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Country Roundup
Country Roundup
1 h

“100% In The Illuminati” – Conspiracy Theories Fly As Lainey Wilson Takes Home Her Second CMA Entertainer Of The Year Award
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“100% In The Illuminati” – Conspiracy Theories Fly As Lainey Wilson Takes Home Her Second CMA Entertainer Of The Year Award

I mean, it could just be because she’s talented? I’ll admit, I thought Morgan Wallen absolutely deserved to win Entertainer of the Year tonight at the CMA Awards. Nobody is bigger or has done more for country music over the past year. But it’s hard to find anything bad to say about Lainey Wilson winning it either. Lainey took home her second Entertainer of the Year award tonight, after first winning the night’s top prize back in 2023. And naturally, there were a lot of fans of other artists who weren’t happy about it…and a lot of conspiracy theories after she not only won Entertainer of the Year but also took home Female Vocalist of the Year and Album of the Year for Whirlwind (in addition to hosting the show). Some people think she has some kind of dirt on the CMA Awards – or that she’s getting special treatment because she’s the host: What dirt does Lainey Wilson have on the cma because there’s no reason she should be winning every award — Kanye East (@kanyeeast40) November 20, 2025 Look Lainey Wilson is good. But WHY is she hosting a show she’s nominated the most for and winning everything. It’s giving majorly rigged #cmaawards — Liller (@_Liller) November 20, 2025 Idk how Lainey keeps winning cmas I can’t name one of her songs…. This is so rigged bc she’s the host. Cody or Luke deserved that more — Colette (@cocohanks) November 20, 2025 Lainey is the CMA puppet so of course she will win all the awards why not #cma2025 — Colson HighRoller (@ColsonRomo14) November 20, 2025 Others seem to think there’s bribery involved. (For the record, I’m a CMA member and nobody even tried to bribe me for my vote). https://twitter.com/af1313af/status/1991355573049377258 But there were plenty of other wild conspiracy theories too: Lainey Wilson is an industry plant — Jake (@JakeAndBall) November 20, 2025 my only explanation for the CMAs is that Lainey Wilson definitely knows what’s in those Epstein Files — Mark Diana (@MarkDiana5) November 20, 2025 You can’t tell me Lainey Wilson isn’t an industry plant #cma2025 — Margo (@work_gal) November 20, 2025 Lainey Wilson is 100% in the Illuminati. — JoeeSwolee (@itsjoethesecond) November 20, 2025 And the comments were much the same over on Instagram: “Lainey Wilson must be good friends with whoever picks the winners.” “Lainey Wilson is paying off the CMA’s. Because there is no logical reason she won. Shes still on theaters and amphitheaters” “Lainey Wilson has the Russian FSB working as her lobbyists. That’s my only conclusion.” Look, I get it. I thought it should have been somebody else too, simply because Morgan is undeniably the biggest artist in country music, which is what the award should be about. But it’s also not fair to Lainey because she was undoubtedly deserving of the award. She works her a– off for country music, is an incredible ambassador for the genre, and puts on a killer live show. Sure, she’s not selling out stadiums like some of the other nominees, but she also doesn’t deserve the hate she’s already getting for her awards. I guess that’s a good problem to have though: Winning so much that people get sick of it. 2025 CMA Award Winners Entertainer of the Year Morgan Wallen Luke Combs Lainey Wilson – Winner Cody Johnson Chris Stapleton Album of the Year Am I Okay? – Megan Moroney Producer: Kristian Bush Mix Engineer: Justin Niebank Cold Beer & Country Music – Zach Top Producer: Carson Chamberlain Mix Engineer: Matt Rovey F-1 Trillon – Post Malone Producers: Louis Bell, Charlie Handsome, Hoskins Mix Engineer: Ryan Gore I’m The Problem – Morgan Wallen Producers: Jacob Durrett, Charlie Handsome, Joey Moi Mix Engineers: Charlie Handsome, Joey Moi  Whirlwind – Lainey Wilson – Winner Producer: Jay Joyce Mix Engineers: Jason Hall, Jay Joyce Male Vocalist of the Year Chris Stapleton Morgan Wallen Luke Combs Cody Johnson – Winner Zach Top Female Vocalist of the Year Lainey Wilson – Winner Ella Langley Megan Moroney Kelsea Ballerini Miranda Lambert Vocal Group of the Year Old Dominion The Red Clay Strays – Winner Little Big Town Lady A Rascal Flatts Vocal Duo of the Year Brooks & Dunn – Winner Dan + Shay Brothers Osborne The War and Treaty Maddie & Tae Single of the Year “4X4XU” – Lainey Wilson Producer: Jay Joyce Mix Engineers: Jason Hall, Jay Joyce “Ain’t No Love In Oklahoma” – Luke Combs Producers: Luke Combs, Chip Matthews, Jonathan Singleton Mix Engineer: Chip Matthews “Am I Okay?” – Megan Moroney Producer: Kristian Bush Mix Engineer: Justin Niebank “I Never Lie” – Zach Top Producer: Carson Chamberlain Mix Engineer: Mat Rovey “You Look Like You Love Me” – Ella Langley ft. Riley Green – Winner Producer: Will Bundy Mix Engineer: Jim Cooley Song of the Year “4X4XU” – Lainey Wilson Songwriters: Jon Decious, Aaron Raitiere, Lainey Wilson “Am I Okay? – Megan Moroney Songwriters: Jessie Jo Dillon, Luke Laird, Megan Moroney “I Never Lie” – Zach Top Songwriters: Carson Chamberlain, Tim Nichols, Zach Top “Texas” – Blake Shelton Songwriters: Johnny Clawson, Josh Dorr, Lalo Guzman, Kyle Sturrock “You Look Like You Love Me” – Ella Langley ft. Riley Green – Winner Songwriters: Riley Green, Ella Langley, Aaron Raitiere New Artist of the Year Zach Top Ella Langley Stephen Wilson Jr. Tucker Wetmore Shaboozey Musician of the Year Jenee Fleenor (Fiddle) Paul Franklin (Steel Guitar) Brett Mason (Guitar) Rob McNelley (Guitar) Derek Wells (Guitar) Music Video of the Year “Am I Okay?” – Megan Moroney Directors: Alexander Gavillet, Megan Moroney “I’m Gonna Love You” – Cody Johnson & Carrie Underwood Director: Dustin Haney “Somewhere Over Laredo” – Lainey Wilson Director: TK McKamy “Think I’m In Love With You” – Chris Stapleton Director: Running Bear “You Look Like You Love Me” – Ella Langley & Riley Green – Winner Directors: Ella Langley, John Park, Wales Toney Musical Event of the Year “Don’t Mind If I Do” – Riley Green ft. Ella Langley Producers: Scott Borchetta, Jimmy Harnen, Dann Huff “Hard Fought Hallelujah” – Brandon Lake w/ Jelly Roll Producer: Micha Nichols “I’m Gonna Love You” – Cody Johnson w/ Carrie Underwood Producer: Trent Willmon “Pour Me A Drink” – Post Malone ft. Blake Shelton – Winner Producers: Louis Bell, Charlie Handsome “You Had to Be There” – Megan Moroney ft. Kenny Chesney Producer: Kristian Bush The post “100% In The Illuminati” – Conspiracy Theories Fly As Lainey Wilson Takes Home Her Second CMA Entertainer Of The Year Award first appeared on Whiskey Riff.
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Country Roundup
Country Roundup
1 h

Morgan Wallen Fans Are NOT Happy That He Was Completely Snubbed At This Year’s CMA Awards: “A Total Joke”
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Morgan Wallen Fans Are NOT Happy That He Was Completely Snubbed At This Year’s CMA Awards: “A Total Joke”

Another year empty handed after the CMA Awards for Morgan Wallen. Tonight, host Lainey Wilson took home the coveted Entertainer of the Year award trophy, after being up against a stacked group in Cody Johnson, Chris Stapleton, Luke Combs, and of course, Morgan Wallen. View this post on Instagram We knew going into it that Morgan was highly unlikely to attend, because he won Entertainer of the Year last year and didn’t show up, and he never even really addressed the award or even acknowledged it, other than posting a picture of the trophy in a slideshow on Instagram. He recently drove his point him during a surprise appearance with Ella Langley at the Ryman Auditorium when he took another shot at the CMA Awards, which take place just steps from the Ryman at Bridgestone Arena: “It takes a lot more than an awards show to get me out to Broadway these days, I’ll tell you that.” So yeah, I don’t think anyone really expected him to be there in person, but I think some fans were a little surprised that he didn’t win one award, despite being nominated for the aforementioned Entertainer of the Year award, as well as Album of the Year for I’m the Problem and Male Vocalist of the Year. But despite consistently topping both the country and all-genre charts, selling out stadiums all over the world and having unprecedented success with each album release worldwide, that hasn’t been enough to secure the biggest trophy at the CMA Awards, or even any of the other ones for the categories he was nominated in. I love Lainey, I have nothing against her winning or any of the other nominees had they taken home the EOTY this year, because it was a stacked category and they were all very deserving, but there’s no question who is at the top right now in country music, and even music in general, and it’s Morgan Wallen. These shows do themselves no favors by making these kinds of calls and only validate the criticisms and issues so many fans already have with them. Personally, I don’t think these awards prove anything one way or the other about how good or bad any artist or band is, so I really don’t care that much about who wins what either way, but of course, fans certainly had a lot to say about it online: You will never convince me Laney Wilson’s new album is better than Morgan Wallwns. Let ALONE, that anyone besides Morgan Wallen is the entertainer of the year.@CountryMusic #countrymusic — Zeus¹⁶ (@ZeusssR6) November 20, 2025 I just want to know WHY MORGAN WALLEN DIDN’T WIN ANYTHING?!? @CountryMusic — Kribse M.S (@krib_zee) November 20, 2025 The fact Morgan Wallen didn’t get entertainer of the year is a total joke. None sold out football stadiums all year like him. #cma2025 #morganwallen — Nate Carver (@Carvercat21) November 20, 2025 Look I love Lainey Wilson, she’s awesome But She shouldn’t be Entertainer of the Year lol Morgan Wallen should have won that, he’s selling out football stadiums and breaking every record in music. But the voters are very biased and dumb lol — Ben Diesel (@BenDiesel24) November 20, 2025 Morgan Wallen should’ve won. We all know this #cma2025 — JG (@J_Graham15) November 20, 2025 The Fact Morgan Wallen isn’t a regular as entertainer of the year is borderline criminal , buddy sells out stadiums in minutes but chooses to not go to award shows so he gets passed up — Wes Hudson (@cfhnole) November 20, 2025 I know Morgan Wallen doesn’t care about these awards or award shows, but he IS the entertainer of the year. — Alyssa Kay (@alyssa4jb) November 20, 2025 And they wonder why Morgan Wallen doesn’t attend any of the award shows….absolutely ridiculous. #cma2025 #countrymusic — Nikki Hardin (@Nikki_Hardin17) November 20, 2025 Aaaand it continues to make sense why Morgan Wallen doesn’t show up to this @CountryMusic #CMAawards — Josue Mendoza (@Josuizzy9_TVO) November 20, 2025 Morgan Wallen once again robbed of entertainer of the year CMA awards should be ashamed for being so politically motivated in their decisions every single year with these awards #cma2025 — GutsyPicksCash (@GutsyPicksCash) November 20, 2025 Lainey Wilson Entertainer of the Year over Morgan Wallen? Okay… — CockPhin (@DSandman1801) November 20, 2025 Nothing against Lainey at all but there is NO WAY Morgan Wallen doesn’t get one award! #cmaawards — Rob (@hitman6498) November 20, 2025 Neither Chris Stapleton nor Morgan Wallen won a single CMA award this year. — Kyle (@astronautikyle) November 20, 2025 Not taking anything away from the nominees, but Morgan Wallen not Winning entertainer of the year is a joke. — JMack (@VALambeauLeaper) November 20, 2025 At this rate, I don’t know if Morgan will ever attend another CMA Awards show, and he seems to be more than okay with that.The post Morgan Wallen Fans Are NOT Happy That He Was Completely Snubbed At This Year’s CMA Awards: “A Total Joke” first appeared on Whiskey Riff.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 h

Can Mark Cuban Save the Mavericks—Again?
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Can Mark Cuban Save the Mavericks—Again?

Culture Can Mark Cuban Save the Mavericks—Again? The Dallas Mavericks traded away their star player and now face an uphill battle to regain relevance.  Mark Cuban could only watch in horror.  The former principal owner of the Dallas Mavericks, Cuban was sidelined in February when his Mavericks traded away their playmaking prodigy, the 26-year-old Slovenian point guard Luka Doncic, to the Los Angeles Lakers. Had Cuban still controlled the day-to-day operations of the Mavericks, Luka, the former #3 draft pick and a fan favorite, would never have been traded. But Cuban, who sold away his majority ownership stake in December 2023 to Patrick Dumont, the son-in-law of Israeli-American businesswoman and Trump-influencer Miriam Adelson, no longer made the key decisions in Dallas. Away Luka went.  Fans in Dallas, who had come to expect sharp strategy from Cuban’s front office, were in for a shock when Dumont arrived. Dumont, who knew little about basketball aside from a fan’s perspective, spent his early career in investment banking with Bear Stearns before helping the Adelson family launch a $140 million takeover bid of the Las Vegas Review-Journal in 2015.  In some ways, that background is no different than many of the men who own and control the destinies of multi-billion dollar sports teams. Take the Los Angeles Clippers owner, Steve Ballmer, for example. What does boisterous Ballmer know about basketball? Well, he knows how to cheer and that’s about it. Which isn’t a dig, by the way; many of the great sporting owners simply sign checks and enjoy the games. And in a lot of ways, Dumont’s background wasn’t all that different from that of Cuban, who had used his billions earned during the dot-com boom to finance entry into a very different NBA than the one we see today.  When Cuban purchased the Mavericks for $285 million four days into the new millennium, the Mavericks were known as one of the worst teams in league history. They boasted a 40 percent win rate over the previous 20 years before Cuban’s arrival and a less-than-stellar 21–32 record in the few playoff appearances they had made in that time span. Cuban immediately began to change the culture in Dallas. In a league governed by the notoriously tight commissioner David Stern, the brash, loud-mouthed Cuban immediately made himself an adversary of the NBA’s top brass. Cuban became the maverick of a league known for its straightforward owners. Cultivating enemies and fans who glommed on to his unconventional approach to management, Cuban racked up hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of fines, including $100,000 for confronting officials on the court in January 2014, only weeks before Stern’s retirement.  Cuban and the Mavericks prospered in the years that came after Stern’s retirement. Under the leadership of the current NBA commissioner Adam Silver, Cuban was fined less and found success in a league that suddenly became data-driven. Cuban also inherited one of the smartest men in the game, Don Nelson, who, as general manager, engineered a draft-day trade that brought the future star Dirk Nowitzki to the Mavs in 1998, a year and a half before Cuban’s arrival. While Cuban stalked the sidelines and berated officials over the next two decades, Nelson helped build the German Nowitzki into a ball-dominant big man who revolutionized the power forward position.  Nowitzki never left the Mavericks, a career arc that many hoped Luka would replicate. Dirk played all 21 seasons of his illustrious career in Dallas, leading his team to a remarkable NBA championship in the 2010–11 season. For that, Nowitzki became an icon in a city that adores winners. It was a Cinderella story: a down-on-its-luck franchise bought by an up-and-coming tech titan who splashed cash where needed and left the front-office decisions to a grizzled vet.  As Nowitzki’s career came to a close, the Mavericks began searching for the next franchise cornerstone. The year was 2018, and although Nowitzki, the French guard Tony Parker, and the Spanish big man Pau Gasol had proven international players were a formidable force in the NBA, there were still looming questions about the ceiling for foreign stars in a league run by Yanks.  Though many talking heads were convinced that the then-19-year-old Real Madrid star Doncic had the stuff to lead an NBA franchise, some doubted that his game could translate. When draft night arrived, the two big men DeAndre Ayton and Marvin Bagley III came off the board first and second. Doncic fell to third, where the Atlanta Hawks took him as part of yet-another draft day trade involving the Mavericks, who selected guard Trae Young at pick #5 before swapping the two players.  In Young, the Hawks got a franchise player who has lived up to his billing. On the other hand, the Phoenix Suns and the Sacramento Kings, who both passed on Luka, have spent years in turmoil as their chosen big men failed to live up to the hype. The one player who did live up to the hype and more: Doncic, who immediately became a playmaking shotmaker for the Mavericks. By the end of his first season in the United States, he had won Rookie of the Year and was being touted as the future of the NBA.  In the years that followed, Doncic was a revelation for Dallas. Not only did he will his team to the promised land; he became a fan favorite for his style of play. His passing instincts were among the best in the league. He played with a tenacious energy, leaving everything on the court. In a league struggling with the concept of load management, Doncic played every night he could, even when lumbering through various injuries. More than anything, Luka was clutch; in the big moments, he never shied away. He sought out the big shots and he made them.  By 2024, Luka wasn’t just a franchise player for Dallas; he was a cornerstone piece for the NBA as a league. Fans from around the country were tuning into Mavericks games night in and night out just to see the one they call “Luka Magic.” When the Mavericks entered the 2024 playoffs as the 5th seed in the West, few thought they could challenge for a title. But Luka and the Mavericks proved them wrong.  In a post-season run that mirrored Nowitzki’s incredible performance in 2011, Luka led Dallas through a gantlet of better teams before sizing up the Oklahoma City Thunder in the Western Conference Finals. As usual, Doncic was fabulous. With the help of guard Kyrie Irving, Doncic rallied the Mavs past the Thunder and to an improbable Finals appearance against the vaunted Boston Celtics. In the end, Boston, behind stars Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, overwhelmed the Mavs in five games.  And though the Mavericks lost the 2024 Finals, basketball fans near and wide had come to see Doncic for what he was—arguably the best player in a league chock-full of talent. But back home in the proverbial garage, all was not well under the hood in Dallas. Nico Harrison, the general manager personally appointed by Cuban to run basketball operations in June 2021, wasn’t as sold as everyone else on Luka. Harrison privately wondered whether Doncic’s training habits and conditioning level, which had come under scrutiny as Luka’s weight ballooned following the NBA finals, were up to the expectations of a championship-minded organization.  Still, what transpired in April of this year left many pundits, casual fans, and Cuban himself stunned. Harrison, Dumont, and the Mavericks traded Doncic away. Not only did they part ways with Luka, they sent him to a Western conference foe whose name and reputation strike fear in clubs across the league: the Lakers. In return, Harrison bought an aging, oft-injured Anthony Davis. Harrison argued the Mavericks were in a “win-now” mentality and that defense, something Davis was best known for, is what really wins championships. But his rationale made no sense.  The Mavs stumbled to the finishing gate of the 2025 season and missed the playoffs. In a stroke of luck that defied Harrison’s mismanagement, the Mavs won the first pick in the NBA draft lottery despite having only a 1.8 percent chance at the top pick. With it, Dallas selected Cooper Flagg, an 18-year-old phenom from Maine who was so big and fast and prolific that he skipped a year of high school basketball. He enrolled at Duke as a 17-year-old before proceeding to torment and dominate every team he faced in the college hoops landscape.  But Flagg’s addition to the Mavs did little to sway animosity toward Harrison and Dumont. With an injured Davis lingering on the bench and the Mavericks off to a 4–11 start this season, fans let the two men hear their discontent. Harrison, who following the Luka trade admitted he “didn’t quite know” the level of support that Doncic had in Dallas, was especially on the receiving end of taunting that lasted throughout most home games this season. The “Fire Nico” chants grew so loud in the American Airlines Center at times that they drowned out actual support for the team on the court. The situation had become untenable. Nico had to go. And so, nine months after the worst trade of the Trump era, Harrison was relieved of his duties on November 11. Dumont cited fan frustration and said the move was made to “refocus on building a championship-caliber organization.” Harrison’s firing wasn’t the only thing that changed overnight in Dallas. Cuban, who had been essentially sidelined by the new organization following sale of his majority stake, has been tentatively brought back into the fold to help advise Dumont and ownership.  Cuban, who once turned around the franchise but who had since been reduced to the “world’s richest mascot,” is now working with Dumont’s team to find consensus and to direct operations back toward winning. First order on the list is finding a new general manager to replace Harrison. Cuban has suggested Dennis Lindsey, a former front-office executive with the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. Second, and perhaps most important, is building a roster that can contend with the dominant Thunder, who have premier talent at every position including the bench.  Flagg’s youthful presence on the team allows Dallas the opportunity to move its aging assets and build around one of the brightest young stars in the league. Expect to see big waves in and out of Dallas in the coming months as Dumont and his team attempt to work with Cuban to salvage a sinking ship.  Regardless of where they go from here, the decision to ship off Doncic will always be remembered as one of the most boneheaded moves in the history of professional sports. The Slovenian star looks spectacular in his limited time with the Lakers, and many are already predicting he will win MVP honors while wearing purple and gold this year.  Can the Mavericks be saved? That’s a question that only time will tell. But if Cuban is going to help resuscitate a franchise on life support, this time he’ll have to do it from the sidelines.  The post Can Mark Cuban Save the Mavericks—Again? appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Conservative Voices
1 h

Right-Wing Candidate to Face Off Against Communist for Chile’s Presidency
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Right-Wing Candidate to Face Off Against Communist for Chile’s Presidency

Foreign Affairs Right-Wing Candidate to Face Off Against Communist for Chile’s Presidency José Antonio Kast bested two other right-of-center candidates to face Jeanette Jara in Chile’s second-round election. (Photo by RAUL BRAVO/AFP via Getty Images) Despite taking second place in the total vote count, the right-wing candidate José Antonio Kast emerged triumphant from the first round of the Chilean presidential election. Kast, who competed against a slate of other right-wingers for the chance to appear in the presidential runoff, slightly outperformed polls to take home 24 percent of the vote, just a few scant percentage points behind Jeannette Jara of the Communist Party of Chile, the left-wing unity candidate, who received 26.8 percent of votes. Jara’s first-place finish comes as no surprise, as the only major left-wing candidate competing against a full slate of right-wing and populist candidates. Indeed, her performance is likely to be demoralizing to the Chilean left: The full force of the unified left, which was confident and even dominant just four years ago, was not able to muster the votes of even three out of 10 Chileans. Jara’s performance was no doubt weighed down by the consistent unpopularity of the left-wing government of President Gabriel Boric, which has consistently mustered a net approval rating of minus 30 percent or worse since December 2022. His government never recovered from the complete failure of his attempt to revise the Chilean constitution in September 2022, a fiasco that saw Boric’s constitutional proposal, which would have written a litany of left-wing values and positions into the organic law of the country, defeated by 24 points. In contrast, the right, though divided between the Catholic nationalist Kast, the traditional center-right candidate Evelyn Matthei, and the new national libertarian right represented by Johannes Kaiser, was able to pull together a hair over 50 percent collectively. Kaiser, a new contender on the national stage who aspires to be the Javier Milei of Chile, managed a respectable performance, with roughly 14 percent of the vote for a fourth place finish. Though deprived of a surprise victory á la his exemplar next door, his National Libertarian Party continues to grow in strength, picking up two more deputies and a senator in parliamentary elections. It nevertheless remains by far the junior partner in a coalition with Kast’s Republican Party. Matthei, a veteran politician who has served in various high-profile roles in government since the end of Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship and ran for president in 2013, finished last of all the major candidates, with a disappointing 12.5 percent. The traditional Chilean right looks exhausted in the face of new, more energetic alternatives. Kast and Kaiser appeal to the more ideologically minded on the right; the centrist populist Franco Parisi has a strong attraction for the center-right’s traditional supporters, the more cosmopolitan urban population concerned with rising crime, illegal immigration and public disorder. Indeed, Parisi is the standout performer this election. Though falling short of a second-round finish, Parisi received nearly double the percentage of votes anticipated by the polls, finishing in third place with 19.8 percent. A self-described liberal, Parisi has made a name for himself attacking right and left for corruption and self-dealing, a message that has apparently resonated with the Chilean populace. His program is an eclectic mix of anticorruption and government efficiency measures, programs for increasing democratic participation at all levels of government, promotion of economic development, and promises to crack down hard on crime and illegal immigration. His success is a good indicator that a sizable portion of Chileans are fed up with the country’s political class as a whole, a consistent problem in the post-Covid era when incumbents have consistently been punished by voters unhappy with the conduct of their governments. The results of this weekend place Kast in a dominating position for the final round of the presidential election. This is Kast’s third attempt at reaching La Moneda, Chile’s presidential palace. The founder of the Republican Party of Chile, Kast is well-known for his social conservatism, including opposition to gay marriage and abortion, which have made him the favored candidate of the country’s growing Evangelical Christian bloc.  This election, Kast’s campaign focused principally on law and order, including promising to build a Trump-style border wall in the north (where illegal immigration from Bolivia and Peru has been a major issue), to conduct mass deportations, and to build maximum security prisons like those Bukele has built in El Salvador. With crime and immigration as major issues this election, he will probably be able to draw from large numbers of voters on the right that were previously in favor of Kaiser or Matthei, while also being able to pull in anti-establishment voters from Parisi’s base who are unhappy with the conduct of the current administration. In contrast, Jara has precious few votes to win from the losing candidates. She might be able to pull in the more left-leaning portion of Parisi voters and the most moderate of Matthei’s urban base, but her association with Gabriel Boric and the perceived weakness of the left on crime are potentially insurmountable obstacles. While she has also promised to deport illegal immigrants and strengthen the border and the criminal justice system, her strongest support comes from older Chileans who associate the right with Pinochet’s dictatorship. Kast has defended Pinochet’s policies on various occasions, and his older brother Miguel served as the minister of labor in Pinochet’s government. The second round of voting will take place on December 14, and the victor will be inaugurated in March of 2026. The post Right-Wing Candidate to Face Off Against Communist for Chile’s Presidency appeared first on The American Conservative.
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1 h

Uncle Sam as Religious Crusader?
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Uncle Sam as Religious Crusader?

Foreign Affairs Uncle Sam as Religious Crusader? Religious persecution in Nigeria is a crime, not a cause for war. There may be nothing more dangerous for America than President Donald Trump learning about another nation. The president who once campaigned for the Nobel Peace Prize might take America into another foolish war there. Such as in Nigeria. The West African nation possesses the continent’s largest population and economy. The country is a major oil producer and has survived civil war and military dictatorship. However, it has long been troubled with corruption, instability, and violence. Almost equally divided between Christians and Muslims, Nigeria is home to virulent Islamist terrorist movements and suffers from a brutal rural/tribal conflict with sectarian overtones. Some Muslim-majority states impose shariah law. The specter of religious conflict looms. In June, some 200 people were murdered in an attack on a largely Christian village. Yunusa Nmadu, head of Christian Solidarity Worldwide-Nigeria, warned that “The rising levels [of] violence and instability being endured by Nigerian civilians constitute a national emergency.” The violence could spread well beyond Nigeria itself. “We are at the precipice,” Nmadu worried. “If Nigeria goes into civil war, all of West Africa is gone.” Trump recently noticed Nigeria’s plight, declaring on Truth Social:  [BLOCK]If the Nigerian Government continues to allow the killing of Christians, the U.S.A. will immediately stop all aid and assistance to Nigeria, and may very well go into that now disgraced country, ‘guns-a-blazing,’ to completely wipe out the Islamic Terrorists who are committing these horrible atrocities. I am hereby instructing our Department of War to prepare for possible action. If we attack, it will be fast, vicious, and sweet, just like the terrorist thugs attack our CHERISHED Christians! WARNING: THE NIGERIAN GOVERNMENT BETTER MOVE FAST![/BLOCK] When questioned whether he might put boots on the ground, he responded, “Could be.” Columnist Walter Russell Mead fantasized that Trump had a sophisticated rationale for action, hoping to “rally many sub-Saharan African Christians to America’s side,” play “the natural sympathy of many American Christians for their African fellow believers,” and “blunt some of the attacks from the groyper right against his support for Israel.” In fact, Trump was apparently moved by a Fox News report, which left him “immediately” angered. He evidently put little thought into the consequences of starting another war. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth responded on X: [BLOCK]The killing of innocent Christians in Nigeria—and anywhere—must end immediately. The Department of War is preparing for action. Either the Nigerian Government protects Christians, or we will kill the Islamic Terrorists who are committing these horrible atrocities.[/BLOCK]  Taken literally, this would require waging aggressive war against a volatile sovereign state on another continent without significant U.S. bases and allies. What could possibly go wrong? Nigeria has a serious persecution problem, one that has long concerned me. The conflict is particularly intense in the so-called Middle Belt, which mixes Christians and Muslims. Members of all faiths suffer. Reported the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom in July: [BLOCK]Religious communities are facing ongoing, systematic, and egregious violations of their ability to practice their faith freely. The Nigerian government’s enforcement of blasphemy laws and an increase in violent attacks by nonstate entities targeting religious communities constitute significant restrictions on freedom of religion or belief (FoRB). Twelve state governments and the federal government in Nigeria enforce blasphemy laws, prosecuting and imprisoning individuals perceived to have insulted religion. Those targeted include Christians, Muslims, traditional practitioners, and humanists. Furthermore, despite efforts to reduce violence by nonstate actors, the government is often slow to react to violent attacks … This violence severely restricts religious practice and observance by Christians, Muslims, and traditional religious communities across many Nigerian states.[/BLOCK] With this record, Nigeria deserves the president’s designation as a Country of Particular Concern, which increases scrutiny of a nation’s policies and practices affecting people of faith. However, war should never be a first resort, ignoring the costs and risks for Americans and everyone else. The violence that devastates Nigeria, though horrendous, does not justify U.S. military intervention.  In a country of some 230 million, almost evenly divided religiously, the annual number of Christians killed in religious violence is estimated to run between 4,000 and 8,000; since 2009, roughly 50,000 Christians have been murdered. However, it is commonly believed that even more Muslims, mostly moderates targeted by jihadist extremists, have been killed, though some analysts doubt official casualty figures, which may underestimate the number and misstate the nature of deaths. Understandably, some beleaguered Christians favor U.S. involvement. One local leader told the Wall Street Journal, “We have been praying for a supernatural intervention to save the lives of our people. President Trump must make haste and carry out this military intervention.”  However, there is no genocide, let alone Christian genocide, in Nigeria. The estimated 8000 Nigerians killed so far this year are far too many, but threaten the extirpation of no people or faith. Violence has many causes and is not directed at the eradication of any one community. According to the Council on Foreign Relations, those killed in communal violence include “Muslims, Christians, soldiers, civilians and government officials, killed by terrorists, herdsmen, vigilantes, forest-dwelling kidnapping gangs, pirates off the coast, and Nigeria’s own overtaxed military.”  Moreover, if the Trump administration plans to begin righting the world’s wrongs, Americans are going to be fighting many wars. And even then, Nigeria would not be the country in which to start. Its toll, though terrible, pales compared to the recent human carnage in Yemen and Gaza—both sadly committed by U.S. allies with Washington’s support—or to Sudan’s horrific civil war. Brutal fighting continues in Myanmar and seemingly endless violence has again flared in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The latter conflagration began in 1998 and raged into the 2000s, consuming an estimated 5.4 million lives. Observed George Rupp, head of the International Rescue Committee: “The conflict and its aftermath, in terms of fatalities, surpass any other since the second world war.”  Anyway, how would Washington end Nigeria’s internal conflicts? The country’s intermittent persecution and pervasive violence are much more complex than presented by the president’s “guns-a-blazing’” post, involving “insurgents, bandits, ethnic clashes and land disputes,” in the words of Miriam Adah of the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data project. The greatest threat is posed by Boko Haram and similar insurgent organizations, but they target moderate Muslims as well as Christians. Moreover, these insurgencies reflecte more than religious extremism, argued Nigerian writer Kola Tubosun. Instead, they “thrive on the poverty in the area, illiteracy, access to illegal mining opportunities, a distrust of a central government, and links to larger jihadi networks.”  A separate, growing problem has been violence by largely Fulani herdsmen against mostly Christian farmers, hundreds of whom have been killed so far this year. The religious difference fuels existing antagonisms and, according to USCIRF, “This competition often manifests along religious divides between Christians and Muslims,” with a particularly significant impact on the former. However, the Fulani also target their Muslim neighbors. The conflict is complex, neither a spontaneous rural dispute nor an organized Muslim jihad.  There is no panacea for these and other political and religious battles, which have eluded solution by a national government whose failures are well-documented. Even the traditional religious balance in politics has broken down. Nevertheless, outside pressure and international engagement have improved Abuja’s responsiveness. A human rights activist and former senator, Shehu Sani, says that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, elected in 2023, has done more than his predecessors to confront the violence. USCIRF concluded that the Tinubu administration took “some steps to ensure greater accountability,” exhibited “a willingness … to discuss the country’s security situation more openly,” and achieved greater success in responding to violent attacks.  The result may still be disappointing, but American military intervention would create far more problems than it would solve. Threats, especially of regime change, would inhibit meaningful cooperation with the Abuja government. According to Tubosun, “Conspiracy theories abound, especially given Nigeria’s mineral reserves and China’s leveraging of rare earths against the United States.” Some Nigerians suspect that Trump’s latest pronouncements are retaliation for Nigeria’s refusal to accept deportees as part of the administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration. Others cite presumed opposition to the Tinubu government’s recent efforts to promote “economic independence.”  Worse, overriding Nigeria’s authority, challenging the country’s military, and/or killing Nigeria’s citizens would widen Nigeria’s internal fractures, inflaming the very conflicts that have torn the country apart. Darren Kerr of the University of California, San Diego warned: “To bring the weight of the United States solely on the Christian side and to frame things in a Muslim-Christian dimension is probably extremely unhelpful to both Christians and Muslims in Nigeria.” Sani fears sparking “a religious and ethnic crisis.” Already many largely Christian Igbos in southwest Nigeria, with serious grievances against Abuja, are pushing a separatist campaign that echoes the failed 1967 secession of Biafra. The U.S. intervening to stage a Christian crusade would also likely spread violence even further, across a continent already riven by sectarian feuds.  In any case, meddling in complicated disputes about which American policymakers know little usually turns out badly. Symbolic intervention would achieve little while entangling the U.S. in a failed effort, leaving Washington with public responsibility for the result. Limited operations with minimum objectives, such as rescuing a hostage, would be within Washington’s capabilities, but would satisfy no one. What the president is demanding would require a real war, which would not be “sweet,” as he suggested. Such a campaign, especially if waged against Abuja’s wish, would involve organized insurgents, Islamist terrorists, tribal antagonists, rural combatants, and more. The battle lines, especially in the Middle Belt and oil-rich Niger Delta, would be murky. Distinguishing among ethnic and religious forces would be no mean feat. America’s past military misadventures in Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Europe have resulted in abundant human carnage. Ayo Sogunro, an author and human rights lawyer, understandably worries that Americans “will fly in and continuously carpet bomb everywhere identified as a terrorist hideout, not distinguishing between innocent and criminals, or Christian from Muslim.” Finally, turning Uncle Sam into a religious vigilante would violate Washington’s responsibility to its own people, especially those in uniform who would do the killing and dying. Humanitarian intervention offers an understandable emotional appeal. However, the world is extraordinarily complicated and beyond American control.  In any case, the U.S. government should not risk its own citizens’ lives and futures without something significant, even vital, being at stake for them. Other people’s lives are of equal moral worth. However, they are not the same responsibility of those called to America’s service. The U.S. military’s essential role is not global charity but national defense. What is happening in Nigeria is terrible and warrants Washington’s attention. The U.S. should promote religious freedom and liberty of conscience, along with other basic human rights. However, Washington officials should recognize that their ability to force change half a world away is limited. Moreover, the U.S. should avoid getting entangled in other nations’ tempestuous politics and conflicts. Plunging America into an unjustified and unnecessary war in Nigeria would be the worst course, a cure worse than the disease. Unsatisfying though a more restrained policy might seem, it is the best path, most consistent with Washington’s responsibilities and America’s interests. Better to work with Nigeria’s government, which has welcomed U.S. assistance while rejecting violations of its sovereignty. The administration should press President Tinubu to more effectively address his nation’s internal problems, and cooperate toward that end, if possible, while leaving Americans and Nigerians free to work together to promote peace and development. Indeed, the White House should adopt the same approach with other nations around the world. The post Uncle Sam as Religious Crusader? appeared first on The American Conservative.
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