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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

BREAKING: Deep State Doctors Already Planning Next Lockdown Before Trump Can Stop Them
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BREAKING: Deep State Doctors Already Planning Next Lockdown Before Trump Can Stop Them

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

What is the worst Beatles number one?
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What is the worst Beatles number one?

The hard truth behind a classic. The post What is the worst Beatles number one? first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Classic Rock Lovers  
1 y

What does ‘Maps’ stand for in the Yeah Yeah Yeahs song?
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What does ‘Maps’ stand for in the Yeah Yeah Yeahs song?

"They don't love you like I love you" The post What does ‘Maps’ stand for in the Yeah Yeah Yeahs song? first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Conservative Voices
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1 y

Elon Musk v. MAGA: H-1B Visas, Foreign Workers, Big Tech, and America First
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Elon Musk v. MAGA: H-1B Visas, Foreign Workers, Big Tech, and America First

Here’s what the tech bros, including Elon Musk, have in common with average Americans of every race, creed, and color that make up MAGA: they knew that the progressive left, a one-world-government cabal of elites wishing to impose a cultural universalism that ends in tyrannical Leninism, posed an existential threat to their freedom. In the tech bros’ case, it was innovative and economic freedom. In the case of MAGA, it was the freedom to be an American and all that means. The tech bros do not understand what it means to be American. They’re learning, but they were not born, bred, and marinated in all the subtle ways that shape American behavior. They saw the results: the optimism, the can-do attitude, the rebelliousness, the freedom, but they don’t know where it came from or the why of it. It just is. And what is, is better than other parts of the world and that’s enough good soil to plant their idea seeds in because it’s fertile, and good ideas grow into great things in America and make innovators very, very wealthy. The psychopaths running Biden’s regime revealed themselves. They spoke openly of commandeering tech. They coerced and pressured companies to conform to their cockamamie speech codes and DEI insanity. The tech bros, mostly Millennials, mostly Ivy-educated cultural snobs, and citizens of the world didn’t really mind. Their worldview was not American. They were used to stupid government ideas and they were big enough to absorb the stupidity. It was just a part of doing business — except that now, the government officials were talking about stealing their businesses and wanted these innovators to be happy about it. The tech bros response? Wait, what? We were right there with you til that last part. Hey, now. That’s kinda rude, bro. I built this company. And so the tech bros made entreaties to Trump. They started paying some attention and a philosophy that polite society dismissed out of hand because it was just the stupid American rubes spouting off, started making sense. MAGA welcomed the tech bros. Hey, Elon gives us free speech! He understands our plight! We are the same! Maybe. If there was a Venn diagram of MAGA and the newly awakened tech world, it would be a big circle of MAGA and a small circle of tech, with the economic piece overlapping. MAGA’s cultural concerns, foreign policy concerns, class concerns, way of life concerns … all of it, matter less to these newbs. Here’s what MAGA knows and is worried about: America started as a Christian nation with Christian ideals grounded in governance ideals from the Magna Carta and Platonic philosophy. MAGA worries that the ingredients that make America great are being destroyed. Those ideals are as big as giving forgiveness instead of seeking revenge (Marshall plan), extending grace (bankruptcy law), equality under the law (jury of peers), the pursuit of an abundant life (low taxation and fewer regulations), dressing and keeping the environment (no littering, conserving beauty), decency and order (solid infrastructure, reliable electricity, water treatment), personal autonomy before God (the right to self-defense and personal property), and on and on. Christian ideals are woven through how Americans perceive gender. It’s why women are free unlike in Hindu and Muslim societies. With God, there is neither Jew nor Greek, male or female, slave or free. All people are the same before God and since a Christian’s job is to be Christ-like, he should treat every person the way God would: as an individual. Outside of Christianity, women, the weaker sex, have always been a slave or chattel class. In this secular society, and especially in the objectivist and materialist tech world, these principles aren’t even known. But these Christian principles form the why of America and MAGA is keen to return to these principles lest America be lost forever. The tech bros have no idea about them. They just understand that whatever makes America work is better than other places. The H-1B visa flap reveals the fissures between the groups. The tech bros want cheap labor. It helps the bottom line. It’s a crass argument though, and they don’t want to make it. They don’t want to admit that the H-1B system is actually a foreign slave market dressed up for public consumption. When cornered, they blamed American workers for not being good enough: too many sleepovers, not enough tutors. And then, when MAGA protested, they retreated to standard Leftist tropes and screamed, “RACISM!” Oops, there it is. The tech bros revealed their leftist cards. MAGA wasn’t having it. And they won’t have it if Trump goes along with the tech cartels and encourages more H-1B visas. They didn’t go along with the government COVID mandates, either, by the way. Far from being a goose-stepping cult, MAGA rebels when the people in charge go astray. What MAGA wants: American jobs for American citizens. A good education and a good job are foundational to the American dream. It’s not a lot to ask. Personal autonomy depends on these things. Illegal immigration and cheap foreign labor undermine these things. Pretty straight-forward. The H-1B visas are a scam. A data nerd on X revealed the truth and it was incontrovertible. As it turns out, these are ALL Indian companies that import H-1B tech workers en masse: Cognizant (93k) Infosys (61k) Tata Consultancy Services (60k) Wipro Capgemini HCL Compunnel Tech Mahindra Mphasis These aren’t American companies that needed international talent to fill… pic.twitter.com/G7p6wsamke — Robert Sterling (@RobertMSterling) December 29, 2024 Let’s review applications by employer (again, with teal representing IT roles and gray being everything else). There are some HUGE numbers here. 15 companies alone received approval for 20k+ applications each. We’ll go back to employers momentarily. pic.twitter.com/aRx95MHh0n — Robert Sterling (@RobertMSterling) December 29, 2024 You can see where I’m going with this. A casual perusal of the data shows that this isn’t a program for the top 0.1% of talent, as it’s been described. This is simply a way to recruit hundreds of thousands of relatively lower-wage IT and financial services professionals. — Robert Sterling (@RobertMSterling) December 29, 2024 Calling Americans who want good things for American citizens racist is an insult, above and beyond many indignities they’ve had to endure. Many years ago, sitting on the floor in Atlanta’s airport waiting for a delayed flight, I chatted with a delusional GM employee. He’d just trained a team of Indian workers to replace him and his team. “But jobs will come back to Michigan,” he assured me. Michigan was dead, a hollowed-out husk. These stories are myriad. They start in college. White kids from certain zip codes with perfect scores, nine AP classes, and on and on, won’t be considered by the Ivies. The national merit scholars with perfect ACT and near-perfect SAT scores couldn’t get interviews. Instead, they went to state schools on scholarship but then competed for jobs, again, against lesser talented but more DEI-approved or H-1B-cheapened talent. Americans, true Americans, expect an even playing field. Between illegal immigration, DEI, and H-1B scams, American citizens are competing against lesser talent and for less money. Vivek Ramaswamy wants a return to a merit-based society. MAGA wants that too. Want to know why Gen Z and Gen Alpha males voted for Trump? It’s not all that complicated. They haven’t watched the cultural insanity from some fourth-column perch, they’ve lived it. Virulent hatred spewed by female teachers toward men? They’ve heard it. Transgender kids, aka their buddies from sixth grade who grew their hair long, put on a skirt, and now play women’s sports even though the guy was picked last on every team cuz he sucked? They’ve seen it. Impossible standards for them to get into good colleges while dumbasses of other colors and sexual persuasions get plum positions even though they’re “no talents”? Par for the course. These boys are radicalized because they’re the butt of every joke, the villain of every story, the skunk at every garden party. If, by some miracle, the boy gets into a college, it’s more of the same. He’s the minority. He’s ridiculed. And when he tries to get a job, it gets worse. He may have been a national merit scholar, graduated summa cum laude, and won national coding championships against these lauded classes, but they will get jobs and he will not. (This is a real example, by the way.) He fills no quota. He will take what he’s given and it’s usually a crappy consulting job for underwhelming pay. One friend’s son said, “There’s just no computer science jobs anymore.” No, honey. There are no jobs for you. Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy stirred the political pot asserting that foreign workers make America great and stating, (paraphrasing here) that American families need to focus more on tutoring, hard work, and stop sleepovers. But that’s not an American point of view. Americans are creative because they’re not programmed robots. They’re free. That means American parents emphasize well-roundedness and a multitude of experiences. American parents don’t generally create autodidacts unless the child shows spectacular talent in an area and desires it. Otherwise, American kids play a variety of sports, maybe learn piano, take swim lessons, and as they grow and demonstrate talent they specialize. However being socially flexible, a good team player, demonstrating leadership skills, and cooperative information sharing are emphasized because this is where the magic happens. Good ideas take good teams to come to fruition. American parents take their kids to church. Moral grounding and a spiritual life promote all kinds of desirable qualities. A child will have a foundation to endure hardship. He will learn to think of serving his fellow man. He’ll sing and pray — more things that promote solid mental health. Personal responsibility is emphasized. American parents, the good ones, impart discipline but also fun. Life is more than drudgery. The American dream is a struggle, yes, but it’s also the joy of baseball, a bike ride, or an ice cream cone. Americans are sick of being actively discriminated against in their own damn country and then being told they’re racist for wanting their children to have the opportunities that used to be taken for granted. Enough, already! To Elon’s credit, he conceded that reforms needed to happen in the H-1B program. Likely, even he was shocked when he saw the data. It’s disturbing. Easily fixed by raising the minimum salary significantly and adding a yearly cost for maintaining the H1B, making it materially more expensive to hire from overseas than domestically. I’ve been very clear that the program is broken and needs major reform. — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) December 29, 2024 The fact is that the leftists want a nation divided by race, gender, and ideology. A divided nation is an easy nation to control. They don’t want a nation full of content, patriotic, employed, happy families achieving the American dream. Those people are difficult to manage because they’re free. The tech bros should want this for Americans, too. American life is not 100 percent about the bottom line. America was never a libertarian paradise. It was a paradise of liberated people. The people were grounded in something more spiritual, broad, and imbued with meaning. America was prosperous, yes, but that prosperity was a result of moral, personally responsible, hardworking people who are charitable, generous, and forgiving. These patriotic, wholesome people want that world for their children. Trump and his friends, Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, have enormous power to make this a reality. Rather than insult the people who rightly desire this, they should help them achieve it. READ MORE from Melissa Mackenzie: Matt Gaetz: Ditching Justice in Service to Petty Hatreds Mitch McConnell Did Not Win a Mandate What Trump’s Cabinet Picks All Have in Common: They Don’t Give a ____ The post Elon Musk v. MAGA: H-1B Visas, Foreign Workers, Big Tech, and America First appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Five Quick Things: The EOY 5QT
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Five Quick Things: The EOY 5QT

Technically, I’m on vacation. But I can’t let 2024 end without just one more installment of the Five Quick Things. So with as little folderol and ado as possible, let’s begin, shall we? 1. The H-1B Thing After last week’s kerfuffle over Vivek Ramaswamy making a pointed, obnoxious, and mostly true critique of the celebration of mediocrity that is American culture while defending the use of H-1B visas, by now you’ve probably seen and heard all you want to on this subject. But I’ll just throw out a few quick points hopefully we can all agree on. The median IQ in the U.S. is considerably higher than that of India. India is not some shining repository of intellectual brilliance. It has a staggeringly large population, and out of that mass of people there will indeed be some brilliant engineers. That those people want to come and ply their trade here is, on balance, a good thing. But this is not an indication that Indian culture drives excellence while American culture does not. That’s not true, and Ramaswamy is wrong to the extent he’s asserting it is. I don’t think that’s what he was asserting, though. I think the deficiencies he sees in American culture are substandard not in comparison to India but in the American culture we should have. He should (and may have; I’m on vacation, as I said, and as such I’m not reading every last little thing on X) make this clear. The H-1B program is absolutely being abused and should be ratcheted down in size. That American corporations have forced American workers to train their foreign-born replacements on their way to the unemployment line is a horror that deserves punishment. Rather than stupid tax increases and other socialist solutions, I’d rather start making use of antitrust legislation to break up the largest and worst offenders since our economy needs to be re-democratized and reoriented toward small and midsized businesses anyway. But H-1B is by no means the biggest problem we have where immigration is concerned. The top priority absolutely must be getting rid of the 12-15 million illegal immigrants clogging our cities and towns without our permission. Start with the criminals, move quickly to the illegals who have been given deportation orders, then to the illegals on governmental assistance (cut that off and offer a free plane or boat trip home and a great number of those will self-deport). And when all of that is done we can talk about what the next steps might be. My guess is there is a cash amount that can be arrived at which will pay illegals to leave — perhaps a distasteful policy, but at the right number it would nonetheless be cheaper than attempting to forcibly remove them. There is also perhaps a number that can be arrived at by which illegals can outright buy a green card given successful vetting. It had better be larger than, say, $60,000; perhaps the leftist NGOs bringing so many of them here might make loans to them for that amount. Speaking of those NGOs, any of them who have participated in facilitating this invasion across our southern border must be banned forever from receiving federal funding. At minimum. I’d say there should be an investigation and any violations of U.S. law by these people must be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. Of course, this is almost certainly going to include government officials before it’s all said and done; so be it. But back to Ramaswamy — the easiest way to square his statements with those of his critics is to recognize that there is a demand for H-1B recipients because our educational system utterly sucks and it produces young workers who not only lack the hard skills needed to fill the jobs of today but the soft skills that allow for them to be trained. What we desperately need to do is to blow up that system and start to embrace a panoply of educational models within a robust marketplace. Rather than diagnose boys with ADHD and medicate them so they’ll sit in classrooms like zombies, put those kids into apprenticeships and teach them trades and industrial skills first, and then move them into academic subjects later. Or whatever. Our one-size-fits-all system doesn’t work, its results are garbage and it’s destroying generations of Americans who might otherwise move from school to fulfilling work and successful lives. One last point: our national birthrate, which was 1.6 children per adult female the last I checked, is far below the replacement rate of 2.1. This has to recover if we’re going to do what we need to do, which is to enter a period of very low immigration that lasts for 20-30 years. Historically, waves of immigration have been followed by such breaks, and in those lull periods, we’ve assimilated immigrants and grown stronger and more unified as a country. But we’ve had the longest period of sustained mass immigration in our history, and it has taken a major toll on our culture and societal cohesion. We need to absorb and assimilate what we have; the problem is, without immigrants, we’re going to grow very old as a country very fast. So as important as curtailing immigration is accumulating and nurturing successful families. In short, there’s a lot to do and probably not so much time for fighting. But it isn’t a bad thing that we’re having open, frank debates on these subjects within the MAGA movement while nobody really gives a damn what the Left, who broke this thing on purpose, has to say about them. 2. Bye, Jimmy There are lots of people saying nice things about Jimmy Carter, who lingered for months waiting to die before finally passing away over the weekend. I’m sorry, but I don’t have anything nice to say about Jimmy Carter. The narrative we’re supposed to accept right now is that Carter wasn’t successful while in office (you don’t say?), he emerged as a great humanitarian upon leaving office. And that narrative, in my estimation, is as worthy as his presidency was. The best example of what a paper-tiger humanitarian Jimmy Carter was, comes from when he went down to Venezuela and gave his imprimatur to Hugo Chavez’s stolen election in 2003 (if I remember the year correctly). That country went straight down the toilet from there. Everybody knew the election was stolen but Carter — committed leftist fellow traveler that he was, happily played the useful idiot. And then there was Carter’s anti-Israel advocacy, which I could bore the reader for hours with examples of. Jimmy Carter spread misery everywhere he went. Pay respects to him if you want, but let’s not sanitize the legacy of one of the worst politicians America ever saw. I’ll let that be all the ill I speak of the dead, but suffice it to say we most certainly don’t need any more praise for Jimmy Carter. (RELATED: Carter Was to Reagan What Buchanan Was to Lincoln) 3. He’s Not Wrong and This Should Be Investigated Our own Nate Hochman had perhaps the most interesting tweet on X Monday… Tons of people have this experience: You’re talking about something with a friend, you open your phone, and all your browser ads are suddenly promoting it. It’s bizarre we haven’t had more public debate about this. Everyone’s just accepted their phones are eavesdropping on them? — Nate Hochman (@njhochman) December 30, 2024 I can contribute to this myself, because a couple of months back I was on the phone while driving, and I was cut off and nearly run off the wrote by a cretin in a Cadillac Escalade, and I mentioned this — along with a few choice invectives — to the person I was talking to. And for four days afterward, I saw Cadillac ads all over my Facebook feed and elsewhere on the internet. It’s one thing when they capture your browser history to show you ads. Nearly buy a flannel shirt at L.L. Bean’s website and you can expect to see that shirt all over the internet as L.L. Bean tries to make the sale. But listening to your calls in order to sell you things? How much of a shred of privacy can we still claim? Doing something about this is a proper function of government and it’s worth a legislative debate — at the state level if not in Congress. 4. Donald Trump and Old Southern Democrat Politics Writ Large I didn’t get to this earlier in the month, but Walter Russell Mead wrote an interesting two-part essay at Tablet Magazine in early December worth a look. Part 1 is here. Part 2 is here. Mead’s thesis is that Southern politics in the post-Civil War era has always broken down into a struggle between two groups: the Redeemers, who sought to bring about a resurgence of Dixie through economic development (attracting capital investment from the North) and social progress, and the populists, who were more interested in reclaiming political power for the farmers and the poor. And that what used to be true of Southern politics is now a model for American politics in this new post-Great Society age which has just begun. I’m not going to characterize too much of Mead’s essay: You should read the whole thing and decide for yourself. A quick taste from the introduction: Donald Trump’s first and in many ways most enduring political accomplishment is not the humiliation of the Democratic Party he has toppled in two of the last three presidential elections. It is the devastating defeat he has inflicted on the Republican establishment he has marginalized and dispersed. Our once and future president will not win every battle with what remains of the old Republican establishment, and in politics nothing is eternal. But as of Nov. 5, 2024, the “man from Queens” has achieved a domination of the Republican Party that no previous Republican president has ever enjoyed. The modern Republican Party that Ronald Reagan made, and that George W. Bush took into the 21st century, has fallen before the MAGA hordes, and today’s ambitious Republican politicos must say to Trump what Ruth said to Naomi: Whither thou goest I will go; and where thou lodgest I will lodge. Until recently, when people thought about the political divisions inside the Republican Party, they saw two camps. There was the predominately liberal Republican Party rooted in the Northeast and represented by figures like Nelson Rockefeller and Mitt Romney, and there was the Sunbelt Republican movement led by Ronald Reagan. Sunbelt Republicans were seen as further to the right than their Rockefeller Republican rivals on both economic and social issues. The shift of white Southerners in the 1970s and 1980s to the Republicans from their traditional post-Reconstruction Democratic affiliation decisively tipped the balance between Sunbelt and Rockefeller Republicans, driving the whole party into the more conservative form it assumed under both Reagan and Bush. Donald Trump clearly does not fit into this model, and his entry into Republican presidential politics in 2015 revealed the existence of powerful forces inside the Republican coalition that its nominal leaders knew little or nothing about. Their consistent underestimation of the importance and staying power of the Trump phenomenon likewise betrays a preference for forgetting the past rather than being warned and instructed by it. Trump’s message and his style have antecedents in our political history, and his ideological, rhetorical, and cultural links to the Jacksonian tradition in American life suggest that his extraordinary political success represents the return to national prominence of potent and enduring forces in American political culture that establishment Republican figures still don’t understand. It’s an interesting argument. My only critique of its foundation is that I don’t think it’s fair or accurate to lump the Reagan and Bush camps together, because they’re not the same thing. The Bush camp deliberately squandered Reagan’s legacy while claiming to act in his name. But now that, as former Pete Buttigieg adviser Lis Smith noted in a New York Post interview, the Democrat brand is “in the toilet,” the real argument seems to be between the modern-day redeemers and populists within the successful America First movement. The H-1B debate is a manifestation of what Mead wrote about. 5. Thank You, J.K. Rowling This is an awfully courageous thing for a celebrity to say. There are no trans kids. No child is ‘born in the wrong body’. There are only adults like you, prepared to sacrifice the health of minors to bolster your belief in an ideology that will end up wreaking more harm than lobotomies and false memory syndrome combined. pic.twitter.com/yyc4MxgfOk — J.K. Rowling (@jk_rowling) December 28, 2024 What she’s saying is obviously true. Transgenderism is an expression of mental illness and it needs to be treated as such. But they don’t let you say that in showbiz, where successful actress after successful actress publicly abuses her children in pursuit of the latest destructive social fad. The good news is this social contagion is beginning to break. It’s courageous people like Rowling who are willing to endure the withering scorn of the lunatics who have broken it. READ MORE from Scott McKay: Biden: Commutations For Murderers, Persecutions For Normal Americans Five Quick Things: Celebrating the Death Of Chuck Schumer’s Porkubus Bill Morphine Mitch Doesn’t Know When to Quit The post Five Quick Things: The EOY 5QT appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Judge’s Ruling Will Help Trump Make the Border Wall Great Again
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Judge’s Ruling Will Help Trump Make the Border Wall Great Again

U.S. District Court Judge Drew Tipton ruled on Friday that the Biden administration must stop selling off steel components that Trump 45 purchased to build the southern border wall. Trump rushed to celebrate. “In a major, crucial WIN for America, and our National Security, a Federal Judge in Texas, based on papers we filed just a few days ago, has PROHIBITED the Biden Administration from selling any materials designated for the Border Wall, that has been wrecked by Biden and his cronies, and which I am going to rebuild in order to protect our Country from violent migrant crime, fentanyl smuggling, sex trafficking, terror attacks, and other heinous, Nation ending disasters,” the president re-elect announced via Truth Social on Saturday morning. “The Judge has also ordered an investigation into the illegal selling of the materials, which will expose just how corrupt and anti-American Radical Democrats are,” Trump continued. “I am honored to be joined in this vital case by the Great States of Texas and Missouri, and applaud Judge Drew Tipton for doing the right thing for our Country. We have to protect our Borders, and Save America. MAGA!” Offering even more good news, Trump’s incoming Border Czar Tom Homan told Fox News on Saturday: “One of the companies actually reached out to me, willing to give us those border-wall products back at what they paid for them — pennies on the dollar — giving them back, for the same price.” Biden reportedly will not swim upstream on this issue. With just three weeks left in his Reign of Error, it seems as if Biden will leave Tipton’s ruling unchallenged and end a nearly four-year Democrat campaign to sabotage Trump’s signature promise — to finish the southern border wall. Since he first ran for president, Trump pledged, “On Day One, we will begin working on an impenetrable, physical, tall, powerful, beautiful, southern border wall.” And since Biden’s Day One, he has labored to undo Trump’s life-saving handiwork. In the latest such effort, the Daily Wire’s James Lalino reported earlier this month, huge pieces of unused border wall material wound up for auction at steep discounts. “They are taking it from three stations: Nogales, Tucson, and Three Points,” a whistleblowing Border Patrol agent told Lalino. The officer added that DP Trucking LLC, a government contractor, hauled these materials up Interstate 19 to Pinal Airpark in Marana, Ariz. “They just started taking all the wall that was not used, which is still totally good and usable, and they started taking it northbound,” according to the federal agent. “They’re pulling it all off the border.” The “32.91’ X 7.91’ Steel Bollard Wall Sections w/Grout” wound up in the hands of GovPlanet, which sells surplus federal property. “When Trump comes back, and he wants to start the border wall all over again, the whole entire funding fight is gonna happen again,” the agent warned. “That’s their play. He’s gonna have to fight for this — again.” This sleight of hand became public and triggered a mushroom cloud of outrage — perfectly fitting this southwestern desert setting. “The Biden administration is well aware they shouldn’t have reversed the construction of the border wall,” Congressman Eli Crane (R–Ariz.) told the Daily Wire. ”If it’s true, they’re purposefully hamstringing an incoming president.” “Joe Biden is attempting a last-ditch effort to keep America’s borders open by selling off materials the Trump Admin will use to finish the wall,” former governor Doug Ducey (R–Ariz.) raged via X. “This decision from President Biden is reckless, will make Arizonans less safe, and should be reversed — immediately.” “All of it pretty much could be utilized, they could put down footing, pick it back up, and use it. Instead, what are they doing? They’re auctioning off,” lamented Border Patrol Council Vice President Art Del Cueto. “When you have to start with the new administration, wanting to rebuild it, what are we going to have to do, you’re going to have to use more taxpayer-funded money, which is insane to me.” During a wide-ranging, 70-minute press conference on Dec. 16, Trump explained why these wall components are more complex and costly than they appear. “It’s a special type of steel, but very, very hard to cut. Inside the steel, as you know, we pour concrete, and that’s a Grade 10 concrete, which is a very strong concrete, as though you were building about a 60-story building. It’s very powerful concrete,” Trump said at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach. “They’ve made tremendous technology advances in concrete, who would think that? But I know that from the construction industry. Today, what you can do with concrete is incredible,” Trump continued. “So, we have a very strong concrete, and then we have a rebar. We put rebar inside the concrete, and the rebar likewise is very hard to cut. So, it’s a very expensive process, very expensive wall, and then we put an anti-climb plate on the top.” As for Team Biden’s efforts to auction off these valuable assets, Trump remarked, “What they’re doing is really — it’s almost a criminal act.” Senator Ted Cruz would delete the word “almost.” “Let me be very clear to every official at the Department of Homeland Security or anywhere else who approves selling off incredibly expensive portions of the border wall for $5 a piece,” the Texas Republican said on Fox News Channel’s Hannity program. “You are engaged in theft of government property, and you should expect the Department of Justice to investigate you and prosecute you!” Cruz added: “This is a brazen abuse of power, and it reflects the views of this White House and Democrats across the board.” Cruz compared Biden’s steel-wall fire sale to a sheriff who loses a re-election bid and then makes his successor’s life miserable by squandering $50,000 squad cars for $100. The probe that Judge Tipton ordered should identify the perpetrators of these shady deals. They should face the music once Attorney General-nominee Pam Bondi is in power. If Biden gets a second ill wind and tries again to sell border wall parts, Trump should ask Elon Musk to purchase all remaining wall materials. By my rough calculations, 40 percent of the $300 million worth of wall components that were set for auction should be worth $120 million. That is barely lunch money to Earth’s Richest Man, worth some $400 billion. If these metal posts can be bought at five cents on the dollar, this should cost a mere $6 million, rather than $120 million. For Musk, this is a rounding error. At a $6.5 million-per-mile cost of a new border wall, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, this should provide the raw steel needed for at least 18.5 miles of new wall. If labor costs are part of that $6.5 million, then these raw materials alone should stretch for more than that distance. With or without Musk’s involvement, these dormant steel slabs soon will stand proudly in place as Trump 47 fulfills his promise to Make the Border Wall Great Again. Deroy Murdock is a Manhattan-based Fox News contributor. READ MORE from Deroy Murdock: Hegseth’s On-Record Defenders Crush Baseless Drinking Claims by Nameless Sources Dear Never Trump: Thanks For Nothing Judge Merchan: Dismiss Trump’s Case or Recuse Thyself! The post Judge’s Ruling Will Help Trump Make the Border Wall Great Again appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Max Boot’s Dirty War on the Reagan Doctrine
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Max Boot’s Dirty War on the Reagan Doctrine

When the important writer Max Boot released his ten-year study of Ronald Reagan recently, it won a nice roll-out from the newspaper where he works, the Washington Post. The “Books” section showed a fine, noble, full-page color photograph of the 40th president of the United States. Reagan was wearing a brown suit — “fashion people” said in the day that only a Hollywood man like Reagan could look good and appropriate in a D.C. formal setting in a brown suit. The photo showed him striding down an elegant White House hallway, looking engaged, determined, his hands around the typescript of an impending speech. The image was all class and public business … perhaps even suggestive of history-making? But no. There was to be no allowing luster in our public affairs. “In Reality” — the words were in capitals, IN REALITY — and as one turned the page, a second headline, “Tearing Down the Myth of Ronald Reagan.” The article instructed that in Reagan’s day “people” were “bamboozled” by the man. His speeches were “little more than a farrago of erroneous statistics” and “spurious quotations.” He started the phrase, “Make American Great Again,” surely mindless nativism. Even good sentiment must be warned against: “Nostalgia for Reagan underscores his irrelevance” today. Surely, we can still at least say Reagan helped win the Cold War? It seems not. We are told it is now known that the Soviet Union’s breakup was “entirely due to Gorbachev’s refusal to hold it together.” All this black ink in the Washington, D.C. newspaper was occasioned by the substantial new book by columnist Max Boot, Reagan: His Life and Legend. The reviewer, so peevish about the president, is generous to the new book calling it “magisterial.” The New Yorker and other publications are calling it among the best books of the year. But while it has fine passages, it is also crippled by an inadequate, negligent handling of a legacy project of both Reagan terms — the “Reagan Doctrine.” The “Reagan Doctrine” involved a worldview and set of actions by the president that directly helped bring victory in the Cold War. What mattered was Reagan’s direction, action, and agency — not just Gorbachev’s losing. This is a vital matter in the history of U.S. foreign policy. The effort involved many people who are still contributing today to the public discourse, including several I teach with at the Institute of World Politics, the D.C. graduate school. We worked on some of the things the younger Mr. Boot does not appreciate or perhaps know of — despite the extensive list of sources in his book. The Reagan vision called for a more free world. That in turn would result in a safer world for the U.S. and other democracies. It was not introduced as a “doctrine” by the president, a secretary of state, or an official historian. Instead, the foundations began to emerge during the campaign of 1980 and the first term — most strongly by 1982. Its label came from that gentle genius Charles Krauthammer, one of the best essayists of his generation. The doctrine’s conception is in part due to a thinker Max Boot (and some other writers in this area) totally ignored: Jack Wheeler, an idealist of oversized personality and a minuscule California think tank called the Freedom Research Foundation. Dr. Wheeler’s creative thoughts won influence with Reagan speechwriters, planners, and William Casey. Office of Strategic Services veteran–turned-investment banker, Casey was given direction of the Central Intelligence Agency, and encouragement from the new president. One very active Casey aide, disliked by the establishment, Dr. Constantine Menges, later wrote a fact-jammed and valuable book on the political and human geography of all this, The Twilight Struggle. That book won no prizes but it is one of the places to look for realities and issues that Mr. Boot gives but a few lines. For the Reagan team, human freedom was a central, fixed idea. Good governments should be built on freedom and to protect freedom. Men and women by nature would fight for their freedom. Soviet Communist despotism — in Reagan’s day — was their enemy, he believed. Communism was then strong enough to tyrannize millions and make gains in the world, too. Forgotten now are the Soviet leaders’ boasts of the late 1970s that they were changing the “correlation of forces,” especially by expanding in the Third World. That self-assessment by America’s enemy is hardly represented — and never evaluated directly — in this massive new book by Boot, yet he makes plenty of space to prod Reagan’s supposed naïveté about Communism, or fears of it. In the 1980s, what the White House determined was that the USSR, despite its overseas expansions, could be de-legitimated and undermined if one could assess its critical vulnerabilities and stir a global struggle for freedom. National security directives of May 1982 and January 1983 laid out the policy and strategy. The U.S. would “contain and reverse the expansion of Soviet control and military presence” and increase the cost of its many ongoing insurgencies and proxy wars. During that time, mine was an unimportant post with a very important member of the House Armed Services Committee, Jim Courter of New Jersey. The post gave me a close look, in early 1986, at Dr. Jack Wheeler and one does not forget his driving idea and its audacity. Years later he confirmed in interviews with me that his knot of American allies dared to believe that if the forces of freedom won even a single strategic fight, anywhere in the Third World where the Kremlin was investing, it would discredit the Brezhnev Doctrine everywhere. Brezhnev had asserted that all Communist gains were progressive, ordained by history, and must be guaranteed. The Reagan team flipped that formula. If the U.S. could aid victory in one place, the argument and prestige of the Kremlin might shatter. The Reagan Doctrine embraced selected countries where recently imposed dictatorships of the Marxist variety were protected by Soviet bloc aid vis-à-vis their subjects. Reagan’s policy offered not to fight in their place — not with American soldiers — but with American supplies for those doing the fighting for themselves. Five countries were most often mentioned: Afghanistan, Nicaragua, Cambodia, Angola, and, at times, Mozambique (whose guerrillas never were given American aid). None of these governments were yet powerful; all were newly commanded and administered by Marxist-Leninists loyal to Moscow. For example: the “Contras.” Many members of a divided House of Representatives hoped to help these Nicaraguans fight for freedom at home and make their democratic way, despite Daniel Ortega’s new Sandinista and communist government. Anti-Communist insurgents failed, ultimately. Today, Ortega’s depredations continue as painful current events. All that is really different in Nicaragua are the ages of the last Sandinistas. Daniel Ortega’s brother Humberto, the former defense minister, died a few months ago while under house arrest — a prisoner of his own co-revolution. He had dared to offer some political criticism. Reagan’s political opponents of that time and now (which, then and now, include some over at the Washington Post) may or may not be content with the results of the U.S.’s failed efforts against communism there. Nicaraguans are not; lately, thousands have escaped to emigrate here. The Reagan Doctrine unfolded gradually and in disparate zones. Angola was also a part of this vision of expanded territories of freedom; Reagan spoke out in his campaign for anti-communists fighting there. He made a policy address in Westminster (June 1982) lauding freedoms and civil law while excoriating the Communist alternative of Leninism. By then, limited aid was flowing to guerrillas in three countries: Nicaragua, Afghanistan, and Cambodia. Next, the president made a principled and pretty speech about democracy to the congress in Costa Rica, a free country in a region replete with transborder guerrilla movements sponsored and often trained and armed by Cuba and later Nicaragua. Politics is about ideas but also people. One saw President Reagan welcoming to Washington individual fighting leaders of the anti-communist movements. Jonas Savimbi of UNITA in Angola is unfairly dismissed by Max Boot with one word — “brutish.” Really? He had a Swiss Ph.D., he was charismatic and multilingual, and he led a shadow government that stretched over as much as a third of Angola — a quarter-million square miles. Dr. Savimbi was hosted twice at the White House, and lectured at the Heritage Foundation, while UNITA advisors and officials, such as Jeremias Chitunda, lobbied in the House office buildings. Hill staff groups met with Contras of Nicaragua such as Adolfo Calero. Some Cambodians who were giving their all against the Vietnamese-dominated Communist government in Kampuchea were liaising with famed Vietnam War writer Al Santoli, working out of Washington. Better known is the work of Texas Rep. Charlie Wilson, one of the powerful Democratic Party congressmen who worked with Afghan representatives. The Tom Hanks movie about him may have its moments of farce but the reality, as confirmed to me by a Marine intelligence officer and liaison to the Mujahideen, is that our shoulder-fired missiles thrilled the “Muj” who used them, terrified the Soviet pilots, and changed the war. The Soviets began losing the war they’d started and freedom fighters everywhere else looked on. By term two, in 1986, the Reagan Doctrine was changing a few maps. Maps had for several years shown accretion of Soviet armed influence, new client states, Red Air Force transports moving Cuban troops here and there in Africa, and so on. Soviet leaders who had boasted of the change in the correlation of forces quit doing so. The U.S. team had now re-imagined and linked together certain theaters of conflict and enthusiastic indigenous volunteers. The world showed hot points, small wars, where homegrown rebels were fighting against their Communist governments and foreign military advisors and troops. This brings us to the first of a half dozen hard reasons any serious reader should feel misdirected and underserved by the Max Boot biography of the president. 1. “Rollback” Aid The emergent U.S. strategy was to directly aid — not just exhort, but aid — anti-communist fighters. To borrow language from John Lewis Gaddis and his famous book Strategies of Containment, this can be called a kind of limited “rollback.” Washington offices had debated rollback for decades but had not done it. In the case of Hungary, two Republican presidents, Abraham Lincoln and Dwight Eisenhower, separately pondered giving material aid to anti-Russian Hungarian freedom fighters. They did not! They pondered and then declined, on grounds of prudence. Now the Reagan administration was doing it, in the Third World, supplying aid to insurgents and accepting the moral and strategic consequences. That is a momentous fact of foreign policy. 2. Perpetuation of a False Narrative A second reason this is worth telling and teaching in graduate schools now is that the Reagan Doctrine is the reverse of much of what U.S. citizens are taught in high school and college. Wherever there was low-intensity conflict, students were told they would see Uncle Sam on the side of a brutal government. Were leftist guerrillas calling for nationalism and freedom? Then the U.S. would be throwing in on the other side, or mindlessly calling for “stability.” Whatever school one attended (and regardless of what you think of that picture), Reagan’s policy was the opposite in morals, law, and politics to what is currently assumed. The insurgents in Afghanistan, Angola, Cambodia, and Nicaragua had Uncle Sam helping the guerrillas. The “reactionaries” and “dictators” fighting to keep power were flying Communist flags and supported by Moscow’s financial streams, technical experts, combat helicopter pilots, and East German Stasi officers. The reality of the mid-1980s was a new global strategy for freedom fighters that contradicted a common image of what the U.S. had been doing in the world. The new vision would have thrilled Thomas Paine, the author of the 1776 pamphlet, Common Sense. 3. Assisting the Oppressed in Liberating Themselves A third reason to care relates to how our Pentagon and leaders currently align policy and military strategy. A mismatch may result in a gross error. What America saw in the mid-1980s was a clean match between policy and strategy. The White House took a stand for freedom and against communism overseas. And, its strategy of rendering material and moral aid allowed non-Americans who wanted to fight for their own liberty the ability to do so. Violence countered violence. Congress and Reagan also ran a parallel and semi-secret material assistance program to the Solidarity underground in Poland. This too was subversive in pro-freedom ways, but different for being wholly non-violent. With fighting there will be controversy, and all know the Reagan White House was damaged by the Iran-Contra funding scandal — a blunder that came after congressional support for the Contras lagged. Despite this, the larger program of aiding insurgents had sound strategic logic — then and now. In Afghanistan, by contrast, Congress kept approving semi-clandestine aid and the guerrillas beat Red Army enemies in a fair fight. Undergirding these coordinated actions were documents such as National Security Decision Directive 75, prepared in 1982 and signed the next January. 4. Cost-effective and Efficient Confrontation Reagan’s strategy was not costly. It was efficient. It compares to the U.S. success of the early 1950s in the Philippines when it sent supplies, arms, and a few dozen advisers to help locals defeat an insurgency by the “Huks.” Contrast this with the mass occupation of the Philippines after the Spanish–American War. The U.S. was successful in both encounters, but the 1950s event was dramatically cheaper. The Cato Institute complained that the Reagan Doctrine did bear a cost too — few others did. It was cheap. Excepting Afghanistan, most aid recipients received a minimum. But there is another, more important measure of “efficiency” in war: lives. Few to no U.S. lives were lost in these Third World theaters on Reagan’s new map. Moral questions still abound — deaths of in-country natives were numerous — but an accounting of U.S. strategy must grant that it was efficient. 5. The Macroeconomics of the Imperial Communist Enemy The Ronald Reagan team observed a USSR with an unnatural and sputtering economy, many bad investments, and overcommitment in distant zones. The U.S. used that against Moscow. It enhanced the expense of those foreign enterprises and drained the Soviet bloc’s internal economies. The new print sources noted at the opening of this article (that is, the book and the book review), both imply Reagan had unconnected or shoddy policy ideas and was flying by the seat-of-his-pants, fueled by his hatred of Communists. In actuality, somewhat like Winston Churchill, Reagan was a politician, not an economics academic, who knew in his bones that communist economics were self-defeating. It is probable that neither Churchill nor Reagan read Das Kapital, and they did not need to. They did read Adam Smith and Friedrich Hayek. They both had abundant common sense. They had a feel for human nature. They each said that, as communism was unnatural, it would collapse. Certain Reagan speeches stuck a deft finger into sore spots in Soviet central planning. Max Boot makes much of a few pauses or shortfalls in Reagan’s program of sanctions and embargoes and anti-Communist aid programs, but together the initiatives compounded stress where the Kremlin was overextended in military and economic terms in the Third World. Reagan’s doctrine was draining treasure, as well as blood, from the Soviets and their partners in outlying states. Strategists sometimes speak of the alternatives of annihilation and attrition; this was attrition strategy. Attrition — not annihilation. The Boot biography concludes that the strategy did not bear many fruits during the first Reagan term, which is true but not relevant. Attrition is a slow-working strategy, but a good one. It is much better than a detonation, always risky in great power rivalries. Better to have the White House help overeager Soviets overstretch. The Reagan Doctrine was an efficient, and even brilliant, form of Great Power Competition. He had a few others, including the Strategic Defense Initiative, aimed toward the same ends. The White House, with advisors like Peter Robinson and William Casey, helped the Soviet bureaucrats blow out their budget overseas, which punished their own people at home. It is certain that Mikhail Gorbachev knew this, even if Mr. Boot does not. 6. “Winning Without Fighting” A strategist can study (and respect) the Reagan Doctrine for its meaning in “war termination.” One of the usual themes of inquiry in classes at the Institute of World Politics is “winning without fighting.” The exhortation to win without fighting comes from the Sun Tzu book The Art of War — two and a half millennia old. Does anyone really win without fighting? Clausewitz himself doubts it … but might the answer be “yes” anyway? There are certain cases of success at the levels of “show of force,” and of tactics, and of strategy. This is one. It is right to dispassionately conclude that, in a global contest over decades, while the U.S. did fight in many places, especially Vietnam and Korea, it won without a global open war, without nuclear weapons and overt combat against Chinese divisions or Soviet armies. And it won this during the Reagan presidency. Ronald Reagan was not merely present when this happened, as suggested by Boot’s passive voice on pages 717-722 (“The world had changed dramatically…”). He was the leading architect of one side’s victory over the other, and in that fulfilled Sun Tzu’s highest recommendation as to efficiency and success: to win without a war. READ MORE: Reagan’s 9 Lessons for Trump in Pursuing Peace Through Strength Yes, Ronald Reagan Did Win the Cold War The Washington Post’s Looney Liberal Readership The post Max Boot’s Dirty War on the Reagan Doctrine appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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If Not Speaker Johnson — Who?
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If Not Speaker Johnson — Who?

The question for those House Republicans opposing the re-election of House Speaker Mike Johnson is an obvious one. That would be: If not Speaker Johnson — who? And the glaringly obvious answer to that glaringly obvious question is: The Johnson opponents have no obvious choice as a Johnson successor. Suffice it to say no Newt Gingrich-style candidate is waiting in the wings. In the long-ago mist of time that was the 1990s, the discomfort of rank-and-file House GOP members with the GOP House leadership of the day was apparent. Leading the charge for change was Georgia’s young conservative rebel, Congressman Newt Gingrich. The Gingrich career was telling. A young history professor at the University of West Georgia, he ran and was elected to Congress in 1978, the first Republican in the 6th district to win the job. By 1989, he was elected House Republican Whip and co-wrote something unknown by the Republicans of the day: a platform and agenda called the Contract with America, which led to the first GOP House Majority since 1954, a long 40 years earlier. With that, Newt Gingrich became Speaker Gingrich. And today? Where is the Newt Gingrich-style, oh-so-obvious choice to replace Speaker Johnson? He or she is not in evidence. The Hill reports: House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) heads to the House floor on Friday in hopes of being formally reelected Speaker. While Johnson has the endorsement of President-elect Trump to remain Speaker, one Republican is pledging to oppose him, and several others are not committing to supporting Johnson. That has raised questions about whether he can win enough votes to keep his gavel, given the House GOP’s razor-thin majority. Notice anything? There is no mention of an obvious alternative to Johnson who has the votes to defeat the Speaker and win the election himself or herself. Which is to say, until that person emerges, an effort to replace Speaker Johnson is much ado about nothing. All this kerfuffle does is stir up negative headlines about a chaotic House Republican Majority that, Speaker Johnson or not, seems to have no agenda and no idea what it is doing. So what will the anti-Johnson Republicans do now? Who is leading them? Who has the votes to defeat Johnson? Until they come up with that answer, the move to replace Speaker Mike Johnson is going nowhere. And the alternative is chaos. Not good. READ MORE from Jeffrey Lord: The Trumpian Future Beckons for America Arrest the Deputy Foreign Minister of Poland? Trump Gets Telework Right: “Ridiculous” The post If Not Speaker Johnson — Who? appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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The Spectator P.M. Ep. 101: The Victors and Vanquished of 2024
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The Spectator P.M. Ep. 101: The Victors and Vanquished of 2024

As 2024 comes to a close, what better way to end the year than by reflecting on the biggest winners and sorest losers? (READ MORE: Heroes and Zeroes of 2024 (Trump Reelection Edition)) In this episode of The Spectator P.M. Podcast, join hosts Ellie Gardey Holmes and Lyrah Margo as they reflect on the historic year. Ellie and Lyrah discuss the key political moments of 2024 that brought about victories for Donald Trump and JD Vance, and massive losses for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. Tune in to hear their discussion! Read Ellie and Lyrah’s writing here and here. Listen to the Spectator P.M. Podcast on Spotify. Watch the Spectator P.M. Podcast on Rumble. The post <i>The Spectator P.M.</i> Ep. 101: The Victors and Vanquished of 2024 appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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TOYOTA WATER POWERED ENGINE: Outperforms Hydrogen And Electric Vehicles (EV’s) “Water As Fuel!”
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TOYOTA WATER POWERED ENGINE: Outperforms Hydrogen And Electric Vehicles (EV’s) “Water As Fuel!”

from NEM721:  TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
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