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Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
8 w

Report: Biden FBI Snooped on 92 Conservative Targets in Trump Witch Hunt
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Report: Biden FBI Snooped on 92 Conservative Targets in Trump Witch Hunt

The FBI under President Joe Biden investigated no less than 92 conservative or Republican groups and individuals, as part of an operation code-named, “Arctic Frost,” which scoured the dregs for a way to charge President Donald Trump with crimes related to the 2020 election, according to documents released Tuesday by the Senate Judiciary Committee. “In other words, Arctic Frost wasn’t just a case to politically investigate Trump,” said Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa. “It was the vehicle by which partisan FBI agents and DOJ [Department of Justice] prosecutors could achieve their partisan ends and improperly investigate the entire Republican political apparatus.” The list included organs of the Republican Party, such as the Republican National Committee and the Republican Attorneys General Association; former Trump officials such as Mark Meadows; and nonprofit organizations focused on everything from policy to networking, such as America First Policy Institute, the Conservative Partnership Institute, and Turning Point USA. The committee released its report less than a week after Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk was shot dead while engaging in one of his characteristic political discussions with college students. The Biden administration’s surveillance against Kirk’s organization creates an unflattering parallel to the FBI surveillance authorized six decades earlier against Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Like Kirk, King was an influential Christian activist who was ultimately assassinated for his political views. Biden administration surveillance could also descend from the grandiose to the provincial. U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyoming, said on “Washington Watch” that her own political consultant was placed under surveillance, at a time when Hageman was mounting a primary challenge to Trump-critical former congresswoman Liz Cheney, one of the few Republicans to join in the Biden administration’s attacks on Trump. What business did the FBI have investigating a political consultant to a Republican primary candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives from Wyoming—unless they were simply performing a favor for Cheney? Begun in April 2022 and reassigned to Special Counsel Jack Smith in November of that year, the FBI investigation left no stone unturned, conducting more than 150 interviews, serving more than 400 subpoenas, and executing more than 60 search warrants (which included seizing the phones of five lawyers, a U.S. congressman, and two White House aides). During the same period as this investigation, cartels freely trafficked drugs and people across America’s southern border, and left wing vandals attacked hundreds of pregnancy centers and churches with nearly no repercussions from the Biden administration. Hageman alleged that Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee showed the same indifference toward actual crime during a Tuesday hearing with FBI director Kash Patel. “The Democrats are not interested in what the FBI is doing to actually keep the American citizens and the American public safe,” she said. “They talked an awful lot about [files related to Jeffrey] Epstein and focused on something that, for the majority of Americans, they’re not interested.” This belated interest in Epstein betrays a political motivation, she argued, because Trump’s “is the first [administration] that has actually disclosed Epstein files. The Obama administration didn’t do it. The Biden administration didn’t do it. So they’re actually disclosing information. But that’s not good enough for the Democrats, because that’s not the point … of them going after this issue.” In other words, Democrats in Congress didn’t care about releasing the Epstein files until they believed it would hurt Trump. That same politicized attitude towards law enforcement seemed to infuse the Biden administration’s campaign of lawfare against not only Trump but anyone they viewed as a political opponent. Thus, the FBI cultivated informants in traditional Catholic churches, investigated concerned parents as potential domestic terrorists for disagreeing with school board policies, and harassed a medical whistleblower and pro-life protestors with spurious prosecutions. The recent revelations shed new light on one three-year-old case in particular. In August 2022, the DOJ used its intervention in a lawsuit against Alabama’s law protecting minors from gender transition procedures to subpoena a tiny, conservative nonprofit that wasn’t even a party to the case, demanding that its one-and-a-half paid employees turn over five years’ worth of records (a judge ultimately quashed the subpoena). At the time, the incident was a stunning abuse of authority. Now, it seems that such abuse of authority was standard operating procedure in the Biden administration’s FBI. “This is what the Biden administration did,” Hageman asserted. “They used their own FBI … as almost a Gestapo against the Republican Party.” The implications of the Biden administration’s subpoena dragnet extend beyond just the individuals and groups they targeted, argued Family Research Council president Tony Perkins. “It’s aptly named ‘Arctic Frost’ because it was intended to chill the freedom of speech,” to deter others from speaking into the political process. “Because we have seen the links of the FBI to groups like the Southern Poverty Law Center and others on the Left,” he added, “I think there’s a whole lot more to be exposed.” Originally published by The Washington Stand. The post Report: Biden FBI Snooped on 92 Conservative Targets in Trump Witch Hunt appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
8 w

Virtue, not power, is the true aim of politics
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Virtue, not power, is the true aim of politics

The great outbreak of evil in these past days stirred a memory of something I used to tell my freshman students on the first day of their introduction to politics class: Politics is about what is good.We would read together the first sentence of Aristotle’s “Nicomachean Ethics” — an unrivaled introduction to politics: Every art and every inquiry, and likewise every action and choice, seems to aim at some good, and hence it has been beautifully said that the good is that at which all things aim.Aristotle goes on quickly to observe in his usual empirical way that many goods exist along with many arts developed to achieve the different goods. The medical art aims at the good of health. The art of shipbuilding aims at building good ships. The military art aims at victory in war. The art of managing the household, which the Greeks called economics, aims at the good of wealth. Virtue is the end or aim of political life.Some arts are subordinated to other arts, because the good at which the art aims is subordinate to a larger good, the way the art of the cavalryman is subordinate to the art of the general.Aristotle then introduces the subject of politics with a great hypothesis: If there exists some good, some end, that we seek for its own sake, and we seek all the rest for the sake of or on account of this one good — if, in other words, we don’t choose everything for the sake of something else, which would make all of our desires empty and pointless — this would be the good itself, in fact the highest good.He asks: Would not an awareness of this highest good have great weight in a man’s life? Wouldn’t the art of attaining that good be the sovereign or master art encompassing all the ends or goods of the other arts? And isn’t this what we call the art of politics?The good that the art of politics aims at, he says, is “the human good.” What name do people give to the human good that encompasses all others and lacks nothing? The Greek word, Aristotle says, is eudaimonia, which we usually translate as “happiness” in English. The art of politics is the art of happiness. But it gets even better.The art of politics is a practical art. It aims not just at knowing what happiness is but at being happy. Thinking happiness through, Aristotle finds that it does not have primarily to do with the body. It is an activity of the soul in accordance with virtue — in fact, in accordance with complete virtue. You can’t be a happy man without being a good or virtuous man. And in this sense, virtue is the end or aim of political life.Aristotle goes on to distinguish between virtues of character and virtues of intellect, or what we usually call moral and intellectual virtues. He argues that the specific virtue or excellence of the statesman — the political man par excellence — is the intellectual virtue of practical wisdom, what he would call “phronesis.” Phronesis is the only intellectual virtue that is inseparable from moral virtue. According to Aristotle, a man cannot possess phronesis without possessing all the moral virtues actively and in their fullness. He is a man in full.I would tell students that to make progress in their study of politics — this practical art — they would have to make progress in virtue; they would have to make progress toward the human good; they would have to make progress toward happiness. This is what our semester would be about.Happiness and politics go together?If I were lucky, at least one hesitatingly confident realist among the students — they were still too young to be cynics — would be brave enough on this first day of class to raise a hand and say deferentially and politely something like: “What! Have you read a newspaper lately?” (They had newspapers back then.) “Every page is filled with violence, crime, corruption, and somebody grasping for power! To call someone a politician is an insult.”And so the semester would be off and running.I would admit that though Aristotle in his “Politics” defines man as a “political animal” because man is a “rational animal” — an animal possessing logos, or reason — he makes an empirical observation at the end of his “Ethics” that will be familiar to anyone who has read a newspaper: Rational creatures though they are, men sometimes do not listen to reason and are carried away by their passions.Aristotle would agree with Alexander Hamilton, or rather Hamilton agreed with Aristotle, when he wrote in Federalist 15: "Why has government been instituted at all? Because the passions of men will not conform to the dictates of reason and justice, without constraint.” And with James Madison’s even more famous saying, “If men were angels, no government would be necessary."In addition, working on our non-angelic human fallibility and culpability, bad education causes us to make mistakes about what is good. For these reasons, Aristotle argues that both education and coercion are central to the art of politics and, alas, that practicing the art of politics is not a leisurely activity. It is the burdensome art of inducing others to do what they ought to do for their own good and happiness, even when they don’t want to.These days, our children learn in school and online that it is good to shoplift or try to change themselves from a boy to a girl or from a girl to a boy. A shockingly large percentage of them have learned that it is good to kill those who disagree with you.From his first day in office in 2021, Joe Biden — our then-educator in chief — made it the central point of American politics that being trans was being good and questioning the goodness of being trans was evil. He thrust this bad education into the face of his country — marching trans heroes before the cameras to model the “goodness” that all Americans should admire and publicly praise if they wanted to avoid ostracism, public shaming and canceling, expulsion from school, losing their jobs, being put in jail, or being murdered in cold blood.Politics requires goodnessKnowing what is good is not easy. A man in ancient Athens with the greatest reputation for wisdom knew only that he did not know what was good. To have what was good, to be good, was so crucial to Socrates — the one thing needful — that it made no sense to do anything else with his life than to try to find out what it was.RELATED: We all knew political murder was coming home Photo by Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune/Getty ImagesBut we do not need to be philosophers to know that boys cannot become girls, that biological males should not be competing against biological females in sports or sharing their bathrooms, and that killing those who disagree with us is evil. Glenn Ellmers, Salvatori Research Fellow at the Claremont Institute and an old friend, published a short essay on the urgent need, in this increasingly deranged world, to hold on to our common sense.Machiavelli — the infamous teacher of “realist” politics — seeing unflinchingly what we all could read in the newspaper, taught that in a world where so many are so bad, it is merely common sense that it is necessary for those who would succeed in the art of politics to enter into evil. I would suggest an alternative lesson to students, one that I think is in the spirit of Aristotle: In a world where so many are so bad, it is merely common sense that it is necessary for the good to be great.Editor’s note: This article was originally published at the American Mind.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
8 w

Rebel filmmaker unmasks Hollywood’s creative stranglehold on America’s cultural voice
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Rebel filmmaker unmasks Hollywood’s creative stranglehold on America’s cultural voice

Alex Lee Moyer is a filmmaker, director, and editor, but unlike most cinematic creatives, she isn’t defined by Hollywood capture.Her edge? Telling the stories nobody wants to touch. “TFW No GF” (2020) dives headfirst into the isolation and alienation of young men in digital subcultures, like incels and Frogtwitter, while “Alex’s War” (2022) explores the rise and impact of controversial media figure Alex Jones.But neither of these films aims to sway the viewer in any specific direction.“I'm not trying to make propaganda films. I'm just trying to get to the heart of things ... that people, including myself, have anxiety about,” she told BlazeTV host Nicole Shanahan on a recent episode of “Back to the People.” Moyer isn’t interested in portraying someone like Alex Jones, for example, as the good guy or the bad guy. “More importantly, he’s a guy. He’s a real person. ... Demystifying some of those [controversial] topics can actually kind of bring people together in conversation,” she says.Ironically, Moyer’s pursuit of facts would have been considered “a liberal cause” just a few years ago. But after the COVID-19 pandemic, things changed. The hyper politicization of today’s culture has caused her work, which is intentionally apolitical, to be falsely labeled as “right wing.”“The Hollywood narrative is so narrow right now that if you're outside of it, you're somehow unworthy or irresponsible or unethical,” says Nicole.The reason we see so many films driven by left-wing political agendas is because high-up executives in the industry have an incredible amount of sway. “In order for something to get made, it has to go through so many different filters,” says Moyer, “and it's not just about whether somebody perceives offense themselves. It has a lot to do with whether they think their boss, or you know, somebody at the streaming platform is going to take offense.”“Hollywood is not going to be taking any risks — not when you have threats from AI, not when you have threats from appeasing people in other countries like China or ... not wanting to run afoul of the homogeny of liberalism in Hollywood. There's a lot of things that keep them locked in place,” she explains.While many are tempted to relegate Hollywood to an irredeemable ash heap, both Moyer and Nicole argue it plays a critical role in society.“We should care about what happens there because it's one of the great sources of soft power for the United States, and it helps forge our identity here and in the rest of the world,” says Moyer.Nicole agrees, stating, “A failure of Hollywood is a big deal, and a Hollywood that doesn't represent America and American culture and ideals is scary.”Instead of crossing her fingers hoping for a Hollywood revolution, Moyer is taking matters into her own hands. In late 2023, she founded her own production company called Onset Creative.The company’s aim, she says, is “to focus first and foremost on developing projects that [cannot] be made anywhere else that reflect the cultural moment, namely the present and the recent past.”To hear about Moyer’s next documentary “The Technologists” — an honest look into the rapidly advancing world of artificial intelligence and its cultural impacts — watch the full interview above.Want more from Nicole Shanahan?To enjoy more of Nicole's compelling blend of empathy, curiosity, and enlightenment, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
8 w

10 Used DSLR Cameras That Are Actually Worth Buying
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10 Used DSLR Cameras That Are Actually Worth Buying

The latest and greatest in DSLRs will always cost a pretty penny, but the used market holds a surprising number of deals for hobbyists and pros alike.
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
8 w

How To Tell If Someone Is Spying On Your Wi-Fi Network
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How To Tell If Someone Is Spying On Your Wi-Fi Network

There are ways to check and monitor network activity on your home Wi-Fi, which can help shield yourself bad actors looking to steal personal information.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
8 w

17-million-year-old fossil of large extinct songbird discovered in Australia
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phys.org

17-million-year-old fossil of large extinct songbird discovered in Australia

Fossil remains of a large, now-extinct bird species have been discovered in Australia's Boodjamulla National Park.
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History Traveler
History Traveler
8 w

Evidence of Imperial Immortality Quest Found On Rock Carving
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Evidence of Imperial Immortality Quest Found On Rock Carving

A remarkable 2,200-year-old rock carving discovered in China's remote Qinghai province has been officially authenticated as genuine, providing unprecedented evidence of Emperor Qin Shi Huang's legendary quest for immortality. The inscription, found at an altitude of 4,300 meters on the Tibetan Plateau near Gyaring Lake, represents the only known Qin Dynasty rock carving still preserved at its original location. After months of heated scholarly debate questioning its authenticity, China's National Cultural Heritage Administration has conclusively verified the carving's legitimacy through advanced scientific analysis. The 37-character inscription, written in ancient seal script, documents an expedition led by a high-ranking official named Yi to collect medicinal substances in the Kunlun Mountains during the 37th year of Qin Shi Huang's reign, corresponding to 210 BC. This extraordinary discovery provides concrete archaeological evidence supporting historical accounts of the first emperor's obsession with finding the elixir of life, a quest that ultimately contributed to his death. Read moreSection: ArtifactsAncient WritingsNewsHistory & ArchaeologyHistoryFamous PeopleRead Later 
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NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
8 w

Islamic State Issues Call to Kill Christians, Jews in Europe, U.S. Warns 
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Islamic State Issues Call to Kill Christians, Jews in Europe, U.S. Warns 

A new wave of terrorist threats is raising alarm across the West after Islamic State group (formerly ISIS) released a disturbing statement urging its followers to launch attacks against Christians, Jews, and their allies in the United States, Europe, and beyond. 
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NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
8 w

Giuliani to Newsmax: Fox 'Completely Banned Me' From 9/11 Coverage
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Giuliani to Newsmax: Fox 'Completely Banned Me' From 9/11 Coverage

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani told Newsmax that Fox News has "completely banned" him since the 2020 election fight, including cutting him out of its 9/11 anniversary coverage despite his historic role in the city's recovery.
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YubNub News
YubNub News
8 w

The De-escalation of Politicization Can’t Be One-Sided
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yubnub.news

The De-escalation of Politicization Can’t Be One-Sided

Nexstar and Sinclair Broadcasting are the two largest owners of ABC television stations in the United States. After Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr blasted ABC for Jimmy Kimmel…
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