Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices

Conservative Voices

@conservativevoices

‘DECAPITATION’ is not the same as regime change: National security strategist
Favicon 
www.brighteon.com

‘DECAPITATION’ is not the same as regime change: National security strategist

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

Trump issues ULTIMATUM to Iran
Favicon 
www.brighteon.com

Trump issues ULTIMATUM to Iran

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

The Lost Charms of ‘Football,’ and of Life
Favicon 
www.theamericanconservative.com

The Lost Charms of ‘Football,’ and of Life

Takimag The Lost Charms of ‘Football,’ and of Life Professional players once were heroes, not celebrities. TakiMag Americans, like Indians, have largely been immune to the charms of soccer, or what we in Europe call football, and so am I, though in my case it was not always so. Whether the current World Cup changes that remains to be seen. When I was a boy, I thought soccer was important, though never quite as important as Bill Shankly, the manager of Liverpool Football Club, thought it. He said that football was not a matter of life and death—it was much more serious than that. The sport has changed out of all recognition since I first attended a professional match in England more than sixty-five years ago. The changes have been both for the better and worse: the changes for the better tangible, those for the worse intangible and therefore giving rise to nostalgia, an emotion that these days is much, and wrongly, deprecated. Past a certain age, if you feel no nostalgia, you must have led a miserable existence. I look back almost with astonishment at the conditions of the game when I was very young. The stadiums were uncomforting and dilapidated, with terraces on which the majority of the crowd stood, not sat. If the stand was covered, which often it wasn’t, it was by a corrugated iron roof. The pitch was of real grass, and when it rained, as often it did (soccer being a winter sport), the ground turned to gloopy mud through which the players struggled as if in the trenches of Flanders during the First World War. The leather ball became heavy and sodden, and kicking it must have been like kicking a cannonball. Many were the players who must have suffered later in life (but not so very much later) from a form of dementia pugilistica from having repeatedly headed such a ball. It was not even as if they, the players, had been well-rewarded for their efforts. Astonishing as it may seem, the professional players were subject to a maximum, not a minimum, wage, which was about that of a skilled factory worker (in those days, there were still factories in England that made things). No club was permitted to pay its players more than this, so no team, or small group of teams, could monopolise the star players, many of whom were local to the teams. This meant that the competition between teams was more open: trophies and championships were not shared out monotonously between three or four teams at most. The players were heroes, not celebrities. After the match, they went home on the bus, not in Ferraris. They gave their signatures to adoring schoolboys, but their lives were otherwise a blank page to the public. Their pictures appeared on little cards in cigarette packets or in packets of tea, avidly collected and swapped by boys (not girls). They were not multi-millionaires by the age of twenty-two. I met a professional footballer when I was seven or eight. It was in a place called Sennen in Cornwall, where I had gone with my mother and brother on holiday. His name was Johnny Rainford, and he played for a team—Brentford—which was not one of the most famous of teams, but nonetheless respectably good enough. He would have been about 27 at the time, a gentleman, by no means dazzled by his own status. Of course, we were in awe of him, my brother and I, but he played patiently with us on a beach, his skill with the ball astonishing to us. It probably bored him to play with two young boys who had no skill at all, but (if I remember well) he exuded a kind of decency, patience and good-humoured modesty. We even ate with him once or twice in our hotel. Of his subsequent life I know nothing, except that he died, alas, at the now comparatively young age of 70, a quarter of a century ago, in 2001. Peace and honour be to his memory! Strangely enough, I think of him, though I doubt that he was high-born, whenever (which is rarely) the subject of gentlemanliness comes up. Since then, of course, professional footballers have undergone a process of celebrification. They are heavily tattooed, wear diamond studs in their ears, crash Lamborghinis into trees, and then go out and buy another one the next day. But the fact is that they are remarkable athletes, who run up and down a pitch about 110 yards long for ninety minutes without apparent exhaustion (players used to be much more exhausted after a game, possibly because they did not follow so strict a regime). Their strength and skill are astonishing, and even someone who hardly knew the rules of the game would be able to see that they were supremely good at what they did. Their skill is vastly superior to that of the players of my childhood, no doubt in part because the conditions under which they play are more propitious for the exercise of such skill. The ball is light, the ground is firm, their boots are soft and supple compared with the agonising clodhoppers that I remember. As a spectacle, the game has improved out of all recognition—though, of course, we couldn’t have known all those years ago that it would do so, and thus we were satisfied with what we saw. The sport was a cheap entertainment, easily within the means of the ordinary working man, requiring no great financial sacrifice on his part to attend regularly. Now, he must either pay a ridiculously large portion of his disposable income to do so or cede his place to a member of the middle class. Our psychology and our culture have changed remarkably in the interval. Looking at films of old matches, I hear ordinary applause— clapping—when a goal is scored, and the players pat the scorer on the back in a relatively restrained way, rather than pile on top of him, embracing or even kissing him for what seems like an eternity. The scorer evinces no vainglory, as if he were a conquering hero, no excess of joy, only pleasure. The game is better, the game is worse: I suppose a metaphor for life itself. The post The Lost Charms of ‘Football,’ and of Life appeared first on The American Conservative.

Liberal Elites Promote ‘Abundance,’ But Democratic Voters Want Socialism
Favicon 
www.theamericanconservative.com

Liberal Elites Promote ‘Abundance,’ But Democratic Voters Want Socialism

Politics Liberal Elites Promote ‘Abundance,’ But Democratic Voters Want Socialism Pro-capitalist social liberalism resembles the “reform conservatism” that President Trump vanquished. The next mayor of DC is set to be a far-left police abolitionist backed by the Democratic Socialists of America. Janeese Lewis George won the Democratic primary this week. Barring a miracle, she will be the next mayor of the city where Republicans don’t exist.  Lewis George made her name in DC politics as a Black Lives Matter activist campaigning to defund the police. She still wants to abolish ICE. She wants to implement numerous left-wing policies, such as expanded rent control, more subsidized housing, and greater business regulations. No one would accuse her of being a pro-business moderate.  She’s just one of many socialists gaining support in Democratic primaries: Chicago, New York, and Seattle are led by DSA-backed politicians, and LA may have a socialist mayor after November. A DSA-aligned candidate could be the party’s Senate nominee in Michigan and Minnesota, as well as its gubernatorial candidate in Wisconsin. Progressives are also doing well in other races. Graham Platner is the most notable example.  All this proves the Democratic base wants far-left candidates. This is bad news for “abundance” liberals and others who wanted the party to move to the center. Their actual voters resonate to a completely different message. Abundance is an idea put forward by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson, two pundits with deep influence in establishment media. It’s a pretty simple concept: Democrats need to embrace pro-growth policies to counter the MAGA Right, win back independents, and make America great again. Abundance liberals want Democrats to come to terms with the market rather than declare war on it. They want to deregulate and to encourage businesses to thrive. Of course, they haven’t given up on social liberalism. An abundance-centered Democratic Party would still advocate for open borders and Pride Months, but as part of an agenda that aims to eliminate government bloat and champion capitalism. In their book promoting this agenda, Klein and Thompson focused on the failures of Democratic governance in big cities as evidence for the need for abundance. Left-wing policies, in their opinion, have led to failing social services and fleeing businesses. The book became a bestseller last year. It was endorsed by Gavin Newsom and numerous Democratic donors. It inspired 30 House Democrats to form a “Build America Caucus.” It also generated a constant supply of takes for and against abundance among the commentariat. Whether people agreed with it or not, abundance was a serious idea the Left paid attention to. That was then. Unfortunately for Klein and Thompson, the policies they criticized remain very popular among Democratic voters across the country, especially the major cities. Indeed, no idea has been more thoroughly repudiated in Democratic primaries this year than abundance. Candidates who stand in strongest contrast to abundance continue to win. A party represented by Platner, Mamdani, and Lewis George is not the one envisioned by Klein and Thompson. Even worse for them, this anti-growth socialism continues to win in cities where it proves the most devastating. Seattle’s socialist mayor is a major factor in convincing nearly half of Washington businesses to consider leaving the state. Klein understands much of his party is rejecting his core idea. In an April podcast, he conceded a lot of points to his critics and tried to insist that abundance liberals want the same things as socialists. They just want to use different means. It’s an argument that’s falling on deaf ears.  Abundance resembles a lot of fads among conservative intellectuals and policy makers. It’s extremely common for this group to begin championing some particular idea as the new way forward for the right while their voters reject or ignore it at the ballot box. In the mid-2010s, self-described “reform conservatives” presented themselves as the future of Republican politics. They posited a wonky, bloodless form of conservatism that would aim to offer an eclectic mix of policy proposals to everyday problems. It notably took little interest in cultural matters. Reformoconism inspired zero enthusiasm among Republican voters. They picked Donald Trump, a man who dispensed with wonkery in favor of the red meat the base desired. Abundance arose in a time when Democrats were trying to find their way after the devastating 2024 loss. Leading liberal commentators and Democratic politicians were eager to say they were putting woke away. They wanted to be seen as moderates who understood why their party lost in ‘24. They were leery of the far-left and how it had alienated the public from the Democrats. Back then, the left was primed to hear the message of abundance. It appeared to offer something new and different. It aligned with the spirit of aspirational moderation.  But a lot has changed since then. The pro-Trump “vibe shift” came to an end. Zohran Mamdani became mayor of New York City. Democrats revived “abolish ICE.” The Iran War happened. The Democratic base became much angrier. Now, the enthusiasm for moderation is dead, replaced by Mamdani. Abundance liberals’ enthusiasm for growth faces a major obstacle with Democrats’ sharp turn against tech. AI and data centers are the enemy. Even though tech may be the biggest contributor to American economic growth right now, Democratic voters want it to stop. No amount of abundance rhetoric can convince them otherwise.  These state and local contests offer a possible preview of what the 2028 Democratic presidential primary may look like. For all the efforts spent by Newsom and others to move to the center, they may all be forced to cater to their party’s radical elements to have any hope of winning the nomination. Few will tout their abundance credentials. For all the hype and attention, abundance liberalism may end up as relevant as the reformocons. The only ones who may remember it are the ones who bought the book. The post Liberal Elites Promote ‘Abundance,’ But Democratic Voters Want Socialism appeared first on The American Conservative.

LA Does Not Love LA
Favicon 
townhall.com

LA Does Not Love LA

LA Does Not Love LA