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4 w News & Oppinion

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Injured Jewish Man in Bondi Who Was in Israel During Oct 7, Gives Live Interview After Head Wound
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‘Hooch’: The Melvins’ unfiltered sound of grunge
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‘Hooch’: The Melvins’ unfiltered sound of grunge

A mesmeric moment. The post ‘Hooch’: The Melvins’ unfiltered sound of grunge first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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The Democrats Decide to Lose

At the end of October, the center-left group WelcomePAC published Deciding to Win, a comprehensive exploration of why Democrats lost the 2024 election and what they must do to start winning again. It drew on surveys of more than 500,000 voters conducted over a six-month period and found that 70 percent of voters think the Democratic Party is “out of touch” and only 39 percent say the party has the “right priorities.” It recommended that the party moderate its most unpopular positions, avoid ideological purity tests, and offer genuine solutions to issues the voters actually care about. This is good advice based on solid data and it is being ignored by the Democrats. The reason they are ignoring Deciding to Win, is a refusal to abandon ideological orthodoxy — particularly where it concerns the “Israel lobby.” Instead, the party is devoting its energy to an internecine struggle between its progressive and establishment factions. Inspired by Zohran Mamdani’s victory in New York City, the progressives believe the time has come to remake the party in their own image. Backed by a variety of donors and leftwing activist groups such as Justice Democrats and the Sunrise Movement they are mobilizing to purge longtime Democrat incumbents by recruiting ideologically pure candidates to challenge them in primaries prior to next year’s midterms. This is taking place in a number of states including New York, North Carolina, Michigan, Missouri, Tennessee and California. Moreover, their targets are by no means limited to “moderates.” In New York, for example, incumbent Rep. Daniel Goldman is being challenged in the 10th District by outgoing NYC comptroller Brad Lander. According to a report in the New York Times, the rationale for Lander’s run is that Goldman is an “oligarch” and too cozy with the pro-Israel lobbying group AIPAC. Lander has the endorsements of Mayor-elect Mamdani. Another New York Democrat who faces multiple primary opponents pursuant to his support for Israel is Rep. Ritchie Torres, who represents the 15th District. His most prominent challenger is Michael Blake, a former state lawmaker who denounces Torres in his campaign launch video for caring “more about Bibi than the Bronx.” He attacked Torres on X in as follows:: I am running for Congress because the people of The Bronx deserve better than Ritchie Torres. I am ready to fight for you and lower your cost of living while Ritchie fights for a Genocide. I will focus on Affordable Housing and Books as Ritchie will only focus on AIPAC and Bibi. I will invest in the community. Ritchie invests in Bombs. I want to end credit scores for housing. Ritchie only wants to take credit. We cannot afford anymore of Ritchie Rich Torres. We need Change now. Goldman and Torres aren’t the only New York Democrats infected with primary fever. Axios reports, “Congressional Hispanic Caucus chair Adriano Espaillat (D-NY) on Wednesday became the latest House Democrat being targeted by a leftist primary challenger.” He will be primaried by Darializa Avila Chevalier, who is backed by Justice Democrats, the group who propelled Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to office. Other New York Democrats that are being challenged in the primaries are Reps. Laura Gillen (4th District), Gregory Meeks (5th District), and Grace Meng (6th District). None of these people are part of the “old guard.” The only obvious thing they have in common is that they accepted campaign contributions from AIPAC. This brings us to Justice Democrats. Most people vaguely associate this group with AOC and other members of “the squad,” but the key to understanding which incumbents and primary challengers they support is their Reject AIPAC campaign. It is no coincidence that every Democrat being challenged, including several progressives like Dan Goldman, has received campaign contributions from AIPAC. This is why Justice Democrats are backing Nida Allam, an obscure  31-year-old Durham County commissioner who is challenging two-term North Carolina Democrat Rep. Valerie Foushee. The latter committed the unforgivable sin of accepting AIPAC money. Consequently, the group now backs Allam according to the Intercept: The group, which previously recruited progressive stars including Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, (D-N.Y.) and Ilhan Omar, (D-Minn.), is endorsing candidates challenging incumbents next year in Michigan, California, New York, Tennessee, Missouri, and Colorado. Justice Democrats is taking a more aggressive approach to primaries this cycle after only endorsing its incumbents last year and losing two major seats to pro-Israel spending. The group plans to launch at least nine more candidates. Justice Democrats are going after another AIPAC villain in Tennessee. Rep. Steve Cohen represents the only Democrat district in the state (TN-9), yet the group supports his primary challenger state legislator Justin Pearson. Justice Democrats also backs former Rep. Cori Bush’s comeback campaign for Missouri’s 1st Congressional District, now held by Democrat Rep. Wesley Bell, whose deadly sin has been to accept AIPAC contributions.  Justice Democrats also endorsed Michigan state Rep. Donavan McKinney in his Democratic primary challenge against Democrat Rep. Shri Thanedar (13th District). By now, the incumbent’s transgression will not be hard to divine: He accepted AIPAC campaign donations. And the beat goes on. In the end, the progressives who want to control the Democratic Party are less motivated by a desire to eliminate aging or establishment Democrats. The reason they are ignoring Deciding to Win, is a refusal to abandon ideological orthodoxy — particularly where it concerns the “Israel lobby.” What we are witnessing is political recidivism. The left is returning to its anti-Semitic roots. Because no one teaches history in our public school system or institutions of “higher education,” few Americans recognize this reality. The good news is that the progressives are confirming what 70 percent of the voters instinctively know — the Democrats are increasingly out of touch with normal Americans and they are thus deciding to lose. READ MORE from David Catron: EU Censorship Metastasizes The Filibuster Must Be Euthanized Now The Marjorie Taylor Greene New Deal
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Trouble on the Right

It’s a divisive Christmastime on the Right. Just over a year after Donald Trump won the biggest Republican electoral victory in 20 years, and two months since the assassination of Charlie Kirk, conservatives are squabbling like the First Triumvirate. This was the unofficial alliance between Julius Caesar, Pompey the Great, and Marcus Licinius Crassus that boosted the supremacy of Rome, only to end in civil war when Pompey backed the Senate against Caesar. Better we all worship one Jew, born in Israel two thousand Christmases ago, who came to redeem all mankind. It took less time to fracture the American Right, and potentially destroy the country. Because Leftists — for all their insanity, stupidity, and rage — are always united in one goal. To terminate Western Civilization by dissolving its Judeo-Christian foundation. And when that foundation divides itself — such as by giving outsized weight to Israel, stoking antisemitism versus Zionism — it cannot stand. Wise conservatives see the danger, the most notable and outspoken being Matt Walsh of the Daily Wire. Right after the murder of his friend, Charlie Kirk, Walsh tweeted: “The entire Right has to band together. Enough of this in-fighting bullshit. We are up against demonic forces from the pit of Hell. They’re killing us in our churches. They tried to kill our president. They killed Charlie, one of our greatest advocates. Put the personal squabbles aside. Now’s not the time. This is existential. A fight for our own existence and the existence of our country.” The result of his call for unity was that Walsh himself has become the target of more on the Right. He noted this yet, true to his decree, again refused to cut off his detractors, which only increased their number and his resolve. Last Friday on The Tucker Carlson Show, Walsh doubled down. “People keep demanding I disavow this person or that person … No. I’m not doing that. If they’re on the Right and fighting the Left, I’m not going to publicly condemn them … That’s how we lose.” I agree with Walsh, and disagree with some people on my side. I believe Jew hatred is a spiritual evil. I stood with Israel before and after its war of retribution against Hamas — since its battles for survival against the entire Arab world. But while antisemites on the Right are wrong, deluded, and sinful, they draw the line at terror. They won’t join forces with berserkers to bring down America as the whole Left has. Case in point — feminists state that they’re for female empowerment, yet they support women-abusive fanatics over the most female empowering country in the Middle East. For they hate the Judeo-Christian family tradition more — and the “toxic” men who head it. The same suicidal empathy extends to the likes of Queers for Palestine and other moronities. Theirs is a madness even the most deluded, prejudiced conservative will reject. They may be touched by evil, but they won’t fully embrace it. To Matt Walsh’s point, they’re with us enough to not be against us. And that leaves the real enemy in our sight. The one that wants to kill us as it did Charlie Kirk and almost Trump. The one that has totally absorbed a major political party in America, Britain, Europe, and tragically Australia. This past September, in a global wave of madness, the ruling leftist party in the UK and the Anglosphere — Canada and Australia — recognized the state of Palestine. This happened while Israel was almost done wiping out the terrorist leadership in its Gaza Strip. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese grandiosely announced the action on camera: “Australia recognizes the legitimate and long held aspirations of the people of Palestine to a state of their own.” Sunday evening at Bondi Beach near Sydney, two Islamicist gunmen in gun-prohibitive Australia opened fire on a Jewish crowd celebrating the first night of Hanukkah. They killed at least 16 people and wounded more than 40. The terrorists were a father-son team of immigrants, no doubt grateful for their host country’s benevolence toward Palestine. PM Albanese addressed the horror in a press conference. “The evil that was unleashed at Bondi Beach today is beyond comprehension,” he said. Well, no, Mr. Prime Minister, it’s very comprehensible. You admit a million immigrants hostile to Western culture, and make no effort to assimilate them, they’ll cultivate their own values, very much including rabid hatred of Jews. Fortunately, in America, this lunacy has been recognized and partially reversed. Because the political party it dominates is out of power. Democrats now cry and howl at every illegal alien deported, or every Venezuelan drug runner blown to bits at sea. Yet a few of the Muslim immigrants the last President welcomed into the country have pulled their weight in darkness. Like Afghan national Rahmanullah Lakanwal, who last month shot two National Guardsmen in Washington DC, killing a young woman and seriously wounding a young man. And as usual the Democrats were on top of it. At a House Homeland Security Committee hearing on the attack, Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS) — not coincidentally the former chair of the January 6th Committee — challenged Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on the killer’s immigration status. “Madam Secretary, you reference the unfortunate accident that occurred with the National Guardsman being killed.” Noem would have none of it. “You think that was an unfortunate accident? It was a terrorist attack … He shot our Guardsmen in the head.” Matt Walsh is right. In the face of such evil, conservative infighting about Israel and the Jews is counterproductive, and potentially fatal to the country. Better we all worship one Jew, born in Israel two thousand Christmases ago, who came to redeem all mankind. READ MORE from Lou Aguilar: How Are the Mighty Fallen: The End of Europe and Hollywood Carols in a Time of Chaos A Great American Thanksgiving Here’s a lovely recent review of my popular Yuletide romantic ghost story, The Christmas Spirit, and why it’s the perfect Christmas gift for your significant other. Available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and wherever fine books are still sold.
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The ‘Donroe’ Doctrine at Sea

The Skipper, the oil tanker fresh from filling up in a Venezuelan port, was seized by U.S. forces last week and is being taken to a U.S. port where its cargo — and possibly the ship itself — will be sold. President Trump appears to want Venezuela’s socialist dictator, Nicholas Maduro, to resign but Maduro says he isn’t going anywhere. The deployment of CSAR aircraft indicates that the president is deadly serious about war with Venezuela. It’s all part of Trump’s corollary to the Monroe Doctrine. For those just joining us, the Monroe Doctrine, born in the 19th Century from President Monroe’s policy, was to prevent foreign nations — principally Europeans — from colonizing the Western Hemisphere. The “Donroe Doctrine” is Trump’s idea that attempts to ensure that no power — China, Russia, Iran or others — can have major influence in our Hemisphere. Which brings us to Venezuela. Venezuela is a socialist country allied to Russia and China as well as Cuba. Both Russia and China have provided financial assistance to Venezuela but it is so sunk in corruption that this aid is essentially unnoticed. Dictator Nicholas Maduro and his henchmen absorb whatever financial assistance may be given except for the monies that are used to keep Venezuela’s oil flowing. Since September 2, U.S. forces have blown up more than 20 alleged drug smuggling boats and killed many — presumably all — of their crews. The September 2 strike is of particular import because, according to several news sources, a second strike was ordered when some of the crew survived the first. To do so would at least be a violation of the Uniform Code of Military Justice which prohibits the killing of former combatants, civilians and POWs. The situation would be entirely confused but for the fact that Special Operations Command boss Adm. Frank Bradley reportedly admitted ordering the second strike. The president’s legal authority to strike the alleged drug boats is questionable. His authority to seize and bring to a U.S. port ships such as the Skipper is not. The Skipper is a VLCC — a very large crude oil carrier which typically can carry about two million barrels of oil — and has a long, sordid record of thwarting U.S. sanctions on Iranian and Venezuelan oil. It was reportedly not using its ship locater and falsely flying a Guyanese flag, both of which are violations of international maritime regulations. The ship reportedly has the ability to perform a ship-to-ship transfer of oil so that it can either transfer the oil to a Chinese ship or carry it directly to China. The Skipper had been specifically sanctioned and its carrying of prohibited cargoes of Venezuelan and Iranian oil qualified it for seizure under U.S. law. Trump said we would keep its cargo of oil. We may be dissuading other crude oil ships from going to Venezuela for a time. But for how long will we be willing to seize those ships and what will we do with them after we’ve seized them? The ships could be sold to legitimate oil traders but would soon create a glut on the market. Meanwhile, Maduro has accused us of piracy. So far, the president’s pressure on Maduro has not had much effect. Our latest aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald Ford, has been in the waters off Venezuela since November. We have built up both naval and Air Force assets in places such as the Roosevelt Roads base in Puerto Rico. So far, reports indicate that we have KC-135 and KC-46 tanker aircraft, E/A-18G Growler aircraft (designed to interfere with enemy electronic transmission and such) as well as F-35s to that base. The president has also deployed combat search and rescue (CSAR) aircraft. But what is it all in aid of? President Trump came to office in his first term promising to end our “endless wars.” But he has indicated that we may be commencing ground operations in Venezuela very soon. Perhaps he has in mind a “splendid little war” with Venezuela which could oust Maduro in a few weeks. But no war plan survives first contact with the enemy. And in this case the enemy includes both our allies, enemies, and the media which would castigate Trump as an aggressor and war monger. If Trump wants to start a war with Venezuela, he could do so for 60 days without violating the War Powers Act which, as I pointed out last week, is of questionable constitutionality and was passed over President Nixon’s veto. After that, he would have to seek either a declaration of war against Venezuela or an Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF) which, so far, he hasn’t done. Or he could take yet another case to the Supreme Court challenging the War Powers Act which he might not win. Any war with Venezuela would break the bond of trust between the military and the president. That trust — spend my life if you must — is based on the concept of a vital national security interest without a threat to which no president should start a war. Iran and China are trading with ships going between their ports and Venezuela and China. Russia and China are Maduro’s closest allies, but they show no sign of willingness to defend Venezuela with financial or military aid. Maduro may be content to wait us out. He knows, as do all the world’s leaders, that Trump doesn’t usually follow through on the threats he makes. But this threat is different because Trump is apparently positioning our forces to take on Venezuela’s defenses. The deployment of CSAR aircraft indicates that the president is deadly serious about war with Venezuela. In the times of the Monroe Doctrine, our nation was united in its pursuit. The “Donroe Doctrine” has no such unity to rely on.  If, as it seems, the president wants a war with Venezuela, he needs to explain why it is in our vital national security interest to do so. At this point, that seems entirely doubtful. READ MORE from Jed Babbin: Trump Could Win on Birthright Citizenship Erasing Old Joe Striking the Unknown      
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MERRY CHRISTMAS!!!!

It’s Christmas here in Beverly Hills. The nearby shopping street of shopping streets, Rodeo Drive, is lit and decorated beyond anything I have ever seen before. One blazing store front after another with the most expensive names in modern shopping history. It’s a carnival of the vanities. It’s a place I would not have believed existed — but exists. We pray that God allowed the miracle of America to triumph in the atomic age. At my usual lunch time cafe, the Cabana Café of the Beverly Hills Hotel, there are beautiful girls and handsome men galore. They are wearing the clothing of rich people. I am there in my “uniform” of blue blazer and oxford cloth shirt and school ties from days in New York and New Haven. My usual hostesses greet me with smiles and laughter. As always, I say “Merry Christmas!” to everyone I pass in the lobby. Some ask me why I, a Jew with Jewish forebears from the days of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, wish everyone “Merry Christmas,” instead of “Happy Holidays.” It’s not complicated. To me, “Merry Christmas” means, “Be thankful for God’s love.” Despite the horrors that man has rained down on man, be thankful that we are still here, having a good meal, walking down well-decorated halls, exchanging greetings with men and women we barely know — except that we know them as beneficiaries of God’s love. Yes, we Jews know the men and women in Beverly Hills have been blessed beyond imagination by surviving the Holocaust, by having ancestors who fought against men who killed everyone they could find just out of hate. Every night, my goddess wife and I hug each other and say intense prayers of thanks for my wife’s war hero father, Col. Dale Denman Jr., who fought to liberate Gunskirchen Lager, a horrible death camp. He was a “warrior angel.” So was her uncle, Major Bob Denman, both of Prescott, Arkansas, who fought in the gruesome battle of the Chosin Reservoir. We pray for my father, Lt. J.G., USN, Herbert Stein, who sailed on two aircraft carriers that were sunk off the island of Luzon, and miraculously survived. We pray for Richard Nixon, who saved Israel when the USSR wanted to destroy it. We pray that God allowed the miracle of America to triumph in the atomic age. We pray with thanks that God allowed me to have the world’s most glorious woman, my wife, Alexandra Denman, to survive and lie next to me for most of a century. And we will keep on praying, and saying, “Merry Christmas!!!” And God bless America!!! READ MORE from Ben Stein: We Are Not Depression Proof Saving Is a Must Mr. and Mrs. Bureaucrats, Show Us Some Mercy
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Removing the Sword of the Federal Judiciary

The Bill of Rights exists to protect the people and the states from an overreaching federal government. Since the 1920s, the federal courts have turned the Bill of Rights into a weapon to use against the people and the states.  December 15 — Bill of Rights Day — should remind Americans that the first 10 amendments were intended to restrict rather than augment federal power. As Americans observe Bill of Rights Day, they should contemplate pounding the federal judiciary’s broadsword back into the defensive shield as designed by the first Congress. In our upside-down world today, we associate the Bill of Rights with landmark Supreme Court cases restricting state action. Modern Americans express shock when learning that the Bill of Rights was intended to apply only to the federal government. As the preamble to the Bill of Rights announces, “further declaratory and restrictive clauses” were adopted because the state ratification conventions wanted some security to “prevent misconstruction and abuse of” powers delegated to the general government of the federation. The people of the states were satisfied with their own bills of rights and restrictions on state power appearing in the various state constitutions. What they feared was untrammeled federal power. Even the Supreme Court in 1833 recognized the limited applicability of the federal Bill of Rights. Writing for the Court in Barron v. Baltimore (1833), Chief Justice Marshall observed that during the late 1780s, “fears were extensively entertained that” certain powers “might be exercised in a manner dangerous to liberty.”  He continued: “These amendments demanded security against the apprehended encroachments of the General Government — not against those of the local governments.” So what happened?  In the 1920s, the Court began to describe certain provisions of the Bill of Rights as “fundamental.” Consequently, the Court began striking down state laws on grounds that they violated protections of the 14th Amendment’s Due Process Clause. For hundreds of years, Anglo-American jurists defined due process as requiring the government to resort to the courts and use established and nondiscriminatory procedures before it deprived a person of life, liberty, or property. Due process was not applied to legislative acts. The Supreme Court rejected the established definition of due process in favor of a new meaning that sanctioned judicial activism. The Court went from neutral umpire to crusader as it strictly reviewed state statutes. The Court’s due process revolution was not limited to liberties secured in the first 10 amendments, but also to unenumerated rights discovered by the justices. Matters that generations had considered within the reserved powers of the states suddenly became the business of the federal judiciary. Laws setting maximum hours and minimum wages for workers were held unconstitutional. As judicial proponents of laissez-faire capitalism were replaced by progressive judges, economic regulations received less deference. But the federal judiciary did not abandon the new found power of due process. The object of their displeasure shifted from economics to social issues such as the availability of contraceptives and abortion. The Supreme Court’s aggressiveness was too much even for Justice Hugo Black — a New Deal liberal.  “I do not believe that we are granted power by the Due Process Clause or any other constitutional provision or provisions,” Black wrote, “to measure constitutionality by our belief that legislation … is offensive to our own notions of civilized standards of conduct.”  Black believed that “such an appraisal of the wisdom of legislation is an attribute of the power to make laws, not of the power to interpret them.” In a republic (or federation of republics) the making of public policy is left to elected representatives absent a clear and palpable violation of a written constitution. State legislators and governors are accountable to the people via the ballot box.  If the people disapprove of a labor regulation or a pronouncement on a social issue, they can remove the officials at the next election. Federal judges serve for life and never appear on any ballot. By design they are independent, but also by design they are to leave public policy to the elected branches of government. The due process revolution has turned the federal judiciary into the most powerful branch of government. The Bill of Rights is no longer a shield to protect the people and the states from a distant federal government, but now serves as a sword to hack away at public policy with which the federal judiciary disagrees. As Americans observe Bill of Rights Day, they should contemplate pounding the federal judiciary’s broadsword back into the defensive shield as designed by the first Congress. READ MORE from William J. Watkins Jr.: The Legal Legacy of Ruth Bader Ginsburg Coronavirus and Our Resilient Federal System Judicial Supremacy Exposed William J. Watkins Jr. is a research fellow at the Independent Institute. He is the author of the forthcoming book The Independent Guide to the Constitution: Original Intentions, Modern Inventions.
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Christmas in the Sub-Tropics

TAMPA – Christmas time again, and I like the season. But it’s a very different business here in peninsula Florida where we don’t have December, except on the calendar. Unlike most of the mainland, hereabouts we don’t have four seasons. We just have two — summer and mid-summer. (OK, from time to time a macho cold-front makes it all the way down here and gives us a few cold mornings. But mostly it’s toasty all year.) So, celebrant or not, believer or not, enjoy the 25th of this month, whether it’s five below or eighty above outside. So getting into the Christmas spirit here takes more imagination and effort than in places where songs about sleigh bells ringing and “Let it Snow, let it Snow, let it snow” don’t require translation. The weather outside here might be frightful from time to time in what we call December, but not from severe cold and deep snow. Palm tree tops do not glisten. All the icicles here are inside and store bought. We don’t have to worry about them melting on the carpet. On Christmas Day we’re more likely to have to blow gnats than to have to throw another log on the fire. Santa Claus may be coming to town. But to make his deliveries here he’ll have to ditch that heavy red coat. And there will be a distinct shortage of chimneys for him to slide down. He may have to check under your mat for a door key. And then hope the security alarm doesn’t bring the cops down on him who’ll try to arrest him as a porch pirate. Santa: “Honest officer, I wasn’t taking anything. I was leaving things. I’m Santa Claus.” Cop: “Right, and I’m the Archbishop of Canterbury. Let me see the registration papers on that sleigh out front. And what kind of animals are those pulling it?” This would almost certainly get cleared up down at the station. But it would put Santa waaay behind schedule. Cozying up on the couch with a fire in the fire place, a toddy in hand, and snow on the window can be very attractive on Christmas cards, and perhaps even in practice. In my travels I’ve experienced and enjoyed winter beauty, but only in short doses. (This Tampa native’s first experience with real kick-a** winter came when I enlisted in the Navy and was sent for basic training at Great Lakes Naval Training Center north of Chicago in mid February. It was a revelation. Like the Baptists — sudden and total immersion.) Weather aside, we celebrate Christmas here pretty much like the rest of the country. It’s a great break from the day to day, a mood elevator for most, at least if the family doesn’t talk politics over Christmas dinner. A bringing together in a country that could use some bringing together just now. Yeah, the holiday has been secularized. Save for committed Christians, it’s become less about the birth of Christ than about gift giving, eating and drinking more than we should, and holiday parties, though HR departments have pretty much taken all the fun out of office parties. “What did you just put in that punch, Homer? Skylar, make sure there’s enough tofu. And Francine, go home and put on some clothes that cover your particulars.” As joyous as the holiday may be, it’s not without its stresses. Gift giving can be a chore when there are people you should give a gift to but have no idea what it should be. It can be a burdensome obligation, one that the makers and retailers of Chia Pets rely on this time of year. But there’s a real joy in giving someone you care for something you know they will like. And by the way, this is almost certainly not fruit cake. In my long life I’ve only met two people who’ve admitted to liking fruit cake. And I’m not sure they would stick to their story if polygraphed. I didn’t see it, but I’ve been told that in a magazine survey long ago of its readers’ most desired and least desired Christmas gifts, fruit cake finished a couple of spots below no gift at all. Writer Calvin Trillin long ago advanced the theory that there is only one fruitcake, not thousands of them as most believe. He says when people receive the fruit cake as a gift, they give it away again so quickly that the velocity of its changing hands gives the impression that there are many fruit cakes. But, he insists, there’s only the one.  Outlandish, some say. But I’m keeping an open mind. Like all of us, I’ve received Christmas gifts I’ve been obliged to act enthusiastic about while knowing it will soon sit on a shelf in the Salvation Army thrift store. Sadly, I’ve probably given some of these a well, which is why I don’t shop at the Salvation Army thrift store for fear of running into what I gave Aunt Eunice for Christmas last year. With all the duds, given and received, some happy and memorable ones stand out. My Christmas present in 1947 sits atop a bookcase in our living room. It’s a Lionel electric train. Long inoperable of course. The transformer that used to power it looks like something out of Dr. Frankenstein’s lab in those great 1930s monster movies. But it gladdened my five year-old heart on that Christmas day. And it still gives me pleasure to see it on display. I counsel Americanos to pay as little attention as possible to the grinches who’ve tried to neuter Christmas by replacing it with the “Winter Holiday.” Talk about thin gruel. These cultural killjoys attempt to cancel a popular celebration on the fatuous notion that Christmas and its traditions are offensive to non-Christians. Funny these party-poopers never name who these offended persons are. I have Jewish friends as well as friends of other non-Christian religions or no religion at all. I’ve not heard a one of these object to a Christian celebration in a predominately Christian nation. Likewise I’m sure that if I lived in Boca Raton rather than Tampa I would not be offended by seeing menorahs displayed on Jewish holidays, even on city property. So, celebrant or not, believer or not, enjoy the 25th of this month, whether it’s five below or eighty above outside. I plan to. Even though it will surely be my 83rd consecutive non-white Christmas. READ MORE from Larry Thornberry: Reports of Woke’s Death Are Greatly Exaggerated Democrat Policies Are Crazy, but Crazy Still Sells (See NYC) RIP Mike Greenwell — a Good Ball Player and a Good Man      
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Donald Trump’s Civilizational Defense Strategy  

If the just-published “National Security Strategy of the United States of America” was intended to infuriate the old line globalist elites in Europe and the United States, then it has succeeded beyond the wildest dreams of its authors. Take, for example, the essay this morning by Jacob Heilbrunn over at that “other” Spectator. Heilbrunn manages the not inconsiderable feat of dismissing the document as “incomprehensible” and “negligible,” while at the same time suggesting that it’s important enough to cause our key allies consternation and dismay. European leaders should ask themselves why young Americans should be asked to fight and die on their behalf. One can find similar comments virtually everywhere one cares to look, but Heilbrunn and those like him miss altogether two absolutely essential points. Like so many foreign policy establishment pundits, Heilbrunn routinely dismisses Trump as incompetent and lacking the consistency of purpose necessary to sustain a coherent foreign policy strategy worthy of the name. Heilbrunn contemptuously asserts that “President Trump has most likely never read” the document, a sentiment in accord with much elite commentary. I beg to differ, for two reasons. First, anyone who has bothered to follow Trump’s formal foreign policy statements over the course of the years, will see this “National Security Strategy” as the further articulation of themes he has articulated for many years. I’ve frequently called attention to Trump’s major foreign policy address in Warsaw in 2017, which prefigures, at a broader level, essential themes of policy philosophy elaborated in the new National Security Strategy. Respect for alliances, alliances built on mutual respect and conditioned by the notion that everyone pulls their own weight. Check. Endorsement of nationhood as the fundamental building block of the international order. Check. The idea that all nations should take care of their own interests, while working together for the common good. Check. Europe, in particular, should take greater responsibility for its own security. Check. Most fundamentally, the Warsaw speech identifies, in no uncertain terms, what Heilbrunn and others insistently condemn within the new National Security Strategy, namely, the manner in which European elites have opened the door to a civilizational threat from Islamist radicalism, a threat already far advanced through uncontrolled immigration, a threat that these elites seem utterly unwilling to address. The Warsaw speech characterized the threat as “radical Islamic terrorism” and insisted that we — and the “we” clearly includes Poland and other like-minded European nations — will “always welcome new citizens who share our value, our borders will always be closed to terrorism and extremism of any kind.” And in the very next paragraph, he makes the connection with Islamic terrorism explicit. The National Security Strategy builds directly on this, and this is the nub of its supposed “grave insult” to our European allies. The offending passages read as follows: [Europe’s] economic decline is eclipsed by the real and more stark prospect of civilizational erasure. The larger issues facing Europe include activities of the European Union and other transnational bodies that undermine political liberty and sovereignty, migration policies that are transforming the continent and creating strife, censorship of free speech and suppression of political opposition, cratering birthrates, and loss of national identities and self-confidence. Should present trends continue, the continent will be unrecognizable in 20 years or less. As such, it is far from obvious whether certain European countries will have economies and militaries strong enough to remain reliable allies. Many of these nations are currently doubling down on their present path. We want Europe to remain European, to regain its civilizational self-confidence, and to abandon its failed focus on regulatory suffocation. There’s nothing novel in this, and the contrast is not between “Trumpism” and European values, but rather between those Europeans who still hope to save their own civilizations and those who’ve wholeheartedly drunk the globalist Kool-Aid. The National Security Strategy raises a serious question: if the current civilizational erasure continues, will there be anything left worth fighting for? Germany’s beloved Christmas street markets now take place only behind heavily armed security against Islamist attacks. French churches are desecrated or destroyed, and whole suburbs have become sharia “no-go” zones. In the UK, rape gangs too often go unpunished, and the governing class goes out of its way to ignore their connection to the “religion of peace.” And as the foregoing excerpts make clear, it’s not just the surrender to the Islamic tidal wave, but also the civilizational solvent of rampant secularism that is at play. Too often, the secular elites simply want to bury their heads in the sand. A commonplace of current conservative commentary in these European countries is that military rearmament is largely pointless when governments no longer believe their countries worth defending, when young patriots are alienated from their homelands, and when the enemy — quite literally, thousands of radicalized, military aged young men, have already taken residence “inside the walls.” Why should we fight for a country that hates us is the question often asked by young men across western Europe, even as it was asked until very recently here in the U.S. Instead of venting their hurt feelings about Trump’s National Security Strategy, European leaders should ask themselves why young Americans should be asked to fight and die on their behalf — and on their terms — when they seem hell bent on surrendering everything we might have in common. If they won’t defend their civilization, why should we? Living comfortably in their well-off enclaves, communicating only within the globalist bubble, the European elites and their American counterparts refuse to see that their civilization is gravely threatened, not by Donald Trump, or Giorgia Meloni, or Jordan Bardella, or Nigel Farage, but instead by the genuinely civilizational threat of radical Islam. The elites will not fare well when the caliphate comes to claim them. When the time comes — and, make no mistake, the time is coming — it will be the ordinary folk, the workers and farmers, those connected to a place, those nurtured in a love for family, community, and country, who will answer the call, and this will be true in every country. Killers will only be stopped by those with something genuine to defend and the courage to fight back. Donald Trump may not be a conservative by many traditional measures — that’s a discussion for another time — and his foreign policy often zigs when some of us wish it would zag. But through two presidencies he has consistently articulated a world view that is conservative in the best sense, a world view that upholds the values of what we once called Western civilization. He’s not always a nice guy, his National Security Strategy — and it is definitely his strategy is not wrapped up in the usual back-slapping feel good platitudes beloved by the transatlantic foreign policy community. But they are very much the words that community needs to hear. Trump kids himself if he thinks that he’ll ever be awarded a Nobel Peace Prize, but if he succeeds in chivvying the Europeans to finally grow up — and grow a pair — then he’ll have earned a more lasting reward, the gratitude of generations to come. Perhaps Jacob Heilbrunn and his ilk might pause to ponder that. READ MORE from James H. McGee: The Burning of Bethany Magee Getting Ahead of Ourselves About the 2028 Elections TDS Now Resembles Orwell’s ‘Two Minutes Hate’ James H. McGee retired in 2018 after nearly four decades as a national security and counter-terrorism professional, working primarily in the nuclear security field. Since retiring, he’s begun a second career as a thriller writer. He’s just published his new novel, The Zebras from Minsk, the sequel to his well-received 2022 thriller, Letter of Reprisal. The Zebras from Minsk finds the Reprisal Team fighting against an alliance of Chinese and Russian backed terrorists, brutal child traffickers, and a corrupt anti-American billionaire, racing against time to take down a conspiracy that ranges from the hills of West Virginia to the forests of Belarus. You can find The Zebras from Minsk (and Letter of Reprisal) on Amazon in Kindle and paperback editions.  
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The Berber War Cry for Freedom

It was what they call a coup de theatre, a moment of absurdity worthy of a play by Claude Feydeau, the master of theatrical farce in belle epoque France — or perhaps of a satire by our own Joseph Heller. French authorities in the department of Yvelines in Paris’s western suburbs blocked at the very last minute a long-announced declaration of independence of the Kabyle region in northeastern Algeria, to take place at a well known convention center in Versailles. Few doubt that the French authorities acted out of fear of offending the government in Algiers, which considers the declaration treasonous. Prudence is always welcome, and we have sound pragmatic reasons for managing our relations with African nations with tact. The proclamation went out anyway, communication technology being what it is. Berber autonomists, led by the MAK (Movement for Kabyle self-determination), announced that following decades of repression of their native culture, language, civil and human rights, they want out. They know very well the proclamation remains symbolic. But still significant. Does issuing a proclamation without any intent — or possibility — of acting on it treason? Or free speech? The Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security, a think tank, did not miss the irony. The self-rule movement operates within strict institutional and legal structures, setting it apart from certain other “national liberation movements.” Not by coincidence, the MAK, following Berber traditions antedating the Arab conquest, are the closest thing to philo-Semites in the Arabo-Muslim world. The Berberist in Kabylie do not hide their support for Israel’s right to exist as a nation state and to defend itself, noting it is one “national liberal movement” that followed up an anti-colonial struggle with the establishment of a free society. The Algerian state that they helped create in a bitter anti-colonial war with France became a colonial state itself, they argue. All efforts at reform, including the nonviolent hirak protests of a few years ago, were spurned by the government in Algiers and followed by waves of repression. The government in Algiers gets particularly incensed at complaints by its large (about 25 percent) Berber population, of whom the Kabyles form the largest bloc, regarding cultural rights and local governance. While that is surely its prerogative, it does not follow that the MAK is a “terrorist” organization.  Its activists are hounded and jailed, its exiled leaders condemned in absentia on treason charges under Article 87, which allows death sentences. While there are sound strategic reasons for France, and indeed the U.S., to maintain correct relations with Algiers the JISS notes it is elementary prudence for interested powers to take note of demands for reform in Algeria, given the fraught geopolitics of North Africa and the Sahel, a region stretching from Sudan on the Red Sea to Mauritania on the Atlantic Ocean. The Arab-Islamic world, far from being a monolith, is no less varied than other geo-cultural areas. In terms of the evolution taking place in the Middle East, and U.S. efforts to clearly differentiate between friends and foes, voices favorable to liberal democracy, freedom of religion, and peaceful political competition ought not be shunned; on the contrary, they are welcome news, the JISS argues. In France, the government’s deference to Algeria is detrimental to both countries, according to knowledgeable observers such as Ivan Rioufol, retired editor of the major daily Figaro. We have important strategic and commercial relations with the Algerians, and there is no incentive to upset them. But there is no question of going to war for liberty or exacerbating delicate diplomatic relations, but merely of being sober about the kind of world we live in. It may be noted that the announced public declaration was to be made at a conventions center in Versailles, with attendance by invitation only. The references to wild musical parties causing disturbances, which the authorities evoked to justify their banning order, were something of a stretch. The MAK’s characterization of the Algerian government as an oppressive Arabo-Islamist regime, while surely open to debate, is not without basis. An African-Mediterranean land of many cultures, ravaged by a cruel anti-colonial war in the 1950s-60s, produced a monolithic state (“Algeria my country, Arabic my language, Islam my religion”) that came with single-party dictatorship and alignment with the Soviet bloc. Victory over France in 1962 would not have been possible without the enthusiastic support of the Kabyles, who had led the last great revolt against French conquest in the 19th century. They supplied much of the manpower and leadership of the national movement. Many of the Kabyle leaders of this movement were purged — murdered in many cases — following the peace-and-independence treaty, while uncounted thousands of Muslims abandoned by the country they had chosen to serve were massacred. Other thousands made it to France, in the hulls you might say, of the boats ferrying a million Algerians of European stock, as well as Jews whose ancestors had been there since before the Arab conquest in the seventh century, a fact the Kabyles themselves did not forget. The Kabyles traditionally favor multi-party democracy, separation of religion and state, a liberal approach to education and culture, and, especially in recent years, a pro-West, pro-Israel, indeed even philo-Semitic foreign policy, harking back to the Kabyle princess, Kahina, who died in battle against the seventh century Arab invasion. Americans of a literary bent will find this background brilliantly explored in Second Sight, a novel based on archeological and historical evidence, by the late, great Charles McCarry. Many Algerians, it may be noted, Berber or Arab or what-all, have inherited from parents and grandparents a positive attitude toward Americans, which goes back to the great invasion of 1942 and its message of liberation. It is expressed in an anecdote about a police official accompanying an American reporter during the Islamist insurrection of the 1990s when the country went through an orgy of terror and counter-terror: “If you die in my country, mister, you may know I will have died just before you.” Mere anecdote, the story is not without pertinence. As a majority-Muslim region, Kabylie (Kabylia in English) would be a voice in the umma for liberal-democratic governance, support for Israel, and opposition to radical Islam. This would weigh in the resistance to jihadist bands spreading terror throughout North Africa and the Sahel. Kabyles have felt oppressed under Arabo-Islamist rule that they believe never appreciated or respected Algeria’s multi-national population, composed of Jews, Maltese, Spaniards, French, Italians, Arabs, Turks, and indigenous Berbers, speaking a variety of languages and professing many faiths, including secular humanistic reason. The two greatest writers of the independence movement years in Algeria were Albert Camus, whose mother was Spanish and who opposed colonial-style discrimination against Muslims while favoring a federal system of governance attached to France, and the Kabyle teacher and writer Mouloud Ferraoun, who favored independence while hoping to retain the pied-noir population and the French connection. He was murdered in the last days of the war by French-Algerian irredentists. Camus and Ferraoun shared a love of their country’s beauty and human wealth, deeply respected each other’s work. This striving for fraternity, this insistence on the dignity that grows out of respect, is an individual human quality, not the sort of thing one generalizes about while talking about nations and cultures. However, it has been expressed in Kabyle protests, poetry, song, and has carried a suffering people through years of monomaniacal linguistic and religious intolerance that drove the Jews out of Algeria. It was top-down intolerance, not broadly popular. It was a religious-statist tyranny that drove out the pieds-noirs, losing their entrepreneurial and professional skills along with the passion of the fierce attachment to their native land.  It forced the Christians underground, instituted a mukhabarat-style secret police with East German and Soviet details added, stifled development in a country richly endowed in natural resources (one-time breadbasket of the Mediterranean world), and abandoned several generations to despair-driven emigration. The Kabyles insist it need not be this way, and obviously many of their neighbors in Algeria agree. The Berber Spring of 1980, forerunner of the Arab Springs of decades later, the democracy movement of the late 1980s and the resistance to the blood-soaked Islamist insurgency of the 1990s, were all included substantial Kabyle participation. Finally, perhaps inevitably, reforms including regional autonomy were demanded by activists, which were met by repression, leading inexorably to the idea of secession. Which of course is met with scorn by the Algiers authorities, though there have been unverified rumors in Algiers that compromises have been offered that might satisfy some self-rule aspirations, linguistic and religious freedom, and the like. The great French-Algerian author Boualem Sansal was recently released following a year in a prison while ill with, reportedly, cancer and cut off from contact with his family and Jewish attorney. Charged under the notorious Article 87 to punish sedition, a capital crime (he had questioned the exact tracing of the boundary between Algeria and Morocco, an old dispute), he may have benefitted from a p.r. calculation given his world-wide fame as the region’s Solzhenitsyn, something that another French writer, the sports journalist Christophe Gleizes cannot rely on (his crime was to interview a Kabyle soccer star.) Sentenced to seven years for seditious activities and possession of forbidden literary materials, he is jailed while awaiting appeals. The autonomists of course cheered Boualem’s release while deploring Gleizes’s detention and that of reportedly hundreds of their activists. The habitual response of the Algerian government to  peaceful protest, as during the hirak (“movement”) demonstrations of a few years ago, is to arrest people, suppress speech and writing, and blame malevolent foreign powers, which is one reason Kabyle activists are accused of being Zionist or Moroccan agents. Algiers’ position as the regional power and mediator is shaky, as it juggles Russian armaments purchases, American investments in energy (as well as some security cooperation) shock waves from the recent regime changes and Islamist violence in the Sahel, and diplomatic spats with France. Critics of the French government’s appeasement efforts say it would be better to resist unreasonable Algerian demands on migration and dual-citizen issues. They see in the Kabyle cause an instance of why French-Algerian relations should be revisited in depth. There is a sense in which the Algerian epic represents a concentration of Islam’s confrontation with the West, not least in the role Algerian emigration has played in French domestic politics.  Algerian emigration was for a time overwhelmingly Kabyle, and it was assimilationist, broadly successful and beneficial to France, across all fields from medicine to law, business, sports, and culture. But under the influence of Islamization, immigration has become a form of civilizational subversion. Kabyle autonomists recognize this and think their freedom-based initiatives will encourage would-be emigrants to see a bright future at home. In calming the “migration crisis,” this could represent, they say, a lifeboat for both France and Algeria — and for themselves. And indeed for us. We would rather see both shores of the Mediterranean at peace and in prosperity. We cannot make this happen. John Quincy Adams’ admonition remains foundational, “She [America] is the well-wisher to the freedom and independence of all. She is the champion and vindicator only of her own.” Prudence is always welcome, and we have sound pragmatic reasons for managing our relations with African nations with tact. However, it may be recalled that the younger Adams’ famous speech insists on our Declaration of Independence as the essential blueprint guiding our foreign policy, in that its claim that “all men are created equal, and endowed with certain unalienable rights.” must be our standard in assessing foreign peoples — and ourselves — though surely not reason to meddle in their affairs. Too, it is worth recalling that the great statesman favored resisting the British Empire on rulership of the waves, as he, in a respectful dissent to the more conciliatory positions of his distinguished father, had favored punishing the pirates of Barbary, who by the way were Turks, Arabs, Berbers and even a few woke Euros, if one may use an anachronism. No one in Algeria, Kabyle or not, wants a return of Stephen Decatur and William Bainbridge to their beaches. Alexis de Tocqueville’s view when he witnessed the beginning of the French conquest was that imposing one’s rule and will by force, in a scarcely understood foreign land, was likely to end badly. A famous native son of North Africa, Saint Augustine, counseled saving perfection for heaven. Nobody’s perfect here below, but is it unthinkable that the arbitrary ruling of a French prefet in Versailles, by its very absurdity, could make everyone involved pause and ask whether there is a reasonable solution that they ought to consider? An American can only suggest it, but we are in a deal-oriented time in foreign affairs, and you never know. READ MORE from Roger Kaplan: Rolling Them Up in Iraq Give (Eternal?) Peace a Chance? Booing Donald Trump at the U.S. Open?   
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