Monthly Archives: July 2017

Ken Yeager: Remember when Silicon Valley was anti-gay? Not that long ago – The Mercury News

Posted: July 8, 2017 at 8:42 pm

Measures A and B. Anita Bryant. Rev. Marvin Rickard. The Los Gatos Christian Church.

When you say these names today you get blank stares. But in 1980 they were at the center of a battle for local policies protecting LGBTQ people from discrimination in employment, housing, and public services.

Back then, the battle for anti-discrimination protections was fought largely at the city or county level because there were no federal or state laws. Californias first such law wasnt signed until 1992.

One of the first measures was in Miami-Dade County in 1977. Opposition came swiftly from Anita Bryanta Miss American runner-up and Florida orange juice pitchwoman. Bryant founded Save Our Children, which led a highly publicized and successful campaign to repeal the ordinances.

Two years later, pro- and anti-gay forces collided in Silicon Valley when the Board of Supervisors took up the matter. Serving on the board were supervisors Dominic Cortese, Rod Diridon, Dan McCorquodale, Gerry Steinberg and Susanne Wilson.

Opposition quickly emerged. Led by Rev. Marvin Rickard of the Los Gatos Christian Church, hundreds of vocal opponents attended each of the six public hearings, far outnumbering supporters. The vote was 4 to 1 for the ordinance, with Cortese voting no.

With far less fanfare, the San Jose City Council then voted 6 to 1 for a city ordinance.

Opponents wasted no time gathering signatures to stop the ordinances from taking effect. The measures were placed on the June 1980 ballot. A yes vote meant you favored the protections; a no vote signified you wanted them repealed.

The campaign was ugly, with opponents getting funding and advice from the Moral Majority and Anita Bryants campaign. Vote no for the sake of our children, read their literature, adding Dont let it spread.

The San Jose Mercury News came out strongly in favor of the anti-discrimination laws. If the voters vote no, they will be saying, explicitly, that homosexuals in this community do not have legal recourse when they suffer discrimination.

The election was a blowout, with 70 percent of San Jose voters and 65 percent of county voters rejecting the ordinances. The message was clear: gays not wanted.

I was always curious how this could have happened in our progressive community. Did the supervisors not know that across the country such measures were being overturned? Did they not expect the religious right to come out in force to oppose them?

To answer these questions, Terry Christensen and I got the supervisors together for a special one-hour show on Valley Politics.

In brief, they said they were surprised at the fervent hostility the ordinance generated because they saw the issue as one of basic human rights, much like other matters at the time. Moreover, labor, the Democratic Party and liberal churches were in support.

Despite growing opposition, the supervisors never considered rescinding their vote because, as Supervisor McCorquodale said on the show, it would be too disheartening to too many people.

You can watch their conversation on YouTube by searching for CREATVSANJOSE, then go to Valley Politics. Or catch the show on Comcast Ch. 30 Wednesdays at 8 p.m and Sundays at 9 p.m.

Listening to the supervisors conversation, I felt proud of their legacy. They put their careers on the line to make sure that I and others had legal protections.

Whether gay rights in the 1980s or immigrant rights today, supervisors remain leaders for the underrepresented and disenfranchised, often ahead of public opinionknowing that in time, the public will catch up.

Ken Yeager is completing his final term on the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors this year. Previously a San Jose City Council member, he was the first openly gay elected official in the county. He wrote this for The Mercury News.

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‘Human fireball’ camper shows his painful blisters to warn of tent safety – Liverpool Echo

Posted: at 8:42 pm

A Taekwondo expert caught up in a horrific blaze while out camping has shared pictures of his painful blisters as a warning to others.

Geoff Bulfin, 47, and his partner Vicky were left with serious burns after a portable stove leaked gas into their tent and it burst into flames.

Geoff, a founding member of Blue Dragon ITF Taekwondo who have a centre in Birkenhead , could now face months of skin grafts at Whiston hospital.

He told the ECHO; It just took me by surprise. All I remember is a bang and big flames and that was it.

I didnt even realise I had burnt myself.

People need to be taught of the dangers of these camping stoves. I dont want to think about what could have happened if a child was nearby.

His friend, Alasdair Walkinshaw, 45 said the tent turning into a blazing fire ball within seconds.

He told the ECHO: I was getting ready when I heard this I heard this whoosh sound. I thought it was an airbed bursting.

Then I heard the screams half a second after.

I stuck my head out of the tent and Geoff was feeling his way out of the tent.

It was like a mushroom cloud of smoke.

Geoff emerged with flames all over him.

The accident happened during a Taekwondo trip to Shell Island on June 30.

Alasadair added: Vicky was still inside and Geoff tried to go back in to rescue her.

I did think she would be in serious trouble.

My daughters fiancs managed to rip the tent and pull her out.

Only the quick reactions of the few of us that had arrived, saved the situation from becoming much worse.

Vic was dragged from the tent with her hair burnt and suffering from burns to her leg.

Geoff on the other hand had taken the full force of the blast and had to lie under to tap of the water point near our encampment.

It was awful but could have been a lot worse. I did not realise Geoff would be the worse one.

Geoff, from Cheshire, decided to use a camping stove inside the tent when it was too windy to make a cup of tea outside.

But he didnt realise it was leaking profane gas into the tent in the moments before the accident.

Now he wants to warn other of the dangers they pose, particularly as people head off on camping holidays this summer.

The deadly explosion happened while around 50 members of the Taekwondo club were arriving to the camping site for the training weekend.

He said: I was wearing a bomber jacket and it melted.

I should have had more burns.

Geoff is recovering in the hospital after his miraculous escape and getting treatment for third degree burns to his hands and face.

His wife Vicky is now at home.

Alasdair said: A week ago he was walking his daughter down the aisle.

Nothing seems to get him down

He now hopes to raise money to help Geoff while he is off work recovering as he needs his hands to work.

You can donate here: https:// http://www.gofundme.com/geoff-vics-support-fund

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Mark Zuckerberg: The US Should Learn From This State’s Basic Income Program – Futurism

Posted: at 8:42 pm

In Brief Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg learned a thing or two about universal basic income from his recent trip to Alaska. The entrepreneur believes the rest of the U.S. should take a closer look at how the northern state makes basic income work. An Approach Worth Emulating

An excursion is always a learning experience. That was certainly true for Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan when they visited Alaska. The social media entrepreneur was impressed by the various social programs he found in Americas Last Frontier, particularly a basic income initiative that Alaskas been running since 1982.

The Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) is a basic income program that allots $1,000 or more per citizen. [A] portion of the oil revenue the state makes is put into [the PFD], Zuckerberg wrote in a Facebook post. Rather than having the government spend that money, it is returned to Alaskan residents through a yearly dividend.

Another basic income Zuckerberg learned about is by Native Corporations in Alaska. These privately owned corporations that develop land run and owned by Native Alaskans give annual dividends to to their native shareholders according to the resources they develop. So if youre a Native Alaskan, you would get two dividends: one from your Native Corporation and one from the state Permanent Fund, Zuckerberg wrote.

Under a universal basic income (UBI) program, individuals receive a fixed amount of income regardless of their social or employment status. UBI is an old idea thats become more popular recently as a potential response to unemployment due to automation, but it is not without critics. An issue these critics often bring up is funding. Zuckerberg was impressed by howthe Alaskan basic income model solves this. [I]ts funded by natural resources rather than raising taxes, he wrote.

This means that running a UBI program isnt impossible, at least in some cases. In fact, a number of countries already have trial programs to test UBI most notably Finland, which launched the program in 2016. Canada has two initiatives in the works, while Hawaii recently passed legislation that will study implementing UBI in the state.

In the end, Zuckerberg thinks its all about mentalities. [W]hen youre profitable, youre confident about your future and you look for opportunities to invest and grow further. Alaskas economy has historically created this winning mentality, which has led to this basic income, he noted. That may be a lesson for the rest of the country as well.

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Let the Libertarian debate – The Washington Post – Washington Post

Posted: at 4:41 am

Summer in a gubernatorial election year means its time to start the debate over the number of debates.

And it has, with a flourish. Republican nominee Ed Gillespie proposed a series of 10 debates with Democratic nominee Ralph Northam, a somewhat more modest demand than the 15 debatesRepublican Ken Cuccinelli demanded of Democrat Terry McAuliffe in 2013.

Northam has accepted threedebatesand seven joint appearances, but he dismissed the overall demand as a public relations stunt.

Gillespie called Northams counter-offer insulting.

Both candidates are correct. This is a public relations stunt, as Northam said, and a very old, tired one at that. It is also insulting, but not in the way Gillespie meant.

The insult is that gubernatorial debates in Virginia are little more than smaller versions of the carefully packaged affairs weve all witnessed at the national level.

What people watch for and what the press and political junkies delight in are those gotcha moments that make for great copy and easy attack lines.

But lets indulge Gillespie on his demand for many debates and ignore his own ducking and dodging on the issue in the waning months of the Republican primary.

Lets have 10 debates. Or 19, as the Roanoke Times has suggested.

But lets also insist on a couple of things.

Libertarians had a good case for being included in the 2013 debates between Cuccinelli and McAuliffe. But their candidate, Robert Sarvis, had to settle for running an ad during one debate. He was excluded from another by a media outlet because he didnt qualify under debate rules worked out between the major-party candidates.

Bipartisan agreement is easy to find, especially if it leads to keeping voters in the dark.

While Sarvis ended up winning just 6.5 percent of the vote, and Republicans still blame his campaign for costing Cuccinelli the election (a claim Paul Goldman and I refuted), including Sarvis on the debate stage would have offered voters a bit of relief from that campaigns incessant negativity.

It also might have offered them a critique of the major parties, their policies and their records.

That would have been refreshing and enlightening.

Hyra campaign director John Vaught LaBeaume told me that his candidate would be willing to participate in any and all debates or forums that both the Democratic and Republican candidates agree to take part in.

As he should.

LaBeaume also hopes the debate organizers are open to including Hyra and do not fall prey to the self-interested campaigns of the Democratic and GOP nominees.

That would mean the Northam and Gillespie campaigns would have to agree to allow Hyra in as part of their ground rules for debating one another.

Thats self-serving and should not be tolerated by any debate sponsor, particularly if that sponsor is a media organization.

To its credit, Roanoke television station WDBJtried to get the campaigns to agree to allow Sarvis to join the debate the station sponsored in 2013 owing to quite a bit of negative reaction to [his] exclusion.

The McAuliffe campaign was somewhat interested in the idea; the Cuccinelli campaign wasnt.

Should we expect a similar outcome this year?

Gillespie spokesman David Abrams told me, Either Ed or Ralph Northam is going to be the next governor of Virginia, which is why the organizations sponsoring debates invited them.

Northam spokesman David Turner told me the campaign would agree to include Hyra in the debates.

Thats a good first step. One that fits Northams political calculus, but still good. Candidates should agree to participate in as many as possible and televise them all. And organizers truly interested in an exchange of ideas rather than a clash of talking points dont allow the candidates to dictate terms.

After all, youre paying for the microphone.

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Libertarian Republicans Powered by Billionaire Money Plan to Undo Gains of Last 100 Years – WMNF

Posted: at 4:41 am

Posted July 7, 2017 by Adam Flanery & filed under American History, Civil Rights, Labor, National Government, National Politics, News and Public Affairs, Social Services, State Government.

A lot of books have tried to explain the rise of conservative power that poses a direct challenge to the reforms that came about under the New Deal, the labor movement, the Civil Rights movement, and the Great Society.

In her new book, a Duke University professor reveals a little known conservative think tank that had its beginnings on the University of Virginia campus. With help from one of the Koch brothers, the think tank helped reframe the debate over the role of business, government and individuals.

The book is Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Rights Plan for America.

The author is Nancy MacLean. Shes the William H. Chafe Professor of History and Public Policy at Duke University. Her previous book is Freedom is Not Enough. Host Rob Lorei interviewed her about her new book.

To listen back to this interview from Thursday, June 15, 2017 click here.

Tags: Koch brothers, Nancy MacLean

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Tallahassee Realtor Bert Pope’s Golden Rule for Real Estate: Etiquette – Benzinga

Posted: at 4:40 am

Bert Pope, the "go-to" luxury Realtor for the largest homes in Tallahassee, lists the top three tips on why everyone involved in a real-estate transaction should practice etiquette.

Tallahassee, FL (PRWEB) July 07, 2017

As a Realtor, etiquette is important because it shows that the representative is willing to participate in the transaction and not be arrogant about the property. "As for the buyer and seller, having etiquette is imperative because it makes the transaction much smoother," said Broker Bert Pope, founder and owner of Bert Pope & Associates LLC, who recently closed on two of the largest homes in Tallahassee : 6089 Leigh Read and 9279 White Blossom.

To highlight why etiquette is essential in real-estate transactions, Pope, known as "that guy" that offers the most incredible homes and host of the highly acclaimed "Extraordinary Homes of Tallahassee" on NBC TV 40, lists the following three tips:

No. 1: Make the home as presentable as possible. When buyers see that the seller made a good effort in making the home presentable, it shows their willingness in the selling process, instead of having an attitude of "If you like it, you like it; if you don't, you don't." "It's like dressing up for a dance -- you wear your finest clothes and not just whatever you want to throw on," said Pope. "You want the other person to like you."

No. 2: Abide by the Golden Rule. "Treat others as you want to be treated. Everyone is different," noted Pope. "Etiquette is working together to get where you want to go."

No. 3: Always be polite. "People can take it very personally when it comes to negotiations. You need to make sure that you are careful with your words and are polite," concluded Pope. "Be understanding and communicate openly. Never let emotions bubble up. That is why etiquette is so important with communication; it shows good manners. It's all about accommodating as much as you can accommodate."

About Bert Pope, Bert Pope & Associates LLC Bert Pope has been in real estate for over 28 years. He specializes in Tallahassee luxury homes and estates and North Florida plantations, and has had a multi-million-dollar luxury property highlighted in USA Today. Bert Pope & Associates works with buyers and sellers. For more information, please call (850) 933-2378, or visit http://www.bertpope.com.

About the NALA The NALA offers small and medium-sized businesses effective ways to reach customers through new media. As a single-agency source, the NALA helps businesses flourish in their local community. The NALA's mission is to promote a business' relevant and newsworthy events and achievements, both online and through traditional media. The information and content in this article are not in conjunction with the views of the NALA. For media inquiries, please call 805.650.6121, ext. 361.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/BertPopeAssociates/RealEstateEtiquette/prweb14483376.htm

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Why Ted Cruz faced off with a ‘dirty’ liberal and other health-care opponents this week – Washington Post

Posted: at 4:40 am

AUSTIN During a week most Republican senators spent in the political equivalent of the witness protection program, Sen. Ted Cruz willingly stood trial before his constituents all across this sprawling state over his push to repeal much of the Affordable Care Act.

He debated a self-described dirty liberal progressive. He met a psychologist who told him that he and his colleagues were scaring the living daylights out of her. He encountered protesters in a border town, a conservative Dallas suburb and this liberal stronghold.

Some who attended his events took the opposite view that not shredding the law known as Obamacare would be the real misdeed. But Cruzs main offense, in the view of the most vocal and most frustrated attendees, has been to participate in GOP efforts to undo key parts of, and possibly repeal, the Affordable Care Act.

Cruz is grappling with a state that, much like the rest of the country, has been deeply divided and firmly gripped by the months-long GOP effort to fulfill its signature campaign promise. Virtually everywhere he traveled this week, no matter where the conversation started, it inevitably veered to health care. That may help explain why so many of his colleagues kept a low profile over the week-long Fourth of July recess.

But Cruz, who built a national reputation on strident conservatism and has fiercely criticized the ACA for years, seemed to relish debating health care with vocal liberal critics. In a red state where he holds little crossover appeal, Cruz sees his best path to a second term, which he will seek next year, in rallying his conservative base to turn out for him. Even as he alienates a growing number of voters concerned about the fate of the ACA, doing his part to push for a full or even partial repeal is one key way his allies believe he can make that happen.

Whether such legislation can pass, as Congress returns to work Monday for one more push on the issue before the August recess, is increasingly uncertain to both Cruz and Senate GOP leadership. I believe we can get to yes, said Cruz this week. I dont know if we will.

A willingness to engage with opponents

Cruz spent Thursday evening in a hotel ballroom here at a town hall hosted by Concerned Veterans for America, a group backed by the billionaire conservative Koch brothers. The organization held two events for Cruz over the past week, with one more coming Saturday, with the aim of offering a more controlled environment than typical town hall meetings.

To attend, people were required to register in advance. The groups policy director, Dan Caldwell, moderated the discussions, keeping them mostly focused on veterans issues and selecting a handful of audience questions submitted in advance.

The first half of Thursdays event here so closely resembled Wednesday nights version in suburban Dallas that Cruz even cracked the same joke about banishing bureaucrats to Iceland and received similarly limited laughter.

But the predictability ended when Gary Marsh and others jumped in without being called on by Caldwell and engaged Cruz in a tense back and forth over health care.

Can I please request that you refer to it as the Affordable Care Act, Marsh told Cruz at one point. Cruz declined, drawing some applause. The senator said he did not believe in deceptive speech prompting outraged laughter from his critics.

Cruz, dressed in a dark blazer, khaki pants and brown cowboy boots, then launched into a detailed defense of his opposition to Obamacare and the imperative to roll it back.

Caldwell tried to redirect the conversation to the questioner he had originally called on. But Cruz overruled him, allowing Marsh a chance to respond. Marsh, a 67-year-old retiree, said he knew he could not change Cruzs mind, but he hoped to sway others in the room.

Repealing Obamacare was the single biggest factor producing a Republican House, a Republican Senate and I think ultimately a Republican president, Cruz said. He said the central focus of Republicans now should be to lower premiums.

Marsh proudly called himself a dirty liberal progressive in a conversation with reporters after the event. John Walker, 69, walked over to confront him. The self-described conservative wasnt pleased.

You monopolized the meeting. Thats the problem I have with you and everybody else that does that, Walker told him. In an interview, Walker, who is retired and on Medicare, said he favors replacing Obamacare with something better that would make coverage affordable for his adult children, who cant afford premiums. He said he is not yet convinced the Senate GOP bill would accomplish that.

A similar flash of discord appeared Wednesday in McKinney, the Dallas suburb. After Cruz finished speaking, Buddy Luce was not happy with what he heard from the Texas Republican senator about overhauling Obamacare.

Im not impressed with a plan that takes away the 65-year-old attorney started explaining to a reporter. Before he could finish his thought, Ivette Lozano had rushed over to argue with him.

Im a family practitioner, she told him. Obamacare is putting me out of business.

Dont you think health care is a human right? he asked her.

No, I think its personal responsibility to take care of you, she responded.

If you dont think health care is a human right, then were just on a different wavelength, Luce retorted.

Obamacare is a manifest disaster

For 47 minutes, the McKinney town hall was free of controversy. As Cruz spoke to Caldwell about veterans matters, the audience listened quietly. But then came a query from a far corner of the hotel ballroom. And the mood quickly shifted.

You all on the Hill are scaring the living daylights out of us with the health-care nonsense that youre doing, said Misty Hook, who described herself as an overflow psychologist who works with veterans unable to obtain services through the Department of Veterans Affairs. She worried about the GOP push to allow insurers in some states to opt out of certain coverage requirements.

What are you going to do to help make sure that mental-health-care services are reimbursed at a proper rate so that we can continue to provide services for veterans? asked Hook, the urgency apparent in her voice.

Cruz, leaning forward in his armchair, offered an extended defense of the effort to undo key parts of Obamacare. He called it a manifest disaster, prompting some to shake their heads in disagreement.

You didnt answer her question about how mental health is going to be covered, one woman interjected.

Well, I am answering it right now, Cruz replied. But before he could continue, Luce abruptly jumped into the conversation from the other side of the room. He continued breaking in, eventually drawing a warning from the senator: Sir, Im happy to answer your questions, but Im not going to engage in a yelling back-and-forth.

Outside the event, a few dozen protesters held up signs emblazoned with such messages as GOP Care Treats the Rich Kills the Weak and Yea! ACA fix it dont nix it. Cruz had encountered similar protests when he visited McAllen on the U.S.-Mexico border earlier in the week.

After the event, Cruz called the health-care back-and-forth a good and productive exchange.

This is an issue that inspires passion and quite understandably. People care about their health care, said Cruz.

A push for a more aggressive rollback of the ACA

Many close observers believe Cruz is likely to vote yes on the final version of the bill, even though he does not support the initial version Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) released last month. Although many other Republican senators believe the first draft would go too far and push too many Americans off insurance rolls, Cruz is pressing for a more aggressive undoing of the ACAs regulations.

The Texans top priority is his amendment to let insurers sell plans that dont comply with ACA coverage requirements so long as they also offer plans that do. He is casting the amendment as a move to give consumers more, less expensive choices in purchasing insurance.

But critics including Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) worry that such an approach would dissolve the risk pool established by the ACA that brings together healthy and sick individuals and could result in higher costs for less healthy Americans.

The Cruz amendment has become a rallying cry among those on the right pushing for a more aggressive bill, with figures such as House Freedom Caucus Chairman Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) and a constellation of conservative activist groups endorsing it. It has also drawn support from White House legislative affairs director Marc Short.

McConnells plans to vote on the bill before July 4 fell apart amid GOP discord. Now as he works to change the bill and as a handful of key senators have faced a drumbeat of opposition to the proposal during the recess it remains as uncertain as ever whether he will ever have enough Republican support to pass.

[At parades and protests, GOP lawmakers get earful about health care]

[A town hall in Kansas shows Republican struggles with health-care bill]

Cruz, like President Trump, thinks that if they fall short, the Senate ought to vote on a narrower bill to repeal the law what he calls a clean repeal and focus on replacing it afterward. But McConnell has embraced a very different kind of backup plan: Working with Democrats on a more modest bill to stabilize insurance markets.

Broad disagreements over how to structure the nations health-care system are sharpening the contrasting way lawmakers such Cruz are viewed at home.

As she stood in line with her husband to talk to Cruz after the Wednesday town hall, Jennifer Beauford, 42, said she wants a full repeal and I dont want a replacement.

Health care is not constitutional right. Its a privilege, said Beauford, who identified as a conservative Cruz supporter.

Outside among the protesters stood Kerry Green, 46, a history teacher who wore a shirt printed with the Declaration of Independence. A self-identified Democrat, Green held up sign urging health care for the 21st Century rather than the 20th. She sharply criticized the GOP bill.

As for Cruz? He needs to go, she said.

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Nicholas Quinn Rosenkranz: The Threat to Free Speech – Commentary Magazine

Posted: at 4:40 am

How to make enemies and alienate others.

On Thursday, the progressive left treated itself to an orgiastic display of self-destruction. In the name of opposing all that Donald Trump deigns to grace with his favor, American progressives found themselves attacking Bill Clintons brand of centrist politics, defendingwoefully misunderstoodcalls for jihad, and dismissing unqualified praise for the West as racially suspect.

Democrats lashed out at former Clinton Strategist Mark Penn on Thursday for recommending that the Democratic Party rediscover its respect for Christians and working-class Trump voters and embrace fiscal conservatism. The nearly unanimous response from the activist left was to dismiss this sage advice. The administration that he served in locked up more black, African-American men than those enslaved in 1850, said former Bernie Sanders campaign staffer Tezlyn Figar. Nostalgia for the 1990s may be politically potent, but it is also very un-woke.

When members of the left werent attacking one of the Democratic Partys most popular figures, they were defending the word jihad and its champion, Womens March organizer Linda Sarsour. In a speech to the Islamic Society of North America over the weekend, the Muslim liberal activist said it is her hope that Allah accepts from us that as a form of jihad.we stand up to those who oppress our communities. Sarsour defined the term as a word of truth in front of a tyrant ruler or leader, though any sentient being knows that her interpretation is subject to much debate in the Muslim world. She added that it is her hope that the Muslim community would be perpetually outraged and that their first priority should not be to assimilate or please any other people and authority.

Naturally, the story of a Muslim activist whos embraced by mainstream Democratic outfits while calling for a form of jihad against the president wasnt treated as the real story. The Republican reaction to the story was the story. Muslim activist Linda Sarsours reference to jihad draws conservative wrath, read the Washington Posts headline. Right-Wing Outlets Read Violence into Sarsours Anti-Trump Jihad, declared the Daily Beast. The people disagreeing with @lsarsour clearly dont understand what Jihad means, wrote Temple University professor Marc Lamont Hill, who was quoted favorably in Timemagazine. Of course, Sarsour was not inciting violence, but her liberal allies now appear committed to explaining why this is not a pipe.

Among Thursdays tiresome outrages, perhaps none was more destructive to the progressive lefts general allure than the liberal reaction to Donald Trumps speech in Poland. It was, perhaps, the most classically liberal and historically erudite speech that Donald Trump has ever made. It praised Western values, heritage, and achievement without qualification. For the left, however, adoration for the West undiluted by apologetics for racism, bigotry, and colonial subjugation is not just a display of ignorance. It might as well be an endorsement of those evils.

It wasnt just Trumps praise for Western achievement that was deemed a display of subtle racism, although it did not escape that censure from the lefts cultural arbiters. It was also his warnings about the threats facing the West: We must work together to confront forces, Trump said, that threaten over time to undermine these values and erase bonds of culture, faith, and tradition that make us who we are. Trump added: Do we have the desire and courage to preserve our civilization in the face of those who would subvert and destroy it?

Because this speech was drafted by anti-immigration activist Stephen Miller, among others, these lines certainly referred not just to threats from without, such as those presented by a revanchist Russia and Islamist radicalism, but also those within, such as the influx of refugees from the Muslim world into Europe. That paranoia can be toxic, and it merits skepticism. But praising the West, the Enlightenment to which it gave birth, and the standards of prosperity, tolerance, and civilization that typify it is not insidious in the slightest. To suggest otherwise is histrionic. Guess how the progressive left reacted to Trumps speech?

The West is not an ideological or economic term, wrote theAtlantics Peter Beinart. The West is a racial and religious term. The south and east only threaten the Wests survival if you see non-white, non-Christian immigrants as invaders, Beinart insisted. They only threaten the Wests survival if by West you mean white, Christian hegemony. This is true only if we accept Beinarts premise; that the West is only a racial and religious affiliation and not a set of political traditions. If we see the West as a champion of individual liberty, freedom of worship, reason and rationality, and republican governancenot to mention a bulwark against the forces of reaction, totalitarianism, and theocracyBeinarts definition is both narrow and incoherent.

That incoherence didnt stop the progressive left from joining him. President Donald Trump issued a battle cryfor family, for freedom, for country, and for God, wrote Vox.coms Sarah Wildman, in a speech that often resorted to rhetorical conceits typically used by the European and American alt-right. Imagine being a political writer in this moment and being utterly unable to identify clear white nationalist dog whistles, wrote CBS News political analyst and Slate correspondent Jamelle Bouie. [Y]ou dont have to have a deep familiarity with the tropes of white supremacy to see this s*** for what it clearly is.

Attacking centrist politics, criticizing those who react negatively to the liberal rejection of assimilation and endorsement of jihad, and declaring that praise for the West is a form of veiled racism; these are odd ways to go about making friends and allies. The progressive wing of the party appears determined to swell the ranks of their opposition, if only by defining their opposition in absurdly broad terms. If the progressive left was actively trying to alienate its potential supporters and marginalize itself, what would it do differently?

The mask falls off "anti-Zionism."

The 75,000 strong Mennonite Church-USA has joined a few other church organizations in voting to divest from companies profiting from the occupation. They seem rather proud of themselves for having chosen a third way.

What this means in the resolutions terms is that the Mennonites will admit complicity in anti-Semitism and also admit complicity in Israels activities in the West Bank. They will form committees to navel-gaze concerning the first problem and single out Israel for economic punishment to deal with the second.

Whats shocking about this resolution, which Church leaders boast is the work of two years of study, is that it treats anti-Semitism and Israels presence in the West Bank as equivalent crimes. The Mennonites will resolve to avoid both! Although the drafters of the resolution acknowledged that Palestinians have turned to violence, they have evidently done so only to achieve security and seek their freedom. In spite of the resolutions hand-wringing concerning anti-Semitism, there is not a word about Palestinian anti-Semitism and the role it has played in frustrating peace efforts in the region.

Nor are these peace efforts the subject of any reflection in the resolution. As far as the drafters are concerned, the Israelis marched into the West Bank in 1967who can say why?and have doggedly continued there, even though they could easily withdraw. The resolution recognizes that Israelis feel threatened but not that they actually are threatened. Indeed, that Israelis feel threatened is treated as evidence that security walls and other measures Israelis have taken for their security have been useless. It is hard to believe that intelligent and well-meaning people justify serious actions on so flimsy a basis, as if the ongoing need for security suggests that one ought to lay down ones arms. But the Mennonite Church takes no risk, so they can afford to be frivolous about serious matters.

Apart from singling out the Jewish state for singular punishment, the Mennonites are studiously neutral. Somehow in their years of study, they missed that the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement endorsed in 2015 an ongoing, youth-led Palestinian uprising whose weapon of choice at that time was the knife. There can be no excuse for not knowing this and therefore no excuse for simply noting, concerning BDS that there are vigorous critics of BDS who raise a range of concerns as well as groups who support BDS as a nonviolent alternative to violent liberation efforts.

Of course, some of those critics point out that BDS has at best cheered on anti-Semitism. But the Mennonites, though they are in bed with BDS-supporting Jewish Voice for Peace, see no need to get to the bottom of it. Their affectation of neutrality here means that they simply dont care about the consequences of working hand-in-glove with a movement that, while it claims to be nonviolent, is effectively the propaganda wing of the violent resistance.

The Mennonites also studiously avoid taking a position on whether a majority Jewish state should exist at all. On the matter of a two-state or one-state solutionthe latter of which means that Jews will be a minority everywhere in the worldthat should be left up to Israeli and Palestinian people. Sure, the end of the Jewish state in the Middle East would leave Jews defenseless in a region teeming with anti-Semitism, but not to worry. The Mennonites have already raised seed money and initiated plans for several conferences in the next biennium on topics including Mennonite involvement in the Holocaust and how we read scripture in light of the Holocaust. They will make up for their blithe indifference to the fate of Jews today by conferencing, and maybe even shedding a few golden tears, about the fate of Jews last century.

The resolution has called on Mennonites to cultivate relationships with Jewish representatives and bodies in the U.S. I will leave it to knowers of the Torah to say whether we are required to associate with a small group of morally obtuse, self-righteous preeners. But if it were left up to me, I would tell them to go to hell.

Is the Trump era a blip or a realignment?

Political media has a bias toward covering the powerful and, at the moment, Democrats are anything but powerful. The intramural debate over how Democrats should navigate the post-Obama environment is, however, far livelier than the presss utter indifference would suggest.

The partisan liberals engaged in deliberations over how the Democratic Party will evolve in the age of Trump have settled into two camps: those who think the party has to change and those who dont. This observation can only be made from the proper remove, it seems. Both the progressive wing and its triangulating centrists are dead certain that the other guy is in full control of the party they call home.

In the opinion pages of the New York Times, Democratic strategist Mark Penn and Manhattan Borough President Andrew Stein offer up a rallying cry for those in the change camp. They argue that the party must adapt to a political environment in which their voters are being poached by a GOP that is no longer a monolithically conservative party. The authors claim that this mission will only succeed if Democrats abandon the hardline progressivism that typified the party in the Obama years.

Their argument takes aim at identity liberalism and the leftist activists who dominate the caucus process. They contend that Democrats need to combat campus speech policing, shun free trade, demonstrate renewed respect for Christians, and embrace fiscal responsibility over profligacy. Only by resurrecting the spirit of the Democratic Leadership Council can Democrats wash the stink off their partys brand.

This salvo was aimed squarely at modern liberal orthodoxy, and progressivisms patriarchs recognize heresy when they see it. Papa needs a new contract! mocked MSNBC host Joy Reid. Rolling out Mark Penn to voice the last dying screeches of the Clintonite center-left is fitting, said The Young Turks correspondent Mark Tracey. Thank you, Mark Penn, for giving liberals [and] leftists something to unite over, wrote liberal author Jill Filipovic. That Dems should do none of this.

It is hardly surprising that progressives would resist a total repudiation of the progressive program. They believe themselves to be the perpetual opposition within a party that already thinks like Penn and Stein suggest it should. The current model and the current strategy of the Democratic Party is an absolute failure, declared Bernie Sanders. The irony of this coming from the Democratic Partys chief attractiona septuagenarian who pointedly refuses to call himself a Democratis under-appreciated.

Sanderss model appeals to what the New York Times dubbed the partys ascendant militant wing. That is not an agenda for the middle of the country but for the coasts and urban enclaves, which can theoretically overwhelm the GOPs suburban vote. That agenda can be summed up in one word: spending. Universal, state-funded health care; free college tuition; tax speculation on Wall Street; expand access to Social Security; cure diseases like HIV/AIDS; and climate justice toward a sustainable economy, whatever that means.

This tension between the partys two halves has been out in the open for months. It led to real and sustained conflict in battles ranging from the fight over the next chair of the Democratic National Committee to special election primaries. It was evident in the partys efforts to mimic the GOP, from former Governor Steve Beshears folksy response to Donald Trumps address to Congress to Democrats unprecedented and reflexive hostility toward even innocuous Trump appointments.

Following a dispiriting loss in Georgia, Democratic elected officials briefly resolved to do somethinganythingto demonstrate that their party was receptive to the electorates repeated votes of no confidence. That sentiment was short lived. The Democratic Partys approach to the Trump environment was perhaps best summarized by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committees latest attempt at a slogan: I mean, have you seen the other guys?

Americas two political parties have endured feast and famine before and emerged stronger for it. The Democrats present identity crisis isnt exactly unknown territory, but that should be cold comfort.

In October of 1982, the Democratic Party appeared hollow and its program stale. Of a sudden, wrote Daniel Patrick Moynihan in 1980, the GOP has become the party of ideas. That year, the GOP won the White House, 34 seats in the House, and 12 in the Senate. With a month to go before Reagans first midterm and despite a stalled economic recovery and mounting unemployment, Democrats were still anxious about their failure to meet the moment.

Were still the party of Tip ONeill and Jimmy Carter, said the depressed Democratic consultant Joe Rothstein. Washington Post editor Robert Kaiser observed that the Democratic Party, once the party of the little guy, had become captured by lawyers, corporatists, and activist minorities. Democrats rebounded some in November of that year, but they did not fully recover in Congress until Reagans second midterm election.

The early 1980s represented a period of political realignment, but that was only obvious in retrospect. And Democrats did eventually meet that moment, but it took a decade and the emergence of a Southern, centrist governor to do it.

Were the GOPs victories in the Obama years merely a reaction to his presidency, or has the earth shifted under Democratic feet? Democrats havent even asked the question. Perhaps they dont want to know the answer.

Only one Trump is the real Trump.

What is more revealing of a president? His extemporaneous and unguarded thoughts or his vetted, polished statements? Donald Trump, the man and his administration, must be taken whole. When it comes to Americas relationship with Russia, this is an administration devoted to sending dangerously mixed signals.

On Thursday, in a speech in Poland delivered ahead of the G20 summit, Trump cast himself as the latest in a line of American presidents who dedicated themselves to the defense of liberty. The president touted the Wests virtuous intellectual and political traditions, and he did so without any of the self-conscious apologetics that Western elites seem to think marks a man of intellect. We put faith and family, not government and bureaucracy, at the center of our lives, the president declared. He quoted Pope John Paul IIs 1979 address to the Polish people who, when laboring under the stifling Marxist secularism, observed that the people of America and Europe still cry out, We want God.

Not only did Trump defend the Western worlds intellectual heritage, he championed its right to defend itself against the chief threat to its interests in Europe: Russia. Trump demanded that Moscow put a halt to destabilizing activities in Ukraine and end its support for hostile regimes, including those in Iran and Syria. He explicitly stated his intention to honor the Atlantic Alliances mutual defense provisionssomething he has so far been reluctant to do. Moreover, Trump drew a parallel to the threats Russia poses to Europe todayand Poland specificallyand those they presented in the past under the former Soviet Union. The Soviets, he noted, tried to destroy this nation forever by shattering its will to survive.

The Trump administration has backed this rhetoric up with action. Earlier this week, Trump agreed to provide Warsaw with sophisticated anti-missile batteriesreaffirming a commitment made to Poland and the Czech Republic by George W. Bush. Contrary to the protestations of the Obama administration that put a halt to that agreement, the reversal of that commitment was seen both in Central Europe and Moscow as deference to the Russian claim that ABM technology was destabilizing. The Trump administration has also begun shipments of liquid natural gas to Poland, the first of which arrived last month. This reduces Europes compromising dependence on Russian energy imports.

These policies dovetail with the Trump administrations refusal to reduce the burden of Obama-era sanctions on Russia until Moscow withdraws its forces from the territory it occupies in Ukraine. If the Trump administration was expected to go soft on Russia, it has not lived up to its expectations.

This Donald Trump is, however, at war with another Donald Trumpthe Donald Trump who speaks from the heart and without a script. That Donald Trump is conspicuously deferential toward Moscow and well-versed on Russian interests. If President Trump is poised to defend the West against the threats it faces from traditional adversaries like those in the Kremlin, he will only say so when those words are the words on the teleprompter.

Before his speech on Thursday, Donald Trump was asked why he is so reluctant to call out Moscow for its efforts to intervene in the 2016 presidential election even though he believes those hacks of private American political institutions were Russian in origin. I think it was Russia, and it could have been other people in other countries, Trump said. He conceded that several of Americas intelligence agenciesthe FBI, CIA, the National Security Agency, and the Office of the Director of National Intelligenceconcluded that the Russian government orchestrated an influence campaign, including cyber espionage operations, designed to influence the course of American political events. And while he said the history of the run-up to the Iraq War ensured that everyone should be cautious about intelligence estimates, Trump proceeded to scold his predecessor for failing to respond forcefully to Russian meddling.

In Trumps view, Russia is responsible for an attack on American sovereignty, his predecessor choked when confronted with this assault, and he is prepared to ratify that choke as official American policy by declining to rectify what he regards as Obamas mistake. Good luck squaring that circular logic.

There is a charitable line of argument that suggests Trump is averse to attacking Russia for meddling in the 2016 election because it undermines his legitimacy as president. That line does not, however, explain why the president was so observant of Russian interests and disinclined to criticize Vladimir Putin over the course of the 2016 campaign.

In the summer of last year, Trump told the New York Timesthat he may not respond to an attack by Russia on a NATO ally in the Baltics, such as Estonia, because those countries arent paying their bills. Never mind that Estonia was one of only five NATO allies that did meet the alliances defense-spending requirements. Trump endorsed Russias military intervention in Syria as an operation aimed at terrorist elements like ISIS, even though Russia spent most of its energies attacking U.S. supported anti-Assad rebels and neutralizing British and American covert facilities.

When confronted by the fact that Putin presides over a regime in which journalists and opposition figures have a habit of dying violent deaths, Trump replied as a candidate: I think our country does plenty of killing. He reprised the line as the president. There are a lot of killers. Weve got a lot of killers, he told Fox News in February. What, you think our country is so innocent? As a candidate, Trump surrounded himself with figures with ties to pro-Putin elements in Moscow. That indiscretion has led to a series of congressional and Justice Department investigations into that campaign, which saps this administration of authority.

These two Donald Trumps are reconcilable, but only with the understanding that the real Donald Trump is the guy without a Teleprompter in front of him. Its only modestly reassuring that the administration he runs does not appear to share his persuasion. Trumps speechwriters and political appointees arent the president. When the crisis comes, it will be the true Donald Trump who determines the course of history.

From the July/August COMMENTARY symposium.

The following is an excerpt from COMMENTARYs symposium on the threat to free speech:

Speech is under threat on American campuses as never before. Censorship in various forms is on the rise. And this year, the threat to free speech on campus took an even darker turn, toward actual violence. The prospect of Milo Yiannopoulos speaking at Berkeley provoked riots that caused more than $100,000 worth of property damage on the campus. The prospect of Charles Murray speaking at Middlebury led to a riot that put a liberal professor in the hospital with a concussion. Ann Coulters speech at Berkeley was cancelled after the university determined that none of the appropriate venues could be protected from known security threats on the date in question.

The free-speech crisis on campus is caused, at least in part, by a more insidious campus pathology: the almost complete lack of intellectual diversity on elite university faculties. At Yale, for example, the number of registered Republicans in the economics department is zero; in the psychology department, there is one. Overall, there are 4,410 faculty members at Yale, and the total number of those who donated to a Republican candidate during the 2016 primaries was three.

So when todays students purport to feel unsafe at the mere prospect of a conservative speaker on campus, it may be easy to mock them as delicate snowflakes, but in one sense, their reaction is understandable: If students are shocked at the prospect of a Republican behind a university podium, perhaps it is because many of them have never before laid eyes on one.

To see the connection between free speech and intellectual diversity, consider the recent commencement speech of Harvard President Drew Gilpin Faust:

Universities must be places open to the kind of debate that can change ideas.Silencing ideas or basking in intellectual orthodoxy independent of facts and evidence impedes our access to new and better ideas, and it inhibits a full and considered rejection of bad ones....We must work to ensure that universities do not become bubbles isolated from the concerns and discourse of the society that surrounds them. Universities must model a commitment to the notion that truth cannot simply be claimed, but must be establishedestablished through reasoned argument, assessment, and even sometimes uncomfortable challenges that provide the foundation for truth.

Faust is exactly right. But, alas, her commencement audience might be forgiven a certain skepticism. After all, the number of registered Republicans in several departments at Harvarde.g., history and psychologyis exactly zero. In those departments, the professors themselves may be basking in intellectual orthodoxy without ever facing uncomfortable challenges. This may help explain why some students will do everything in their power to keep conservative speakers off campus: They notice that faculty hiring committees seem to do exactly the same thing.

In short, it is a promising sign that true liberal academics like Faust have started speaking eloquently about the crucial importance of civil, reasoned disagreement. But they will be more convincing on this point when they hire a few colleagues with whom they actually disagree.

Read the entire symposium on the threat to free speech in the July/August issue of COMMENTARY here.

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Canada at 150: Celebrating its liberal values and achievements – Idaho State Journal

Posted: at 4:40 am

Americans crossing the far western Canadian-American border pass by the Peace Arch. The inscriptions read: Children of a Common Mother, Brethren Dwelling Together in Unity, and, referring to the open gates in the arch, May These Gates Never Close. We have indeed lived in unity and our border has always been open, with the exception that we now must show our passports.

Even though the Canadians chose to stay with Mother England longer than we did, they still joined us in embracing the liberal political philosophy of the European Enlightenment. With his principles of the separation of powers and religious freedom, English philosopher John Locke was essential to our founding thinkers.

Thomas Jefferson drew on Locke when he declared that all human beings have inalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, but with one exception: he substituted Lockes property with happiness.

Even though only propertied males could vote, Jeffersons preference for happiness and the general welfare was significant for early Americas commitment to the common man. Unfortunately, Americas slaves and women had to wait for the promise inherent in the Declaration of Independence and classical liberalism.

The American and French Revolutions were fought for the promotion of liberal principles, which include inalienable rights, religious freedom, free markets, and free trade. Canadas ruling Liberal Party, as well as our own Democrats, also stand for equal opportunity, which does not mean the guarantee of equal outcomes.

With this principle liberal governments provide funds for public education and health care. The government will pay for your education, but it will not guarantee a job or income, except for a minimum wage.

Citizens who suffer unnecessary illness will not be able to exercise their basic freedoms and support their families. So liberal governments around the world have provided universal health care.

With its patchwork system of government and private insurance, the U.S. spends twice as much on health care while covering fewer people and suffering poorer health results. For example, Canadians in general live 2.5 years longer than Americans, and those suffering from cystic fibrosis survive on average 10 more years.

Canada has committed itself to liberal values more consistently than the U.S., and the results have been impressive. In terms of social and economic mobility Canada now ranks among some European countries in terms of getting ahead.

One study found that 50 percent of Americans will remain in the lowest 20th percentile, while only 20 percent of Canadians and Danes will remain at the bottom. The titles of recent essays sum it up: Poor at 20; Poor for Life and The American Dream has moved North.

The libertarian Cato Institute, an unabashed promoter of the American Way, has ranked the Canada sixth on its Human Freedom Index while the U.S. finds itself 23rd behind Poland.

In terms of economic freedom, the conservative Heritage Foundation ranks Canada 7th with the U.S. 17th. And Reporters Without Borders awards Canada 18th place for press freedom with the U.S. at a distant 41st.

The Economist has been the mouthpiece for English liberalism since 1842, and a recent article on Canada has a provocative title: The Last Liberals.

As the U.S. and Europe start to tighten immigration, Canada still maintains its liberal immigration policies. Newly elected Canadian Prime Justin Trudeau has personally greeted Syrian refugees at the airport offering them winter coats and food.

Canadians pay higher taxes. But they, just like the Europeans, get a very good return on their investment. And contrary to GOP ideology, higher taxes do not kill economic growth. In the last quarter Canadas economy grew 3.7 percent while the U. S. was at an anemic 1.4 percent.

A steady revenue stream allows Canada to run an annual deficit of 2.7 percent of GDP. Our annual deficit has now climbed to 3.5 percent of GDP, after Obama had brought it down from over 10 percent to 3.2 percent, so it is Trumps debt now.

Canadas proper balance of taxes and spending means Canadas total national debt is much lower than ours: 32.5 percent of GDP versus the U.S. at over 100 percent.

As most Canadians celebrate 150 years of progress, there are some who are not joining the party. Leah Gazan is a member of the Wood Mountain Lakota nation and the famous Sioux chief Sitting Bull is in her family lineage.

Her mother overcame a childhood of abuse in orphanages and convents and rose to become one of the first psychiatric nurses in Saskatchewan.

Gazan swears that, until the Canadian government stops violating fundamental indigenous human rights, I have nothing to celebrate.

Nick Gier of Moscow taught philosophy at the University of Idaho for 31 years. Read the full version at http://www.sandpointreader.com.

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The liberal reporting on sleeveless dresses in the Capitol is monumentally false and stupid – Washington Examiner

Posted: at 4:40 am

Sloppy reporting is not new. There has always been corner-cutting in journalism.

There is a new genre of lazy reporting in the Trump era, however, that goes well beyond the sloppy, and straight into the aggressively ignorant.

A prime example of this sort of thing would be this week's news cycle claiming House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wisc., is responsible somehow for the Speaker's lobby's decades-old dress code.

This flat-out embarrassing narrative begins with a CBS News report titled, "Are sleeveless dresses appropriate attire'? Congress doesn't think so." The article itself is fun, and it goes over the details of the Speaker's lobby dress code, which requires that men wear jackets and ties and that women dress "appropriately," meaning no sleeveless dresses or open-toe shoes.

The dress code is loosely defined, and enforcement depends on who's doing the enforcing. The code is not new, it applies specifically to the Speaker's lobby and it has been this way for many, many, many years.

But Trump derangement syndrome is a hell of a thing, and certain people in the press saw the CBS report as an opportunity to accuse Paul Ryan of imposing his sexist will on female congressional reporters (or something like that).

Just look at these headlines:

Look at the opening paragraph of the Vogue story:

Not content with wanting to dictate what women can do with their own bodies, Republicans in Congress are now trying to dictate what women can wear. According to multiple female reporters in Washington, D.C., it seems sleeveless clothes are no longer considered "appropriate attire" for women working at the Capitol.

Are you kidding me?

Luckily, a good number of journalists who actually know what they're talking about weighed in to point out that, no, Paul Ryan didn't impose some weird new dress code on female congressional reporters.

Unsurprisingly, certain journalists are having a difficult time letting this particular news cycle go, and they are scrounging desperately for a new anti-GOP angle.

"Alright. No, the Speaker's Lobby dress code isn't new. But is it a good policy? Is it sexist? Does Paul Ryan have no power to change it?" asked the Huffington Post's Matt Fuller.

"This is the dumbest news cycle of the year, and Capitol Hill reporters who think they're ACTUALLY right are still ACTUALLY getting it wrong. It just amazes me that reporters believe SPEAKER Paul Ryan has no authority to change the dress code of the SPEAKER'S Lobby," he added.

Sure. That's the real takeaway from this one-hundred percent bungled news cycle. A bogus narrative based on aggressively bad journalism and the real story here is that Ryan hasn't updated that one thing no one cared about until this week.

Okay.

It was bad enough when reporters suggested the House Speaker's logo was based on Nazi-era iconography, but this dress code bit is just ridiculous.

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The liberal reporting on sleeveless dresses in the Capitol is monumentally false and stupid - Washington Examiner

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