and priorities.

Argument 7: "Muslims Are Citizens Too"

The assertion that Islamophobic counter-terrorism measures violate the rights of Muslim citizens of Western liberal democracies -- who should be treated equally, without any discrimination on the basis of race or religion -- is a popular theme in organizing against such measures. However, it is inadequate to simply defend the rights of citizens while ignoring the situation of those who are not citizens of the state, but made subject to its power and violence in the name of national security. As University of Toronto law professor Audrey Macklin observes, Canadians have long tolerated serious abrogations of rights and freedoms for non-citizens that would likely be considered unacceptable against citizens. The same is true in the United States and across Europe.

In Canada, for instance, many cases involving terrorism have not been tried using criminal law, but dispatched with using immigration law, enabling the deportation or indefinite detention of suspects under a lower standard of proof and without many of the procedural safeguards (such as they exist) of criminal trials. The argument that Muslim citizens should not have to suffer Islamophobic laws and policiesbecausethey are citizens perpetuates the disadvantage and vulnerability of non-citizens.

Furthermore, in settler colonial states like Canada and the United States, the institution of citizenship is built on a foundation of indigenous genocide and dispossession. In these contexts, the quest for inclusion in citizenship risks normalizing the colonization of indigenous nations. Upholding citizenship as the ultimate source of rights, freedom and belonging tends to prevent critique of the violence and exclusion embedded within citizenship: against indigenous peoples and against migrants. The struggle ahead must be about collective liberation beyond inclusion in liberal frameworks of citizenship.

Argument 8: "Obviously Innocent Collateral Damage"

Cases of white progressive activists monitored as national security threats are frequently cited to demonstrate the absurd overreach of counter-terrorism. The injustice involved in these cases is meant to be apparent and inarguable. The protagonists are represented as obviously innocent collateral damage of counter-terrorism, and their entrapment in the expansive net of national security as a manifest wrong.

Such examples are considered persuasive because the victims are not generally regarded as legitimate objects of suspicion. This is in stark contrast to Muslim, South Asian, Black and Arab men, who are consistently demonized as national security threats, and who have suffered extreme state abuse because of this -- extraordinary rendition, torture, secret and/or indefinite imprisonment, and so on. The innocence of this demographic is not taken as obvious, but must be proven time and time again against a default presumption of guilt. Unlike the targeting of "obviously innocent collateral damage," the state's surveillance and securitization of brown- and black-skinned men is not widely treated asinherentlyirrational.

For example, Professors Deepa Kumar and Arun Kundnani observe that while the exposure of the National Security Agency's massive warrantless data collection program generated widespread condemnation, the revelation that Muslims were specifically targeted for surveillance attracted far less attention and outrage. While many objected to the US government collecting private data on ordinary citizens, Muslims tend to be seen as reasonable targets of exceptional surveillance -- simply because they are Muslim.

Arguments invoking the obvious innocence of certain victims of national security problematically entrench the problematic distinction between those who do not deserve to be treated with suspicion. They perpetuate the state's normalized suspicion of precisely those groups that are most vulnerable to the violence of counter-terrorism.

Moving Beyond Liberal Anti-Islamophobia

Critiquing common liberal arguments like these can help organizers imagine and articulate other types of responses to Islamophobia: responses that do not merely shift the position of Muslims in the state's existing racial landscape, but upheave and re-make this terrain altogether. Doing so is particularly important in our present political moment, when the ostentatious Islamophobia of far-right organizations and the Trump administration is often understood as exceptional -- occluding continuities and similarities with the Islamophobia of liberal governments like Obama's or Trudeau's. This in turn perpetuates the dangerous illusion that liberal politics are a refuge from right-wing racism, when the truth is that they are constructed of many of the same components.

Of course, opposition to Islamophobia should not remain limited to the discursive field. It should also include -- and in fact prioritize -- building and organizing within racialized communities to assert dignity, power and freedom. Examples of such organizing abound. For instance, the first iteration of Trump's Muslim ban was met by a general strike by the primarily Muslim New York Taxi Workers Alliance, whose inspiring actions set off a spate of airport shutdowns that were crucial to defeating the administration's first set of executive orders. Similarly, hours after the Qubec shooting, Muslim organizers and their allies issued a call for days of action across Canada against Islamophobia, white supremacy and deportations.

Deconstructing widespread liberal fallacies is therefore by no means a comprehensive or sufficient approach to a genuinely anti-Islamophobic politics. What it may do, however, is strengthen and further our collective struggle against the intertwined scaffolding of racism, patriarchy, colonialism, imperialism and capitalism upon which the Islamophobia of the neoliberal security state and the neo-fascist right continues to rest. Deepening our analysis in the days to come, when it may seem easier not to, would be a critical first step in building towards the worlds we want to live in.

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The Problem With Liberal Opposition to Islamophobia - Truth-Out