West Virginia governor: Virginia counties unhappy with liberal government should just secede – Fox News

West Virginia's Republican governor urged counties inVirginiathat are unhappy with their state's Democratic majorityto secede and join his state.

Gov. Jim Justice proposed the long-shot bid during a news conference Tuesday withLiberty University President Jerry Falwell Jr.

If youre not happy where youre at, come on down, Justice said.If youre not truly happy where you are, we stand with open arms to take you from Virginia or anywhere you may be. We stand stronglybehind the Second Amendment, and we stand strongly for the unborn.

Democrats regained control of Virginia's General Assembly in November for the first time in more than two decades.

Jerry Falwell Jr., President of Liberty University, and Jim Justice, Governor of West Virginia, answer questions at a press conference at Blue Ridge Community and Technical College on Tuesday in Martinsburg, W.Va. (Ron Agnir/The Journal via AP)

Democratic lawmakersquickly pledged to enact gun control measures, loosenabortion restrictions and prohibit discrimination against the LGBTQ community.

The proposal sparked backlash from conservatives and prompted a gun-rights rally earlier this month that drew thousands from across the country, some dressed in tactical gear bearing weapons.

What's happening in Virginia right now is a tragedy in the making, said Falwell, who heads the evangelical university that was started by his father. Democrat leaders in Richmond, through their elitism and radicalism, have left a nearly unrecognizable state in their wake, and they are using their power to strip away the God-given rights held by every person in the state, despite their due protections under the U.S. Constitution.

Virginia's Democratic Gov. Ralph Northamsaid of the proposal: "Sounds like it's an election year in West Virginia."

What are they doing, a comedy routine? said Republican Sen. Emmett Hanger.

Senate Majority Leader Dick Saslaw, a Democrat, said Justice should focus on addressing his state's high poverty rate, calling the idea "preposterous."

The process to make secession happen is convoluted. Falwell said he was told by lawyers that Virginia counties would need to conductpetition drives, followed by a referendum. If successful, the proposal would go before the Virginia General Assembly.

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West Virginia lawmakers have introduced resolutions inviting parts of Virginia to join their state. One targeted Virginia's Frederick County but didn'tfind much support.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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West Virginia governor: Virginia counties unhappy with liberal government should just secede - Fox News

As it Stands: In praise of liberalism – UT Daily Beacon

The American political system is broken It has been for nearly three decades. Extremism seems to have usurped pragmatism. The spirit of bipartisanship and compromise are not merely waning but, in many respects, dead altogether.

Politicians constantly warn of threats posed by the opposition be they militant socialists or right-wing tyrants conspiring among the shadows. However, the more likely cause of death will not be at the hands of some radical despot. Americas political system will fail only when its populace perceives it to have stopped working and, in turn, votes to dissolve it.

Democracy dies at the ballot box.

Since the end of the Cold War, most democratic breakdowns have been caused, not by generals and soldiers, but by elected governments themselves, Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, co-authors of the prescient book How Democracies Die, wrote. Like Hugo Chvez in Venezuela, elected leaders have subverted democratic institutions in Georgia, Hungary, Nicaragua, Peru, the Philippines, Poland, Russia, Sri Lanka, Turkey and Ukraine.

In light of a devolving political life in America, one is not unreasonable to question the capacity of democracy to endure during hard times even despite the American varietys tenacity thus far. The depth of constraint and accountability imposed by constitutional order is ultimately dependent upon the willingness of its people to fight and uphold it.

For years, the guardrail sustaining American democracy was a collective, civic commitment to liberalism. As a nation, however, the United States is witnessing what seems to be the gradual death of liberalism and an attack on the ideals underpinning it.

The revolt represents a collective succumbing to those hardships inherent to human coexistence. In truth, liberalism to a degree unlike any principle or philosophy that previously governed society forces us to encounter those unlike ourselves while presupposing our capacity to overcome those differences. At its core, the liberal structure assumes that, more often than not and despite oftentimes vehement disagreement, citizens will come together bound by a human identity more alike than different in pursuit of higher ground.

But the liberal structure requires its practitioners to see more than demagoguery in their political opposition. It requires the type of coalition-building which molds seemingly contradictory truths into one mutually desired, higher truth no matter how divergent the paths were to arrive there. History suggests the reward for doing so has been, to say the least, worthwhile.

Yet, democratic governance is still failing to realize its own potential each day, whether warranted or not, taking on the manic whims of crisis and the American mediascape is partly to blame.

New technologies have radically expanded our ability to make and distribute a product, but the problem, the American novelist Salvatore Scibona writes, is that far too often the product is our judgement of one another.

Some argue these platforms social media and the 24-hour news cycle are the manifestation of a more direct democracy. But research suggests the impact of social media platforms are more complex.

A recent study by Pew Research Center found that 97% of tweets from U.S. adults that mentioned national politics came from just 10% of users. Additional analysis indicates that, on average, Twitter users are younger, more likely to identify as Democrats, more highly educated and have higher incomes than U.S. adults overall. This means, on Twitter, an increasingly prominent way for politicians to gauge public opinion, a disproportionate amount of influence resides with a relatively small subset of young, educated and wealthy users.

On Facebook, Pew finds that more online followers engaged when elected officials took sides, especially when opposing individuals on the other side. These findings flip the incentive structure for political campaigns, who increasingly capitalize on returns to dividing Americans as opposed to uniting them, which is why ever-expanding social technology presents a problem.

To sustain a liberal society, where order and freedom are held in delicate balance, democratic structures demand and therefore must be premised upon a certain objective truth. As the political philosopher John Stuart Mill recognized, a considerable weakness of democratic governance lies in that, inevitably, citizens will not have enough information to make informed decisions about political issues. Popular opinions, on subjects not palpable to sense, are often true but seldom or never the whole truth, he writes.

In its totality, the modern media ecosystem presents a far greater threat than Mill originally theorized, culminating in the rise of illiberal and revolutionary figures, nave to what springs from ideologies defined by zero-sum games, self-righteous indignation and leaders that lament becoming too big of a tent.

Akin to the revolutions of decades past, the revolutionary ethos, however morally valiant its cause, often lacks insight into the historical winds of change and foresight about how to recreate them. It is forsaken by the peril of its own ego, failing to accept that big ideas are usually the condensation of many breaths more than [they are] the wind that blows history forward, as the writer Adam Gopnik articulated in A Thousand Small Sanities.

Revolution, albeit at once a positive and necessary feature of history, narrows the mind so sharply toward a particular injustice, many of which are incurable within the span of a singular human life, that it renders the revolutionary unable to acknowledge the limit of their own power or to accept small steps when larger steps are out of reach.

Knowledge rests not upon truth alone, Carl Jung observed, but upon error also. Liberalism, and the diversity within it, necessitates a breadth of knowledge and error that inform one another so as to climb towards objective truth.

All this is not to mourn the death of liberalism but rather a contemplation on why it must persist and the potential peril if it does not. History doesnt repeat itself, Levitsky and Ziblatt wrote. But it rhymes. The promise of history is that we can find the rhymes before it is too late.

Hancen Sale is a senior majoring in economics. He can be reached athsale@vols.utk.edu, and you can follow him on Twitter @hancen4sale.

Columns and letters of The Daily Beacon are the views of the individual and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Beacon or the Beacon's editorial staff.

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As it Stands: In praise of liberalism - UT Daily Beacon

Is the liberal UMC ‘takeover’ cheating traditionalists? – OneNewsNow

Liberals in the United Methodist Church have masterminded a proposal to resolve the theological debate that has consumed their denomination for decades. But a lifelong member of the denomination argues that their "rigged" resolution is anything but equitable for traditionalists.

John Lomperis, a member of the UMC since he was a teenager, is director of Methodist Action for The Institute on Religion & Democracy. He finds it hard to believe how liberals within the denomination can get away with turning the church in an unbiblical direction with a minority of the vote. In his recently posted blog, he poses:

"Will they really keep demanding that votes be blatantly 'rigged' so that their side would 'win' any annual conference currently subject to the traditional biblical standards of the United Methodist Discipline if a mere 44 percent minority vote for such a liberal take-over, while shamelessly imposing a double standard of traditionalist believers needing to muster a 57 percent super-majority just to stick with the same doctrinal and moral standards we have already had?"

He is mesmerized at how a large chuck of the denomination can be led to disregard God's definition of human sexuality and morality.

"How can someone really keep a straight face, in loudly professing to follow Jesus Christ while stubbornly insisting upon disregarding one of His most core teachings?" Lomperis asks. "How can those bishops who have already broken so much trust be trusted to act with honesty, fairness and integrity in managing the transition and sorting processes? These and other very important question will need to be addressed in the days ahead."

It's expected that the historic break in the denomination will occur on the final day of the UMC's annual conference in May in Minneapolis.

"[T]he current denomination now known as the United Methodist Church will evolve into at least two new denominations," Lomperis explains. "One whose moral standards and underlying theology would allow a more permissive approach to same-sex union ceremonies and clergy being sexually active outside of monogamous, heterosexual marriage; and one that would continue the same basic doctrinal and moral standards of the current United Methodist Church."

The major rift, he predicts, will likely be one of unequal proportions.

"The reality is that in any of the likely scenarios for separation, pieces of our denomination as well as conferences, congregations, and people will be divided, with some continuing with one of the new denominations and some continuing with the other," Lomperis adds.

According to IRD's Methodist director, one denomination resulting from the split will probably retain most of the current denomination's hierarchy of general agencies while "abandoning" the greater part of the doctrinal and moral standards of the current denomination.

"The other denomination will be the other way around: abandoning most of the bureaucracy while keeping our doctrinal and moral standards," he writes.

Consequently, he says, the UMC of decades past will be no more.

"The end of our denomination as we know it is an occasion for sadness, and will take time for all of us to process and grieve," Lomperis laments. "The United Methodist Church as we now know it the whole packaged deal of the current structure, doctrine, moral standards, denominational culture, internal divisions, and people will be no more, and two (or perhaps more) new denomination[s] will be born in its place, each inheriting different parts of the old denomination from which they grew."

The left-leaning branch of the split is expected to fall even further down the road of progressive teachings usurping Scripture, according to Lomperis.

"Each denomination can be expected to move in dramatically different directions, suddenly unhindered by internal resistance from those United Methodists who would now be in the other denomination," Lomperis ventures.

And he agrees with others who say issues other than sexuality will differentiate the new denominations.

"I would expect that rather quickly, some of the most prominent differences between the new denominations would be over matters entirely separate from sexuality," he writes, "such as the size of the denominational bureaucracy, or which denomination supports bishops in publicly teaching that Jesus Christ needed to be converted out of His sinful 'bigotries and prejudices' (and which denomination does not)."

Earlier related articles:

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Is the liberal UMC 'takeover' cheating traditionalists? - OneNewsNow

Exclusive: Tories to challenge Liberal Democrats on overspend in St Albans – City A.M.

Local Conservative party associations are preparing to challenge the Liberal Democrats on the partys local spending during Decembers General Election, with the hope of overturning at least one result.

A case is being readied to challenge St Albans, where pro-Leave Conservative Ann Main lost to Daisy Cooper, according to sources close to the matter.

A number of Tories in parts of London and the South West have also said they are also toying with challenging the result, with meetings taking place both in Westminster and in local seats to discuss the issue.

However one MP said the plan was to focus our energies on a seat which could turn back to blue. Richmond Park, where the locally-popular MP Sarah Olney ousted Zac Goldsmith, who was sitting on a tiny majority, is not thought to be on the hit list.

Multiple Conservative MPs and their campaign agents have told City A.M. of unusually high levels of Lib Dem leaflets going out to constituents during last years campaign. There are instances where individuals have reported receiving nearly 30 pieces of literature.

I cant come up with a way that you can do that [within the rules], one party agent told City A.M. We probably put out about a fifth of the literature they did and we are close enough to limit that I would not want to go much beyond certainly not enough to to do four or five-times more.

Alec Campbell, who worked on Mains campaign, said: The challenge is always trying to understand whether every household in the constituency has got that level of literature or just isolated individuals.

Under Electoral Commission rules, updated in the wake of the Craig McKinlay expenses case in South Thanet, notional spending must be declared as an election expense in the candidates return even if the notional spending has not been authorised by the candidate, the candidates agent or someone authorised by either or both of them.

The rules stipulate that local or candidate spend is a maximum of either 6p or 9p per elector, equivalent to around 15,000 in St Albans. This includes advertising of any kind, unsolicited material sent to voters, transport costs, public meetings, staff costs, accommodation and administrative costs.

Party-level spend can include a local newspaper advert as long as it does not mention the local candidate or specifically targeted local issues.

A Liberal Democrat spokeswoman said: All local expenditure in the election was reported correctly and clearly identified in our election return which has been filed with the returning officer.

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Exclusive: Tories to challenge Liberal Democrats on overspend in St Albans - City A.M.

Alan Dershowitz’s impeachment argument is perfectly logical and that’s why liberals are twisting it – Washington Examiner

You can tell how effective Alan Dershowitz has been as a member of President Trumps impeachment team by how vehemently liberals are trying to discredit his performance thus far.

Dershowitz said during Senate trial proceedings on Wednesday that the evidence demonstrates that Trump had a mixed motive in asking Ukraine to investigate the Bidens, including the motive to gain a political advantage as well as advance national interests.

Well, yes, thats the mixed motive every single elected official has when they make every single decision of every single day, assuming theyre not completely corrupt.

And thats precisely the point Dershowitz so eloquently made on the Senate floor.

Every public official that I know believes that his election is in the public interest, and mostly, youre right, he said. Your election is in the public interest, and if a president does something which he believes will help him get elected in the public interest, that cannot be the kind of quid pro quo that results in impeachment.

Trumps critics are acting as though Dershowitz was arguing that anything a president does at all, so long as he believes its in the public interest and his own political preservation, is fair and fine, which would be absurd. But dont count on Trumps critics for the context of Dershowitzs argument.

He was referring to the ridiculous abuse of power charge that makes up one of the Democrats impeachment articles, the assertion that even if what Trump did was legal, that he stood to benefit politically makes his actions in and of themselves an impeachable abuse of power.

Dershowitz addressed that twisted logic in previous remarks on the Senate floor. The claim, he said Monday, that foreign policy decisions can be deemed abuses of power based on subjective opinions about mixed or sole motives that the president was interested only in helping himself demonstrate the dangers of employing the vague subjective and politically malleable phrase abuse of power as a constitutionally permissible criteria for the removal of a president.

In other words, to remove a president from office for taking lawful action that he believed advanced public interest and that happened to benefit him politically would set a stupid precedent for what justifies an impeachment.

Critics might find reason to dispute or reject that argument, but theyve opted to rebut something Dershowitz didnt say.

Trump could give pardons for free to the indicted Russian hackers who attacked the 2016 election and basically encourage them to do it again in 2020, according to Alan Dershowitz and Trumps team, tweeted David Corn of the liberal Mother Jones.

No, thats not what Dershowitz said.

Formerly sane Republican Jennifer Rubin at the Washington Post said the logical end to Dershowitzs position is that Trump can rig elections, have opponents jailed, anything to cling to power.

No, thats not what Dershowitz said.

New York magazines Jonathan Chait, an otherwise very smart liberal, summed up Dershowitzs argument by writing, If it helps the president win, then you cant impeach.

No, thats not what Dershowitz said.

Dershowitz has all along, in fact, said that a crime or criminal-like behavior would merit impeachment and probably removal from office.

President Richard Nixon, for example, tried to cover up a burglary. Thats criminal-like behavior.

President Bill Clinton, for example, lied to a grand jury. Thats a crime.

Trump? Well, the worst version of events is that he withheld foreign aid (ultimately released) to Ukraine in hopes that he could get its government to investigate the Bidens in a matter that journalists themselves have been probing for years (coming away with more questions than answers). Thats not a crime, nor could it reasonably be described as criminal-like behavior.

Dershowitz isnt even the first person to make this argument. Josh Blackman, a constitutional law professor at South Texas College of Law Houston, made the same case in an op-ed for the New York Times last week.

Politicians pursue public policy, as they see it, coupled with a concern about their own political future, wrote Blackman. Otherwise legal conduct, even when plainly politically motivated but without moving beyond a threshold of personal political gain does not amount to an impeachable abuse of power.

This isnt an argument to say that House Democrats cant do the impeachment that they did. Its an argument that House Democrats shouldnt have done the impeachment that they did and that to remove a sitting president based on an abuse of power charge, wherein nothing even remotely illegal took place, would be a tragedy.

Theres nothing controversial about that position. But thats why Trumps critics arent addressing it.

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Alan Dershowitz's impeachment argument is perfectly logical and that's why liberals are twisting it - Washington Examiner

Don Martin: Unleashing the auditor general on the invisible Liberal infrastructure plan – CTV News

FORT MYERS, FLA. -- Back in the gloom of the 2009 recession, they were everywhere.

Blue and green signs blanketed the countryside, proclaiming Conservative government emergency spending on everything from highways to hiking trails stretching from the eastern tip of Cape Spear to the pounding surf of Tofino, B.C.

They were backed by a television commercial blitz which had viewers rolling their eyes at what was clearly a Conservative arent-we-wonderful propaganda push.

But for all that questionable self-promotional spending, there was no mistaking a rollout of $40 billion in infrastructure spending was underway and that there were shovels behind most of the signs to prove the funds were buying jobs. Even the auditor general of the day was impressed.

There is no similar indication todays muddled Liberal version of the action plan is delivering a big economic bang for all those deep deficit dollars.

Thats partly why the opposition parties united Wednesday to ask the auditor general to examine the $188 billion pledged to keep Canadas already-healthy economy humming.

The only opponent to that push for greater transparency was, to nobodys surprise, the Liberal side of the Commons.

Now, one action plan isnt quite like the other.

There was a bonafide sense of an economic emergency ten years ago that mobilized motivation at all levels to get dollars in active circulation.

Todays hostile provincial premiers may be disinclined to go deeper into deficit to partner with a signature Liberal program or theyre merely taking the federal cash and cutting their contribution to projects already on the books.

And unlike 2010 or 2011, this programs fundamental flaw is trying to force-feed stimulus into an economy where the construction sector is almost fully employed. Its hard to get idle shovels breaking new ground if theyre already working.

Sure, light rail lines in Calgary and Vancouver got a welcome boost, but a big chunk of the money is still sloshing around in unallocated budgets across dozens of departments waiting for a funding partner to sign on or a federal bureaucrat to sign off.

The governments own website gives few details at what is going where and how much.

If indeed the Liberal plan is stimulating economic growth, and there were statistics showing it didnt do much in easing the 2009 recession, the government should be shouting it from the Peace Tower.

If there are holdups to project kickstarts beyond the governments control, it should be transparent about that as well.

But the fact signs of activity dont exist is proof an independent authority like the auditor general needs to give the real impact of this massive borrowing binge a closer and clearer look.

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Don Martin: Unleashing the auditor general on the invisible Liberal infrastructure plan - CTV News

Is this the end of the liberal international order? And what might take its place? – ABC News

Updated January 31, 2020 09:12:56

The liberal international order faces an existential threat, warns the UN Secretary-General, and the world is in grave danger of splitting in two.

"I fear a great fracture with the two largest economies on Earth creating two separate and competing worlds with their own dominant currency, trade and financial rules, their own internet and artificial intelligence capacities and their own zero-sum geopolitical and military strategies," Antonio Guterres recently told UN delegates.

"We must do everything possible to avert the great fracture and maintain a universal system."

This system is structured around ensuring a unitary world economy with "universal respect for international law and strong multilateral institutions".

But foreign policy analysts say an erosion of global governance is already underway and it is proving anything but a neat divide.

"Every day the liberal international order seems less liberal, less international and less orderly," says the Lowy Institute's executive director Michael Fullilove.

He cautions against adopting a simplistic narrative that pits an insurgent China against the US.

"I personally think it will be much messier and probably more dangerous than a simple bifurcation," he says.

Dr Fullilove doubts Beijing has aspirations to simply replace America as the global hegemon.

"I think China is probably in two minds. There are certainly elements of the international system they want to change, but on the other hand they are a veto-wielding permanent member of the Security Council, they have a lot of leverage in New York," he says.

So, the continuation of certain elements of the current international system suits the Chinese government's interest, Dr Fullilove says.

Their primary objective, he believes, is to dominate their region.

"They want an Asia that is focused on China. That is China's first and greatest ambition," he says.

"They don't want the United States to completely leave, necessarily, because having the US there is useful, but they don't want to play second fiddle."

And while US President Donald Trump regularly talks up America's military and economic clout, Dr Fullilove says it is clear Washington's interest in the current system of global cooperation has waned.

"Basically, the leader of the free world at present doesn't believe in the free world and doesn't want to lead it," he says.

"He looks at the liberal international order and he sees an enormous scam that has been visited on his predecessors whom he regards as suckers.

"So, whereas every American president since the Second World War has believed in the order, has basically defined American interests broadly, Mr Trump is an unbeliever in the international order and defines American interests very narrowly."

And America is not alone in adopting a less international mindset; with the rise of populist politics other Western powers are also becoming more inwardly focused.

Hans Maull from the German Institute for Security and International Affairs says it's too early to know what kinds of arrangements might eventually replace the existing liberal international order, the system that has largely kept the world in check since the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s.

He talks of a notable erosion of the effectiveness of global institutions, but he says the very diversity of our international governance bodies makes a complete collapse of the system unlikely.

And he says it's important to acknowledge that current superpower rivalry differs significantly from the Cold War era.

"There is a massive amount of interdependence economically, socially, technologically between China and the United States and across the whole world. This is a new thing," he says.

"And, of course, we do not have the kind of direct political confrontation over what domestic politics should look like.

"That was an important part of the Cold War, we don't have it in quite the same way between the United States and China."

A major difficulty in assessing the health of the liberal international order lies in defining exactly what it constitutes.

For example, while many in the West would naturally include the International Criminal Court, not every country accepts its legitimacy.

Then there's the issue of compliance.

Both China and the US have ignored international laws when it suited them China in the case of its construction of armed artificial islands in the South China Sea, and America with its decision to invade Iraq without UN approval.

In fact, while the United States has routinely condemned Beijing for breaching the United Nations' Convention on the Law of the Sea, Washington itself is yet to formally ratify the treaty, despite being one of its original architects.

"One of the things that's interesting about the liberal international order is how liberal it ever was, and whether or not there's a fairly hefty dose of hypocrisy that goes on with a liberal international order," says Sarah Percy, an international relations expert at the University of Queensland.

"There's an awful lot of imposition, there's an awful lot of 'here, have these liberal democratic values and work with them do what we say but not what we do'."

Dr Percy expects the great powers will continue to ignore or violate international law, but she says the international legal architecture will be imperilled if violations become routine and if middle-ranking, normally law-abiding nations like Australia, Canada and the Scandinavian democracies also begin to follow suit on a regular basis.

Still, she says, it is important to remember there have been many successful instances of international collaboration.

"When we have international disasters like the Fukushima nuclear reactor, or we have a major, major natural disaster, you see people cooperating," she says.

"And you see people increasingly agreeing on things like the prosecution of war crimes.

"It is imperfect, but do we have an overarching principle in the international system that you can't get away with war crimes? Yeah, I think we do."

Simon Chesterman at the University of Singapore agrees.

"States comply with the vast majority of international law, the vast majority of the time," he says.

"It's not because of a threat of coercion, it's because most of the time states realise that it is in their self-interest to have a world governed by law, to have a world that is predictable and stable."

But Oxford University's Ian Goldin believes it is time for radical change.

He says many international institutions like the UN, the IMF and the World Bank have become "overloaded" with "mushrooming mandates".

What's needed, he argues, is a back to basics approach and a root-and-branch rethink of the very idea of global governance.

Professor Goldin has set out five core principles that he says could and should guide all future global initiatives or collaborations.

The first principle involves overreach, he says, recognising that not every dispute should actually be subject to global governance. Global action should only be required on genuinely global problems.

"We should remove the instinct we have to kick things upstairs. And instead try and solve things with a smaller group of actors at different levels. It certainly doesn't have to be governments always," he says.

The second he terms "selective inclusion" pinpointing the necessary key players who need to be included to achieve results.

"One should include the people that really have to be in the room to solve that problem, and without whose presence one couldn't solve it," Professor Goldin says.

"For example, if one's dealing with antibiotic resistance, the pharmaceutical companies would be there, and the consumers of antibiotics."

And again, that might not always involve government officials.

The third principle is what Professor Goldin calls "variable geometry".

Efficiency is essential, he says.

"The small island nation of the Maldives, sinking from rising sea levels, should not be included in questions about regulating climate change but must be included on negotiations about mitigating its impacts," he says.

"If small groups of key countries with much at stake are involved, gridlock can be broken."

The fourth principle, says Professor Goldin, is legitimacy.

"We really do need to ensure that the people that are affected by these decisions feel they are part of them and that they are legitimate, otherwise they will rebel against them," he says.

"We've seen that time and again around the world. That's what populism and nationalism are based on, the illegitimacy of many decisions."

And the fifth and final principle, he says, is enforceability.

"The world is littered with thousands and thousands of treaties and agreements which simply make the people who sign them feel good, become photo-ops, but then there's no enforceability," he says.

In other words, there's no point making agreements that are never going to be followed through.

The paradox of international relations in the 21st century is that while many politicians, academics and analysts believe our governance institutions are straining to cope, there's general agreement that the overall demand for governance remains high.

So too, it seems, does public approval for our major multilateral institutions.

The Pew Research Centre recently surveyed citizens in 32 countries seeking their impressions of the United Nations.

A median of 61 per cent recorded a favourable impression. And there were similar results for other international governance institutions.

So, while dictators, nationalists and the current US President might like to talk down the worth of international institutions, it seems a majority of citizens don't share their negativity.

Topics:world-politics,international-law,government-and-politics,donald-trump,forms-of-government,foreign-affairs,australia,asia,united-states,china

First posted January 31, 2020 07:00:00

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Is this the end of the liberal international order? And what might take its place? - ABC News

New York’s Liberalism Is a Threat to New Bedford [OPINION] – wbsm.com

Six men accused of operating a $7 million fentanyl distribution ring from a Bronx apartment were released without bail under New York's new criminal justice law on Wednesday after Assistant District Attorney Michael Di Paolo said none of the defendants were eligible for bail.

The New York Post says the apartment was being used as a "heroin and fentanyl packaging mill." The New York Drug Enforcement Task Force says it found hundreds of thousands of envelopes filled with suspected fentanyl that was being prepared for distribution in New York City and New England. That's New Bedford and Fall River and Taunton. To you and your kids and your co-workers and their kids.

A judge in Manhattan District Court ordered the defendants to turn over their passports, as a number of them have connections to the Dominican Republic. The judge ordered them to appear for arraignment on February 27 before releasing them. How dare he?

The Post says lawyers for the defendants convinced the judge that the men are not flight risks because none of them have criminal records and family members with court dealings of their own turned up for their arraignments.

New York's liberal criminal justice reform, drafted and enacted by Democrats, is threatening all of society. Six men who were aiming to flood the streets of New York and New England with $7 million worth of fentanyl were allowed to walk free from a courtroom in Manhattan. That is disturbing.

New York's sanctuary policies recently allowed a 24-year-old illegal immigrant to evade deportation by ICE and once released he is charged with raping and murdering a 92-year woman, breaking her spine and ribs in the process before leaving her for dead on a sidewalk.

Nice going, New York.

There are those in state government who are proposing similar laws for Massachusetts while refusing to enforce existing laws that protect law-abiding residents. We must continue to resist them.

Barry Richard is the host of The Barry Richard Show on 1420 WBSM New Bedford. He can be heard weekdays from noon to 3 p.m. Contact him at barry@wbsm.com and follow him on Twitter @BarryJRichard58. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

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New York's Liberalism Is a Threat to New Bedford [OPINION] - wbsm.com

Liberal tax cut will cost $1.2-billion more annually than promised: PBO – The Globe and Mail

A new report from the Parliamentary Budget Officer says the federal government's tax cut will cost about $1.2-billion more per year than estimated during the election campaign.

The Canadian Press

The federal governments tax cut will cost about $1.2-billion more per year than estimated during the election campaign, according to a new report from the Parliamentary Budget Officer.

The Liberal Party platform said the tax cut would reduce federal revenue by $5.66-billion a year once fully implemented in 2023-24. However, in a new report released Tuesday, Parliamentary Budget Officer Yves Giroux said the estimated cost for that fiscal year is now $6.85-billion.

The government is planning to introduce legislation that would make the tax cut effective as of Jan. 1, 2020. The change would raise the basic personal amount a non-refundable tax credit that essentially sets the income threshold before owing tax from the current $12,298 for 2020 to $13,229, then gradually increase it to $15,000 for 2023.

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The latest PBO report appears to contradict the offices own costing, given that the Liberal Party platform relied on an independent estimate provided by the PBO. Last year, for the first time, political parties had the option of getting cost estimates from the PBO for specific campaign promises.

However, PBO officials say there are two main reasons Tuesdays estimate is higher. The first is that the Liberal Party asked the PBO to exclude the spousal and dependant benefits from the campaign estimate, but the government has included those in the proposed tax cut presented to Parliament. The second is that Tuesdays report is based on current data for economic growth and tax revenue.

Tuesdays report also provides new details about the distributional impact of the tax cut in 2023.

Couples with children will receive the largest benefit, $573, while a single-person family will receive $189.

Individuals with incomes between $103,018 and $159,694 will be $347 better off. Those with incomes between $51,510 and $103,017 will receive $337. People earning $159,695 to $227,504 are next in line, with a $257 tax cut. Those with incomes between $15,001 and $51,509 will receive $211, and individuals with incomes below $15,000 will save one dollar, on average.

The benefit of the tax cut starts to be phased out for individuals in the second-highest tax bracket and is fully phased out when individuals reach the highest tax bracket, which is estimated to start at $227,504 by 2023. As a result, the PBO said Canadians in the highest tax bracket will end up owing $11, on average.

The NDP has called on Finance Minister Bill Morneau to restrict the scope of the tax cut so that it no longer applies to individuals earning more than $90,000. The NDP said this would help pay for new social spending in areas such as dental care.

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Liberal tax cut will cost $1.2-billion more annually than promised: PBO - The Globe and Mail

Liberal elites shaming of Western culture ignores the true international offenders – Washington Times

ANALYSIS/OPINION:

An ancient habit of Western elites is a certain selectivity in condemnation.

Sometimes Westerners apply critical standards to the West that they would never apply to other nations.

My colleague at the Hoover Institution, historian Niall Ferguson, has pointed out that Swedish green-teen celebrity Greta Thunberg might be more effective in her advocacy for reducing carbon emissions by redirecting her animus. Instead of hectoring Europeans and Americans, who have recently achieved the planets most dramatic drops in the use of fossil fuels, Greta might instead turn her attention to China and India to offer her how dare you complaints to get their leaders to curb carbon emissions.

Whether the world continues to spew dangerous levels of carbons will depend largely on policies in China and India. After all, these two countries account for over a third of the global population and continue to grow their coal-based industries.

In the late 1950s, many elites in United States bought the Soviet Union line that the march of global communism would bury the West. Then, as Soviet power eroded in the 1980s, Japan Inc. and its ascendant model of state-sponsored industry became the preferred alternative to Western-style democratic capitalism.

Once Japans economy ossified, the new utopia of the 1990s was supposedly the emerging European Union. Americans were supposed to be awed that the euro gained ground on the dollar. Europes borderless democratic socialism and its soft power were declared preferable to the reactionary United States.

By 2015, the EU was a mess, so China was preordained as the inevitable global superpower. American intellectuals pointed to its high-speed rail transportation, solar industries and gleaming airports, in contrast to the hollowed-out and grubby American heartland.

Now the curtain has been pulled back on the interior rot of the Chinese Communist Party, its gulag-like re-education camps, its systematic mercantile cheating, its Orwellian surveillance apparatus, its serial public health crises and its primitive hinterland infrastructure.

After the calcification of the Soviet Union, Japan Inc., the EU and the Chinese superpower, no one quite knows which alternative will next supposedly bury America.

The United States and Europe are often quite critical of violence against women, minorities and gays. The European Union, for example, has often singled out Israel for its supposed mistreatment of Palestinians on the West Bank.

Yet if the purpose of Western human rights activism is to curb global bias and hate, then it would be far more cost-effective to concentrate on the greatest offenders.

China is currently detaining about a million Muslim Uighurs in re-education camps. Yet activist groups arent calling for divestment, boycotts and sanctions against Beijing in the same way they target Israel.

Homosexuality is a capital crime in Iran. Scores of Iranian gays reportedly have been incarcerated and thousands executed under theocratic law since the fall of the shah in 1979. Yet rarely do Western activist groups call for global ostracism of Iran.

Dont look to the U.N. Human Rights Council for any meaningful condemnation of worldwide prejudice and hatred, although it is a frequent critic of both the United States and Israel.

Many of the 47 member nations of the Human Rights Council are habitual violators of human rights. In 2017, nine member nations persecuted citizens who were actively working to implement U.N. standards of human rights.

There are many reasons for Westerners selective outrage and pessimism toward their own culture. Cowardice explains some of the asymmetry. Blasting tiny democratic Israel will not result in any retaliation. Taking on a powerful China or a murderous Iran could earn retribution.

Guilt also explains some of the selectivity. European nations are still blamed for 19th-century colonialism and imperialism. They will always seek absolution, as the citizens of former colonial and Third World nations act like perpetual victims even well into the postmodern 21st century.

Virtual-signaling is increasingly common. Western elites often harangue about misdemeanors when they cannot address felonies a strange sort of psychological penance that excuses their impotence.

It is much easier for the city of Berkeley, California, to ban clean-burning, U.S.-produced natural gas in newly constructed buildings than it is to outlaw far dirtier crude oil from Saudi Arabia. Currently, the sexist, homophobic, autocratic Saudis are the largest source of imported oil in California, sending the state some 100 million barrels per year, without which thousands of Berkeley motorists could not get to work. Apparently, outlawing clean, domestic natural gas allows one to justify importing unclean Saudi oil.

Western elites are perpetually aggrieved. But the next time they direct their lectures at a particular target, consider the source and motivation of their outrage.

Victor Davis Hanson, a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, is the author of The Second World Wars: How the First Global Conflict Was Fought and Won (Basic Books, 2017).

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Liberal elites shaming of Western culture ignores the true international offenders - Washington Times

The strange new liberal attraction to the feds – The Spectator USA

In a political era defined by abnormalities, few developments are as bizarre as the newfound liberal admiration for federal law enforcement.

Given its rich history of activism and countercultural tendencies, the left has traditionally regarded federal law enforcement with hostility. Looking back, this attitude has been largely earned.

Throughout the 20th century, radical leftists were relentlessly targeted under the guise of protecting America from seditious ideologies. For instance, from 1919 to 1920 thousands of suspected communists were arrested in sweeping raids that spanned 23 states. Subsequent attempts to combat subversives would prove no less appalling: in 1964, the FBI hatched at blackmail plot aimed at coercing Dr Martin Luther King, Jr. to commit suicide.

Given this sordid past, its unsurprising that many Democrats viewed the FBIstreatmentof Hillary Clinton in 2016 as more of the same. In the New York Times, Andrew Rosenthalaccused erstwhile FBI director James Comey of interferingon behalf of the Republican party. The Guardian went further, offering a portrait of the FBI that suggested it was Trumpland.

But the world spins in a different direction only a few years later: allegations of a partisan conspiracy come from the right, while federal investigators arehros de la rsistance. Indeed, firing the man onceblamedfor Clintons electoral demise has become an impeachable offense, and his testimony fit foryoga watch parties.

Of course, tribal loyalties easily explain these transformations investigating enemies is righteous, while investigating allies is nefarious. Once federal agents began probing Trumpworld, many of his supporters discovered the virtues of due process overnight, while Democrats began sounding like rural sheriffs, spewing platitudes about innocent people having nothing to hide.

So whose side are the feds really on? This is likely the wrong question. As Jack Goldsmith and Bob Bauer note, the problems at the FBI revealed by multiple inspector-general investigations do not cut politically in one direction. Individual political biases exist, but the overarching bias is institutional. Federal investigators fashion themselves as guardians of order and seek to defeat those they think threaten it, whether environmental activists, right-wing populists, or drug dealers. While the vast majority are patriots committed to the public good, their righteousness can manifest itself in dangerous ways, fostering an ends justify the means mentality.

One such case study is presented by DoJ Inspector General Michael Horowitzs report examining the FBIs use of FISA while investigating the Trump campaign. The IG report exposes a pattern of misconduct that, in every significant instance, disadvantaged the suspect. This is all the more disturbing given that FISA applications are approved 99 percent of the time. While FISAs defenders have long claimed that this statistic is misleading, Horowitzs report compels us to ask whether the hurdles we expect the government to clear before jettisoning our liberties are, in reality, mere rubber stamps. If rules are bent in such a high-profile case, how often do run-of-the-mill suspects fall prey to such oversights?

While we romanticize ideals like innocent until proven guilty, the truth is that the scales are tipped heavily in the governments favor. In fact, they almost never lose: the DoJs conviction rate regularly exceeds 95 percent. This unsettling statistic is largely explained by a draconian federal code and the aggressiveness of prosecutors. For example, if someone accused of bribing her daughters way into USC dares mount a defense, prosecutors will likely hit Aunt Becky with charges better reserved for someone washing money for the Sinaloa cartel.

The goal? Capitulation. While we like to imagine the adjudication of truth or fair justice to be the principal motivation driving our system, the desire to swiftly dispose of cases and protect prosecutors near-perfect records more often prevails.The latest US Sentencing Commissionsreport reveals that a staggering 97.4 percent of offenders pleaded guilty, rather than being convicted in trial. The prospect of years in a hellacious federal prison reliably inspires people to leap for any deal on offer.

Some readers will surely be unmoved, confident that they are law-abiding citizens. But have they ever gotten lost in the woods? Faked a sick day? As Mike Chase hilariously demonstrates inHow to Become a Federal Criminal, federal law criminalizes a virtually infinite range of behavior, from moving a park bench to making an unreasonable gesture to a passing horse. Indeed, no oneactually knows the total number of federal crimes (allattemptsat a tally have ended in failure.) Sure, prosecutorial discretiontypically prevents the most obscure of these offenses from being charged. But the potential for abuse remains: just ask the Michigan Fish Dealer doing time for trout trafficking.

Federal investigators can devise a plausible justification to target almost anyone. And if their initial suspicions prove unfounded, they are adept, as former prosecutor Ken White notes, at turning investigations of crimesinto schemes toproduce new crimes. It is routine, he emphasizes, to convict people not for the subject of the investigation but for how they react to it.

There is no shortage of hypocrisy on either side. But our views of law enforcement cannot be governed by tribalism: overlooking injustices perpetrated against our adversaries only reinforces behavior that harms all Americans.

Our system grants federal law enforcement extraordinary power to ruin lives. The time has come for Americans of all stripes to ask how freely they should be allowed to wield it.

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The strange new liberal attraction to the feds - The Spectator USA

This is a slippery slope: Petition against Liberal assault rifle ban receives thousands of signatures – Edmonton Journal

Semi-automatic AR-15's are for sale at Good Guys Guns & Range on February 15, 2018 in Orem, Utah.George Frey/Getty Images

An Alberta-led federal petition opposing a ban on military-style assault rifles without first having a debate has received more than a hundred-thousand signatures in just a short period of time.

As of Saturday, the 60-day petition, known online as e-2341, has received more than 107,000 signatures since launching on Dec. 17. The petitions main problem is how the Liberal government plans to impose a ban on military-style assault rifles through an Order in Council instead of having it debated in the House of Commons.

Medicine Hats Brad Manysiak, who started the petition, said how the government is approaching this doesnt sit well with him.

Thats an egregious overreach of parliamentary power, he said. When we change laws in Canada, historically, its debated, it goes to the Senate, it has a specific path it has to take in order for something to become law. Usually, there has to a lot of public support for it. This is a slippery slope.

A spokesperson from the Minister of Public Safety in an email said a ban is coming.

Military-style assault rifles have been used in Canada to target women and students, the spokesperson said. Police chiefs in our country have been advocating for restrictions on assault weapons for more than four decades. Weve listened, and, as promised to Canadians in the recent election, we will ban military-style assault rifles.

The spokesperson said the ban would not affect rifles and shotguns designed for hunting and pest control.

Ottawa is also looking at introducing a buyback program but the cost to do so is estimated to be in the hundreds of the millions. Public Safety Minister Bill Blair told reporters months ago that there are about 250,000 semi-automatic assault rifles legally owned in Canada.

Manysiak called this a kneejerk reaction by the government, especially in light of an increased amount of handguns used in Toronto-area shootings. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised he would allow municipalities and provinces to implement handgun bans if they so choose.

Its not being directed in the proper way, Manysiak said. Its not directed at the problem.

He said owning a gun in Canada is a long and arduous process and even when someone passes, a gun owners name is constantly being run through the RCMPs database to ensure no crimes have been committed.

Medicine Hat MP Glen Motz is expected to present the petition in the House after its closed on Feb. 15. Manysiak didnt believe it would be enough to change the governments mind but will send a message to the Liberals given the amount of support and media attention the petition has received.

With files from The Canadian Press

jlabine@postmedia.com

Twitter.com/jefflabine

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This is a slippery slope: Petition against Liberal assault rifle ban receives thousands of signatures - Edmonton Journal

With Boris Johnson in control, the danger is that liberals will give up the fight – The Guardian

Historians will debate the reasons for the complacency that descended on the British in the first months of the 2020s. Had their government duped the nation into ignorant passivity? Were they really as stupid as they appeared to be? Nothing had been settled. The pain was yet to come. Yet they behaved as if they believed Boris Johnson when he said he could get Brexit done. And, as Im certain the historians of the future will say, believing Boris Johnson never ended well.

A few causes of our torpor appear obvious. The Conservatives won a handsome majority. Brexit bored the public rigid. The opposition was hopeless. Journalists werent doing their job. The prime minister was thus free to announce: Now we can put the rancour and division of the past three years behind us and focus on delivering a bright, exciting future, and not be met with derisive laughter.

Yet the delusions that follow are anything but obvious. As the clock chimes 11 on Friday night, we can, apparently, build high-speed rail lines, reinvigorate the north, bail out a regional airline and let a thousand bus services bloom. We can tear up our economic model without having the smallest idea what to put in its place.

The listless acceptance extends to those who believe that leaving the European Union is an act of monumental folly. Brexits inevitability, the possibility that we are in for another decade of rightwing rule, is leading opponents of the status quo to retreat into private life, as the defeated so often do. Perhaps they are almost grateful for the chance to concentrate on their friendships, family and love affairs: these are in the end what matter most to everyone except obsessives.

Arent you sick of an argument about a subject no one except a handful of zealots cared about before 2016?

On this reading, the country has not been wholly deceived by Johnson and his propagandists. The British are just exhausted. In a piece for the Parisian news magazine, LExpress, the French journalist and historian Agns Poirier interviewed psychiatrists dealing with voters who had looked on appalled as Britain made a disastrous choice. They were devastated, angry, depressed, betrayed and ashamed, as a psychological study of Remain supporters put it. Brexit allowed the old to enforce their worldview on the young and broke ties between the generations. My patients talk about the impossibility of mentioning the subject in family, to avoid clashes. In extreme cases, they have cut ties, Dr Ian Martin, a London psychiatrist, said a story I have heard several times myself.

Its not the fear that kills you but the hope, runs the cliche. And now all hope of a second referendum or a change of government has gone, a kind of liberation follows. You can just sigh, move on and patch up differences. What else is there to do?

Perhaps many will be relieved. Poirier repeats the echoingly grim phrase the French socialist Lon Blum used to describe the decision by France and Britain to allow Hitler to dismember Czechoslovakia at the Munich conference of 1938: a lche soulagement a cowardly relief. Selling out Czechoslovakia was shameful, but Blum, who had campaigned for peace, could tell himself that at least it avoided war in Europe. Do you feel a lche soulagement of your own? Arent you sick of an argument about a subject no one except a handful of zealots cared about before 2016?

The millions who think they can now avoid the bitterness of 2016-19 will find that it has just been postponed

Wouldnt it be more truly British to come together, let bygones be bygones, and make the best of it? I dont see how you can if you are one of the three million EU nationals in Britain or 1.5 million Britons in the EU who have seen their sense of who they are and where they belong torn to shreds. But if you face no immediate stresses, the temptation to walk away is seductive.

The Munich agreement did not avoid war, it merely postponed it for a year. Likewise, the millions who think they can now avoid the bitterness of 2016-19 will find that it, too, has just been postponed. You may not be interested in Brexit but Brexit is interested in you.

The hard break the government is proposing as the only way to leave the EU without following EU law will be a direct attack on the pharmaceutical, chemical, aerospace, food processing, farming, fishing and car industries. Businesses that rely on the frictionless movement of goods will suffer. The absence of regulatory checks and arguments about the source of components and applicable tax rates is essential for their health, just as the absence of border checks on perishable food is essential for fresh food and fish exports. Hundreds of thousands of jobs and everyones living standards are at stake. The Food and Drink Federation said last week that the Johnson administrations policies sounded like the death knell for frictionless trade with the EU and were likely to cause food prices to rise.

You can tell we are in a state that borders on the catatonic when Sajid Javid responded by telling the Financial Times that some businesses would indeed suffer. It was a welcome outbreak of honesty from a dishonest administration. But what an admission from a chancellor of the exchequer charged with protecting the economy.

As telling was the indifference with which his dereliction of duty was greeted. The liberal elite, the chattering classes, the remoaners, call them what you will, once worried about the fate of car workers. Every serious study of the consequences of Brexit has shown that it will hit the old manufacturing regions of the north-east, Wales and Midlands hardest. London will be all right, as London always is. Yet at the moment they need support, they will be met with indifference. They will hear educated voices say that they voted for Brexit in 2016 and then voted for Johnson in 2019. They were warned and chose not to listen.

I fear that the most damaging effect of the languid complacency that has infected the national mood is the collapse of any notion of solidarity. The most characteristic gesture of Brexit Britain will be a shrug of the shoulders.

Nick Cohen is an Observer columnist

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With Boris Johnson in control, the danger is that liberals will give up the fight - The Guardian

Idaho’s Liberal Media Embarrass Themselves Attacking Climate Realism – The Heartland Institute

Idahos liberal media showed this past week just how ill-informed and out-of-touch with everyday Idahoans they are by viciously attacking climate science and the people who deliver such science to their state. Their unfortunate attacks came in response to a 20-minute PowerPoint presentation I delivered January 23rd at the invitation of the Idaho House Resources and Conservation Committee.

I took great pains during my presentation to be as factual, cordial, and professional as possible. Every one of the 22 slides was populated with the best available information objective charts and data produced by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the United States Department of Agriculture, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and other objective, authoritative sources. I welcomed questioning from the House committee after my presentation and disparaged nobody during or after my presentation. Nevertheless, the Idaho media responded with nasty, false, and often personal attacks in an attempt to divert attention away from the science that was presented.

The central message of my presentation was that temperatures are rising in Idaho at a slower pace than is the case nationally or globally, that precipitation in the state is increasing especially in the dry summer months and that the modest warming and increasing precipitation are bringing net benefits like longer and more-productive growing seasons and increasing plant density in the state. I documented these points with objective data from NOAA, NASA, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The response from the liberal Idaho media has been personal and rabid.

Rocky Barker of the Idaho Statesman published an article calling me an Illinois-based lobbyist. I neither live in Illinois nor am I a lobbyist. He could easily have learned the truth about both points simply by asking me.

Barker continued by saying The Heartland Institute is heavily funded by the fossil fuel industry. In fact, Heartland receives the vast majority of its funding from private individuals and charitable foundations with no connection to the fossil fuel industry. In fact, our funding from the fossil fuel industry is miniscule. Thats important to note because leftist environmental groups like the Sierra Club with annual budgets much larger than Heartlands have received much more money from the fossil fuel industry than we have. I would have been happy to share that information with Barker if he had asked.

An Idaho Falls Post Register house editorial, titled, Heartland Institute presentation was an embarrassment, was even more vicious and erroneous.

The Post Register claimed I presented lies from the very start in a Policy Brief I wrote on the topic. I stated in that paper that Idaho Gov. Brad Little in January 2019 said climate change is real and a big deal, and that he did it following a hearing on climate change on March 6, 2019. They got me! I made a mistake by correctly identifying Gov. Littles statement as occurring in January, but later saying it occurred after the March hearing. That is a regrettable oversight, but hardly a lie. [NOTE: We have corrected that passage in the Policy Brief.]

Heres another attack designed to take attention away from the science: The Post Register, as well as Rocky Barker in the Idaho Statesman, made a point to derisively assert I repeatedly referred to Idaho as Iowa during my presentation and lectured that I should know the difference. Guilty as charged. I certainly know the difference, but such childish attacks have nothing to do with the science I presented. Moreover, I mentioned the state of Idaho by name 40 times during my presentation, and apparently said Iowa four times. As somebody who grew up in Iowa and frequently talks about and with people from Iowa, I think it is understandable for me to occasionally make that easy slip of the tongue. I certainly have experienced people from Idaho inadvertently refer to my home state of Iowa as Idaho, but I dont take offense or respond childishly to it.

The Post Register further lied about me, and in a childish manner, when it stated, The whitebark pines in the high mountains here, which Taylor has never seen. I have been to Idaho several times and have certainly seen the whitebark pines in the state. I could have confirmed this to the Post Register if they had exercised minimal journalistic standards and asked before publishing their childishly asserted falsehood.

Moving on to the actual science, Barkers Statesman article asserts in the caption of the accompanying video that A new study out of the University of Idaho and Columbia University shows human-caused climate change doubled size of wildfires in the West. The new study was published four years ago in 2016 and its findings have been thoroughly debunked since then. Perhaps by falsely referring to the old study as new, the Statesman believes it can induce people not to check into the newer, more accurate information that debunks the alarmist assertion.

The Statesman article responded to the data I presented showing increasing Idaho precipitation and a lessening of Idaho drought by asserting, But in fact the fire season has grown by 47 days annually over the past 25 years, according to Boise State University geology professor Jen Pierce. Of course, a lengthening of fire season (i.e., the number of days in which fires may potentially occur) is of minimal significance when drought conditions throughout the potential fire season are less frequent and severe due to increasing precipitation.

The Statesman also quoted geologist Pierce stating, Even the increased crop yields could drop if the lower snowpack forecast reduces the water supply. Yet my presentation delivered objective data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture showing Idaho crop yields are consistently increasing and setting frequent new records, even with a modest decline in recent snowpack, as more abundant annual precipitation and longer growing seasons enhance crop output.

A follow-up editorial from the Statesmans editorial board devoted most of its space to saying this years Australian wildfires debunk my presentation and show what Idaho could soon experience. Had the Statesmans editorial board examined the data before leaping to alarmist assumptions, they would have learned that there has been a long-term increase in Australian precipitation, droughts were much more severe 100 years ago, and the past two decades have been wetter than normal in Australia. Our modest recent warming is responsible for many benefits, but it cant make all droughts and wildfires disappear.

I would mention science errors presented by the Post Register editorial board, but the Post Register editorial board barely mentioned any science. They hoped to avoid the topic by making their house editorial almost entirely personal. To the limited extend the Post Register addressed the science I presented, they couldnt even get that right.

The Post Register stated, Taylors two key messages were: Climate change isnt happening in Idaho, and climate change is good for Idaho. While the two messages contradict each other. I never said climate change isnt happening in Idaho. In fact, most of my talk centered on how the pace of Idaho warming is modest, has occurred primarily during the coldest winter cold spells, and has brought beneficial increases in annual and dry-season precipitation. How could any competent reporter or editorial board describe that as climate change isnt happening?

Ultimately, the Idaho Statesman and the Idaho Falls Post Register made themselves look bad by resorting to ill-informed and childish attacks against somebody invited to present information to an Idaho House of Representatives committee. The scientific information I presented was objective, authoritative, and delivered in a cordial and professional manner. Given a choice between objective science and childish personal attacks, I suspect Idahoans will choose objective science. Watch and listen to the PowerPoint presentation yourself and make up your own mind.

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Idaho's Liberal Media Embarrass Themselves Attacking Climate Realism - The Heartland Institute

Did Eleanor Roosevelt Say This About the Word ‘Liberal’? – Snopes.com

In early January 2020, Snopes readers inquired about the provenance and authenticity of a quotation attributed to former first lady Eleanor Roosevelt that contained her reflections on the word liberal and the importance of the concept of freedom in American society.

On Dec. 31, 2019, for instance, a Facebook account posted a widely shared meme containing a portrait of Roosevelt and the following quote:

Long ago, there was a noble word, liberal, which derives from the word free. Now a strange thing happened to that word. A man named Hitler made it a term of abuse, a matter of suspicion, because those who were not with him were against him, and liberals had no use for Hitler. And then another man named McCarthy cast the same opprobrium on the word We must cherish and honor the word free or it will cease to apply to us. Eleanor Roosevelt.

The same meme was promulgated even further two days later, when the left-leaning Occupy Democrats Facebook page posted it, along with the message Who else is a PROUD liberal?

The quote is authentic and did indeed originate in something Roosevelt wrote: her 1963 book Tomorrow is Now, which was published shortly after her death in November 1962. The relevant section, towards the end of the book, reads in full as follows:

Long ago, there was a noble word, liberal, which derives from the word free. Now a strange thing happened to that word. A man named Hitler made it a term of abuse, a matter of suspicion, because those who were not with him were against him, and liberals had no use for Hitler. And then another man named McCarthy cast the same opprobrium on the word. Indeed, there was a time a short but dismaying time when many Americans began to distrust the word which derived from free. One thing we must all do. We must cherish and honor the word free or it will cease to apply to us. And that would be an inconceivable situation. This I know. This I believe with all my heart. If we want a free and a peaceful world, if we want to make the deserts bloom and man grow to greater dignity as a human being WE CAN DO IT!

The meme shared widely in early 2020 left out certain words taken from this section, but it properly acknowledged that omission with the use of an ellipsis, and the omission did not misrepresent or change the meaning of what Roosevelt wrote. As such, the meme was accurate and authentic and properly attributed the quotation to its true author.

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Did Eleanor Roosevelt Say This About the Word 'Liberal'? - Snopes.com

The End of Pseudo-Liberalism | John Waters – First Things

The self-styled intellectual class is growing excitable. Under the onslaught of Trump, Brexit, Europe-wide populism, and Jordan Peterson, can we be certain, they ask, that the open society will continue? The only way on from liberalism, they believe, is backward into the darkness whence we allegedly emerged. Even those who are not enthusiastic about liberalisms tender mercies are required to moderate their hopes for its demise, lest the new nurse turn out to be worse than the serving one. A lot of people, including people who call themselves conservatives, appear to be concerned about the future of liberalism, and this concern is causing the age to be misread.

For the discussion is bogus to begin with. What is called liberalism here is not liberalism at all, but its direct opposite. It is liberalism only in name, and therefore offers no guarantee of an open society at all. By corrupting the meanings of terms like equality, tolerance, and human rights, the liberal ascendancy of the past three decades has overburdened the skeleton of our civilization, leaving it weakened and susceptible to collapse.

We should stop using words like liberalism as though they were not already subsumed in irony, as though the sense of virtue and good intention that they are supposed to connote remained valid. I believe it has become necessary to prefix certain words in our political lexicon to alert bystanders to their hidden corruption. For three decades I have referred to pseudo-liberalism. What we call liberalism is no longer to be thought upright. If it dies, it will be a cause of celebration, not dismay.

This pseudo-liberalism is founded on a lie: the idea that freedom resides in getting whatever you demand and doing whatever you desire. In the words of the diabolical occultist Aleister Crowley: Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law. A moments thought reveals such ideas as civilization-threatening. By definition, what one person demands must be taken from someplace where it already benefits others, and doing exactly what you want will invariably be a cost to someone else or, ultimatelybecause of the complexity of the human instrumentto yourself. There are libraries of philosophy and theology on these topics, but as far as contemporary conversations are concerned, it is as though not a word of this is relevant.

The Sixties generation, which introduced these incoherencies into the bloodstream of modern societies, has not been honest about its own experience of these much-vaunted freedoms, which have left a trail of devastation behind them. One symptom of this is that there is virtually no lucid witness to the errors of pseudo-liberalism, not just in the intimate areas of human relations, but in relation to economics and the movements of people in the modern world. For half a century, these converging strands of insipid thinking have dominated Western societies, steamrolling everything and everyone with the help of corporate money and devious propaganda, their incoherencies protected from scrutiny by the influence and dollars of Big This and Big That, by corrupted media and the force field of political correctness. Self-styled liberals have hijacked the idealism of the young, enlisting them for a project that has the outward appearance of virtue but is rotten to the core. They have convinced even our own children that globalism is an unequivocal good and that human safety and well-being can be maintained without the assistance of the civilization that made all these qualities possible in the first place.

Thus, pseudo-liberalism seeks to turn upside-down the value system of the civilization that once was Christendom, attacking its core institutions and mocking and censoring its history. It justifies genocide in the form of abortion and is clearly intentsometimes unwittinglyupon engineering the cultural and moral demolition of the West itself, by dint of godless relativism, induced migration, the elimination of distinct nations, and the destruction of the nuclear family.

And although this is quite clearly the most intolerant ideology to have emerged in the West since World War II, signs of the demise of this liberalism are met with handwringing from people who ought to know better. All right-thinking people must agree that populism is a bad thing. We must, while admitting its minor blemishes, still accept that what is called liberalism offers the one best way forward for Western societies.

Liberal-progressivismto give it its most informative nameis actually an advanced form of colonialism, imposing itself not just on territories but also claiming dominion over all future time, brooking no dissent and remorselessly punishing recalcitrant doubters. In this sense it is deeply totalitarian, insisting on one best way that cannot be questioned.

In his 1987 essayStories and Totalitarianism, Vclav Havel defined the mechanism of totalitarianism as the assassination of history to achieve both nihilisation of the past and mastery over the future. The instrument of this process he identified as the removal from history of the possibilities of human choice, mystery, and autonomy: History becomes a fixed sequence of unfolding inevitabilities, and the role of human beings is merely to acquiesce and embrace what is pressed upon them.

To put this another way, under the new colonialism the future is a city already constructed, waiting to be moved into. There is no space for human discussion or disagreement. It is already decidedand not, we are archly informed, by some arbitrary human authority but by the mechanistic mind of time, which ordains the course of history according to immutable and unchallengeable laws.

We are now, it is certain, seeing the early stages of the disintegration of this pseudo-liberalism. This liberalism has promised untrammeled economic growth, itself an example of its incoherence: Increasing growth never delivers increasing happiness. Moreover, in ignoring the inevitability of boom-bust, this promise provides an example of pseudo-liberal dishonesty.There is no final glorious destination.

This pseudo-liberalism also promises free speech, while curtailing it in the name of civilityemploying sophisticated abuses of language to impose censorship so as to protect its own incoherence, and arrogating to itself the right to stifle anything that offers a significant threat to itself.It also promises increasingly purer forms of democracy but in reality is pushing us ever closer to mob rule.

Pseudo-liberalism lays claim to the universalization of human rights, but it requires just a moments reflection to realize that what is meant by this is not universal in the least, but a highly ideological recalibration of the balance of power between establishments and minorities, which provide human shields for the prosecution of an undeclared war on what is.

Moreover, it is precisely the pseudo-liberal insistence on a selective understanding of human rights that lies at the heart of the current threat to Europes future. For if universal rights are to trump rights of culture, history, place, locality, home and hearth, the outcome will be the destruction of all culture, loyalty, and trust, creating an intercontinental incontinence that will sweep all order and coherence before it.

What is called liberalism attacks what is most precious in our tradition of community solidarity, opposing those values we have held dearestlove of God, nation, and familyin favor of an empty and faithless materialism and the pseudo-laws of the new ideologies. The flaws of this pseudo-liberalism amount to an indictment that far outweighs even the sum of the promised benefits, for it amounts, in truth, to the negation of democracy, free speech, and meaningful liberty.

It is true that there are actors waiting in the wings who represent something even more illiberal than the present dispensation. But we should not cling to a nurse for fear of something worse.Perhaps somewhere about the precincts of this paradox lies the explanation of why liberals have so far supported the influx of Muslims into Europe: This is part of the liberal program of disintegrating the culture, traditions, and civilization of the West. Often one is forced to wonder if liberals know anything about the nature of Islam and its ambitions, whether they are aware that the Islamic concept of the infidel disqualifies all such peoples from what they think their entitlements. No sane person could ever have accused these pseudo-liberals of being far-sighted. Still, here they have surely surpassed themselves with their willful myopia and stupidity. If they wish to imagine how it will end, I recommend they have a quiet read of Michel HouellebecqsSubmission, which tells of the capitulation of a future French establishment to the blandishments of Islam.

But the problem does not lie merely with pseudo-liberalism. Paradoxically, a dangerous tendency of thought has arisen in late times among conservatives: the idea that any flaws of liberalismsuch as, one presumes, its blind utopian globalism and politically correct excessespale compared to the barbarism to be observed elsewhere in the world. They take this to mean that we should not raise a fuss about what is happening in the West, but rather express gratitude for the openness we enjoy and the tolerance liberals extend to their opponents. This, too, is bogus. Tolerance here, like equality, means something different than it used to. Once, tolerance meant not interfering with, or attempting to suppress, beliefs that contradicted ones own, but this response has given way to a dictatorship of intolerance wherein everything is tolerated except the views of those who do not subscribe to the tenets of pseudo-liberalism.

Liberals speak of what they call the liberal order as though its virtues were self-evident. This allows them to adopt a tone of moral sanctimony. Those who disagree, therefore, mustipso factosuffer from some kind of pathological perverseness: They oppose the good out of fear, vexatiousness, or worse. But the pseudo-liberal sense of the good is selective and self-serving, and has no good plans for those who dissent from it. We have seen this, again and again, and what we have seenat the hands of social justice warriors, LGBT activists, #MeTooers, and the likeprovides evidence of what the liberal end of history would actually look like.

So let us not be frightened into shoring up that which is finally disintegrating. Pseudo-liberalism is finally disintegrating under belated retaliation from those it treats with contempt, as well as the weight of its own senselessness. The liberal state of affairs is a bit like the current state of rock n roll: Though on its last legs, no one can imagine what, if anything, comes next.This for a time appeared to be the strongest card of the self-proclaimed liberals: that they did indeed represent the end of history.Now, what is (often pejoratively) calledpopulismhas arisen to put paid to that idea.

This populism may represent the future, in one form or another, or simply the precursor to something we are not yet able to imagine.Butwhatever it is, it seems our only hope. The choice we face is not between left and right, orstill lessliberal and far right. Certainly, the choice is not between a continuation of the present pseudo-liberalism or a descent into Islamismthe first willinevitably give way to the second. Rather, the choice is between civilization and its antithesis. It could hardly be more serious.The time has come tolet the delusions of the Sixties finally die in their dilapidated beds.

John Watersis an Irish writer and commentator, the author of ten books, and a playwright.

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The End of Pseudo-Liberalism | John Waters - First Things

In Knives Out, both liberals and conservatives are the villains – Washington Examiner

Knives Out, an Agatha Christie-style whodunit that will likely snag some Oscar nominations soon, is not really political.

You can enjoy the film as a pretty standard murder mystery without unpacking its characters beliefs, from the Trumpism of one character to the open borders rhetoric of another. One of the most interesting things about the film is the way its able to lampoon both.

Liberal magazine Sojourners described the movies perspective as a merciless skewering of white privilege. More fundamentally, its a critique of hypocrisy.

Hollywood liberals took a beating this week when Ricky Gervais blasted their double standards: touting moral lessons about society while cozying up to Harvey Weinstein and Jeffrey Epstein. Knives Out follows suit.

The film is about a rich, white man and his rich, white family, who hope to inherit his wealth after his mysterious death. During a discussion at old Harlan Thrombeys birthday party the night before he dies, his son-in-law and daughter-in-law get into an argument.

Richard, whom daughter-in-law Joni pejoratively refers to as red-hat wearer, echoes the pull yourself up by your bootstraps rhetoric of the GOP. Immigrants should be rewarded for entering the country the legal way, etc.

Joni, an Instagram influencer who meditates and spouts platitudes in a way that would make Gwyneth Paltrow jealous, responds that the government is putting kids in cages.

To settle the argument, Richard calls in Marta, Harlans Latina nurse. She did it the right way, he explains. But Marta has a secret: Her mother is undocumented.

Marta becomes the unofficial protagonist of the film, leading detective Benoit Blanc through the idiosyncrasies of the family and ultimately to the truth of the murder. And while the film had a chance to present the liberal, excessively pro-immigration side as heroes, it turns them, as well as the right-wingers, into villains.

No one in the family can remember which country in South America Marta is from, and at least three different options are mentioned throughout the film. (Brazil? Paraguay? Educador?) When it is revealed (spoiler alert) that the unselfish Marta will receive all of Harlans fortune, the Thrombey family goes ballistic.

In an effort to wrest the fortune back for themselves, they threaten to expose Martas mother as an undocumented immigrant unless Marta gives them what they see as their rightful inheritance. All of the characters, from the MAGA ones (one of whom calls Marta an anchor baby) to the woke liberals, are in on the scheme. That talk about caring about immigrants seems pretty empty when one immigrant becomes an obstacle to a huge wad of cash.

Instead of using the political tension in the film to stir controversy, Knives Out plays off it for humor, particularly in the scene where the family begins fighting and hurling insults from alt-right troll to SJW student.

Everyone kind of sucks, except Marta, who, like many young immigrants in America, grew up in a difficult situation that she did not choose. The film refrains from overly politicizing her plight, but it does offer this commentary: Neither conservatives nor liberals are really on her side.

The film's director, Rian Johnson, has said Knives Out is not a "message movie." But, he told the Associated Press, it was important that the film seem modern.

"Right now, if you have dinner with your big family and you have a few glasses of wine, and you start arguing, guess what you're going to be arguing about?" he asked. "It's the same stuff we're all arguing about. And so hopefully the movie portrays that in a way where you can go with your family and you can all kind of laugh at yourselves a little bit."

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In Knives Out, both liberals and conservatives are the villains - Washington Examiner

Liberal Swim Teams Takes Third in Wichita – KSCB News.net

Team Scores

1st Place Garden City 534 Points2nd Place Kapaun Mt Carmel 357 Points3rd Place Liberal 221 Points4th Place Wichita Classical 166 Points5th Place Trinity Academy 152 Points6th Place Garden City Brown 142 Points7th Place Wichita West 76 Points

Wichita West Meet1/11/2020

200 Freestyle7th Aaron Barboza9th Seth Fitzgerald

200 IM6th Jack Maxwell7th Edgar Cortez

50 Freestyle4th Jacob Sautter16th Seth Fitzgerald

100 Butterfly6th Yared Romo

100 Freestyle4th Jacob Sautter12th Jack Maxwell15th TC Stephenson

500 Freestyle8th Aaron Barboza9th Sea Jiamsripong

200 Freestyle Relay6th Jacob Sautter, Jack Maxwell, Seth Fitzgerald, Aaron Barboza9th TC Stephenson, Malachi Martinez, Yared Romo, Aidan Rice

100 Backstroke9th Malachi Martinez

100 Breaststroke7th Aidan Rice9th Edgar Cortez

400 Freestyle Relay4th Jacob Sautter, Jack Maxwell, Seth Fitzgerald, Aaron Barboza

Coach Mary Stephensons comments

It was a great Meet in Wichita. The team PRed in 14 different races. We continue to see improvement in every meet we compete in. Next meet will be next Tuesday in Hutchinson.

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Liberal Swim Teams Takes Third in Wichita - KSCB News.net

The Washington Post’s latest liberal news from the swamp – Washington Times

ANALYSIS/OPINION:

Do you wish the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) was more or less likely to mail you one of their ominous audit letters?

You know, the kind that lands in your mailbox like the carnival sledgehammer in the high striker game. Only, instead of ringing a bell, it sends your blood pressure soaring and has you running for boxes of receipts in the basement even if you did your taxes honestly and accurately, which we all should.

If not, you must be an editorial writer for The Washington Post, the government newsletter. The Post railed against Republicans this past Thursday for trimming the IRS budget.

The agencys audit rate has plummeted, The Post thundered from its prime spot in the belly of the swamp. If you pay your taxes, on time and in good faith, you should be outraged.

Or relieved, depending on your point of view.

Calling for a bigger IRS budget and more audits, The Post labeled the GOP effort to hobble the IRS an irrational populist spasm that Congress should finally suppress.

Somehow, The Post was not overly moved or spasmodic its own self when the IRS under President Obama was caught red-handed using its power to kneecap the Tea Party movement in 2009, 2010 and beyond.

Ample documentation emerged of IRS officials repeatedly visiting the White House during this time to, oh, I dont know, have tea?

Meanwhile, IRS agents were demanding years of financial records and piling on with other federal agencies against Mr. Obamas perceived political enemies. They even demanded to know if some groups seeking a tax exemption started their meetings with prayer.

It soon became clear that Lois Lerner, who was in charge of the nonprofit sector at the IRS, was illegally using the government like a Third World brute squad to hobble a major Republican constituency. Of course, nothing ever happened to her, other than retiring with a full pension. Thanks, suckers.

No wonder The Post wants the IRS to be bigger and more powerful. Its nice to have them in your corner hassling conservatives when youre trying to elect more socialists, er, progressives.

Along those lines, The Post also ran a column the same day by a self-described Republican woman who penned, How Democrats can attract Republican voters.

This swamp creature, who once chaired a major federal agency and worked in Republican and Democratic administrations, is The Posts kind of Republican. She wants Democrats to choose an experienced candidate like Joe Biden or Elizabeth Warren. She warns against being lured by young Mayor Pete, who has been surging in primary state polls.

I like Buttigieg and would be happy to endorse him 20 years from now, this Republican writes. But, hes too wet behind the ears, unlike Mr. Obama who, she swoons, was, and is, an exceptional, inspirational leader, skilled politician and grass-roots organizer.

As for Mr. Trump, she says he beat Hillary Clinton only because a large segment of the electorate wanted to register a vote against her perceived elitism and disinterest in the working class.

This simplistic explanation couched in the language of Marxist class warfare is not why I voted against her. Its not even because Hillary is a crook and a liar and hung our people out to dry in Benghazi.

Its because, unlike her centrist Democrat husband, shes a hardcore leftist in the mold of Mr. Obama, whose administration put hundreds of loons in judges robes, rammed through his own version of HillaryCare and knocked America down a peg all over the world, especially in the Middle East. Thats where he did his apology to Muslims tour and shipped pallets of cash to our enemies in Tehran.

On top of all that, Mr. Trump is actually pro-American, pro-life, pro-religious liberty, appoints excellent judges and is not afraid to take on the left, including the Marxist brain trust otherwise known as mainstream media.

Did I say Marxist? How else to explain things like a lengthy, sweetheart obituary in The Washington Post on Thursday for Harry Pombo Villegas, right hand man to Cuban revolutionary leader Che Guevara? Most of the article is about the dashing Che, beloved of T-shirt wearing, clueless college students. They have no idea that he was a ruthless thug who personally executed many of Fidel Castros opponents without trial or mercy. Neither do The Post obits readers.

Villegas followed Che to Africa and South America, where, backed by the Soviets, Che was trying to turn more countries into communist hellholes.

Che finally was captured in Bolivia with the CIAs help in 1967 as Villegas escaped and got back to Castros Cuba. A Bolivian sergeant executed Che, with a nefarious CIA agent orchestrating it to look like he died in battle, according to Villegas memoir cited in the obit.

The very last line is a quote from Villegas: Che died as he lived; full of optimism.

So, CIA bad, Che and Villegas good. Par for the course.

Between the call for a more powerful IRS, the political advice to Democrats from the Republican woman, and the ode to one of the most vicious murderers of our time, The Post lived up to its front-page motto: Democracy Dies in Darkness.

Robert Knight is a contributor to The Washington Times.

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The Washington Post's latest liberal news from the swamp - Washington Times

To The Liberal Media’s Dismay, There Will Be No Disastrous War With Iran – The Federalist

The last few days have been an ongoing spectacle of media bias and incompetence in the coverage of the Qassem Suleimani strike and its fallout.

Mainstream outlets, suffering mightily from Trump derangement syndrome, practically rooted for a wider conflict with Iran in the hopes it might damage Trump, then evinced genuine disappointment when Iran backed down after half-heartedly lobbing a few short-range ballistic missiles in the direction of U.S. troops stationed in Iraq, which inflicted no casualties.

But just think what could have been! Three days ago, The Atlantics David A. Graham wrote a piece headlined, Its 2003 All Over Again, in which he argues the recent killing of Iranian general Suleimani by U.S. missile strike last week is just like the runup to the 2003 invasion of Iraq under George W. Bush.

The U.S. stands on the brink of an unpredictable war in the Middle East, Graham writes, then describes a scenario in which an American president, untutored in foreign affairs, is pushed into war by a hawkish vice president and a powerful Cabinet secretary seeking to follow through on their deep-rooted ideological commitments. Meanwhile, as civilian leaders march toward war, military officers seem unprepared and startled by the administrations belligerence.

See the connection? Graham sure does. Each new piece of information about President Donald Trumps decision to assassinate Iranian General Qassem Soleimani produces sobering parallels with the situation 17 years ago.

What a difference two days make. After a face-saving missile attack on an Iraqi airbase that houses some U.S. troops, which American officials were apparently told about in advance by Iraqi intermediaries, the fight seems to have gone out of Iran. Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif tweeted Tuesday night that Iran had concluded proportionate measures and that it does not seek escalationan admission by Tehran that President Trump had called its bluff and the ayatollahs arent willing to risk a broader conflict.

Further confirmation came when Shiite Cleric Muqtada al-Sadr told pro-Iranian militias in Iraq not to retaliate, saying in a statement, the crisis is over.

On Wednesday, Trump confirmed that no U.S. troops were injured in the missile attack and that Iran now appears to be standing down. Instead of ratcheting up the bellicose rhetoric, Trump gave the Iranians an off-ramp, saying America is ready to embrace peace with all who seek it, and calling for new multilateral negotiations to replace the defunct 2015 Iran nuclear deal.

So far, all of this is very unlike the leadup to the Iraq War, let alone the beginning of World War III. To the medias dismay, Trump isnt turning into Bush, and Iran isnt turning into Iraq. In fact, the entire saga has been deterrence-through-strength 101. Trump surgically took out the worlds number-one terrorist and successfully managed a de-escalation with Iran, but all the liberal media can muster in response is fear-mongering, dissimulation, and what amounts to a collective sneer at Trump and his supporters.

The Atlantic ran a column by David Frum on Wednesday crowing about how the American people still arent rallying around Trump. The Trump administration and its supporters seem to have hoped for a rally around the flag effect from the killing of Soleimani. This did not happen.

Can you imagine Frum or any other mainstream pundit writing such an article after, say, Benghazi? Of course not. Yet that was a legitimate crisis of the Obama administrations own making, a deceit-laden screwup brought on by a needless Libya campaign that turned the country into a failed state. Remember all the Atlantic think pieces on how Americans werent rallying around President Obama? Me neither.

It seems the mediaalong with no small number of Democratswill say anything and take any position, no matter how asinine, if it might hurt Trump. Theyll even praise a murderous theocratic regime. Heres the Washington Posts Dave Weigel, with a case in point:

And heres Joy Behar of ABCs The View, touting the good news that Richard Spencer, the racist neo-Nazi provocateur, regrets supporting Trump because of the Suleimani strikeat which the audience applauded.

No wonder so many people hate the mainstream press. No wonder, for example, that in the aftermath of the shooting at West Freeway Church of Christ in Fort Worth, Texas, the churchs minister, Britt Farmer, refused to speak with anyone in the mainstream media. He gave only one interview to the editor of a Christian outlet, who said Farmer feared how a conservative Christian minister in a pistol-packing congregation might be portrayed. Smart man.

Of course, no one can predict what will come next in the Middle East. Perhaps Iran will retaliate further, maybe with a terrorist-style attack against U.S. targets somewhere. But for now, by any reasonable standard Trumps gambit has worked. He dealt a harsh blow to Iran and the mullahs backed down. Just dont expect the media to be honest about it.

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To The Liberal Media's Dismay, There Will Be No Disastrous War With Iran - The Federalist