Daily Archives: May 28, 2017

How Liberal Short-Term Thinking Is Destroying America – Townhall

Posted: May 28, 2017 at 8:08 am

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Posted: May 27, 2017 12:01 AM

"We are living in an interminable succession of absurdities imposed by the myopic logic of short-term thinking." -- Jacques Cousteau

Facts dont care about your feelings. Ben Shapiro

Like a crack addict who cant seem to think about anything other than his next fix, liberals cant seem to think about anything but spewing their emotions at the world. They may be reflexively saying something that makes them feel compassionate, outraged, sensitive or angry, but liberals usually seem to be caught in the grip of some strong emotion.

Of course, it goes without saying that emotion unmoored from logic produces a lot of warped views, but it also mires a person in short term thinking.if you could even call it that. Because when youre emotional, most of the time youre not thinking; youre reacting based on your feels. This is where a lot of liberals live 24 x 7 and so, its not shocking that their behavior is so thoughtless.

Take rock star Katy Perrys reaction to the Manchester bombing, "No barriers, no borders, we all just need to coexist. So, what does co-existing with radical Islamic terrorists who want to kill you mean? Is Katy Perry going to invite ISIS terrorists from Syria to bomb her next concert?

Can you imagine how bizarre the typical liberal reaction to terrorism must seem to the terrorists?

Terrorist: We want to kill you in the name of Allah because were good Muslims!

Liberal: No, youre not. Thats not what you believe.

Terrorist: Yes, it is.

Liberal: No, noyoure oppressed and probably upset about global warming.

Terrorist: Wait, what?

Liberal: Lets all co-exist!

Terrorist: How did you miss the entire, We want to kill you in the name of Allah thing? What is wrong with you?

Then there are the Trump Administration leaks. Undoubtedly, some of the leaks inside the Trump Administration are coming from his staff, but others appear to be coming from the deep state. In other words, Democratic holdovers in the government bureaucracy are leaking information to the press in order to attempt to sabotage a rival political party. Obviously, these leakers are so consumed with their hatred for Trump that they feel politically motivated leaks are justifiable. Except whats going to almost inevitably happen once a Democrat gets back into office? Republicans in the deep state are now going to leak things in an attempt to embarrass him.

Liberals are so overwrought with emotion that they dont get the idea that theyre setting precedents when they do these sort of things. Its like the shock and surprise they experienced when they used the nuclear option to keep Republicans from blocking Barack Obamas cabinet appointments, only to find that it also meant they couldnt stop Trumps cabinet appointments. Wait, you mean that applies to liberals, too? Yes, and those leaks? The next Democrat President is likely to be undermined in exactly the same way.

Look at the liberal threats and violence at universities that have become a regular occurrence. At worst, liberals riot when people they disagree with speak on college campuses and at best, they make threats and do everything they can to rob conservative speakers of their First Amendment rights. Liberals are so supportive of this kind of thing that the police in liberal cities or on liberal campuses refuse to stop the rioting or disruptions.

In other words, conservatives no longer get the same protection from the police. Even illegal aliens are treated better by the police on campuses controlled by liberals. So, when thats the case, is anyone surprised to see that someone like Based Stick Man was warmly received by conservatives for breaking a stick over a violent ANTIFA protestors head? It wouldnt surprise me if we start seeing armed gangs of conservatives policing marches to protect other people on the Right from armed gangs of liberals since the Left has convinced the police not to do it. This is the world liberals are creating with their short term thinking: one where both sides of the political argument will have armed factions at political rallies. How healthy does that sound for the country?

Liberals do the same thing on the deficit. Supporting that program makes me feel good! Spend somebody elses money on it and I dont like thinking about the debt; so just ignore that.

They did it with Obamacare. They lied about the bill, assumed no one would recognize they were misled to when the bill became law and cared nothing about creating an expensive new entitlement program when the country is drowning in debt.

They get upset that Trump actually told NATO that if were going to be in a military alliance, then the nations involved will have to spend enough on their militaries so that they field an effective military force. How dare Trump try to make NATO useful again!

Theyre so blinded by their emotions that theyll even rank Hillary Clinton as the 6th most beautiful woman on the planet. Seriously.

It is impossible to competently govern a nation based on pure emotion and short term thinking. Additionally as a practical matter, its impossible to cut a deal with people whose entire rationale for doing things is, A celebrity told me what I should believe and now I have to do it or I heard a sad story yesterday; so everything has changed. At some point, liberals have to engage in some long term thinking that goes beyond, As long as were in charge, everything we do is okay, or our country is going to get dragged down the tubes along with them.

Obama-Appointed Federal Judge Tosses Benghazi Families'Lawsuit Against Hillary Clinton

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Conservatives Complain That Republicans Have a Liberal Bias … – The Nation.

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Trumps negative media coverage is being driven not by Democrats but by law-enforcement sources and pissed-off Republicans.

CNN analysts discuss President Donald Trumps comments on the necessity for the US Civil War. (Screengrab / CNN)

Last week, when CNN reported that Attorney General Jeff Sessions had left a couple of meetings with Russian officials off his application for a security clearance, Representative Jeff Duncan (R-SC) falsely claimed that the broadcaster had later retracted the story. In a Facebook post, Duncan, who is not known for having the keenest intellect on Capitol Hill, wrote, The media was never this critical to President Obama, the recent Harvard study proves that the media has applied a completely different standard to President Trump.

Duncan, like many on the right, sees a recent study of the mainstream coverage of Trumps first 100 days in office released by Harvards Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics, and Public Policy as solid proof that the media treat Trump unfairly. It looked at news reports in the print editions of The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Washington Post, the main newscasts of CBS, CNN, Fox News, and NBC, and three European news outlets, and found that 80 percent of Trumps coverage by those outlets was negativesignificantly higher than the shares for Barack Obama (41 percent negative), George W. Bush (57 percent), and Bill Clinton (60 percent) at this point in their presidencies. Conservative publications greeted the report with headlines like Harvard Study Confirms Media Bias Against Trump and Harvard Report: There Is A Huge Anti-Trump Bias In Corporate Media.

The obvious response is that the vast majority of stories about famine, natural disasters, and genital warts are negative, and that doesnt imply a bias on the part of those writing them. Trumps young presidency has been a train wreck, his White House has been mired in largely self-inflicted scandals, and his legislative agenda has so far gotten nowhere in Congress. And Trump, unlike his predecessors, has a penchant for impulsively tweeting dubious claims and inflammatory nonsense. The study also found that the sheer volume of Trump coveragehe was the subject of four of every 10 news stories in the outlets studieddwarfs that of previous administrations.

But thats not the real story. The real story is that Trumps negative coverage is being driven not by liberals or Democrats but by law-enforcement sources and pissed-off Republicans.

Its important to understand the studys methodology. According to its author, Harvard scholar Thomas Patterson, Tone is judged from the perspective of the actor, the actor being, in this case, Donald Trump. A story is coded as negative when the actor is criticized directlyfor example when Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer told a reporter, Eleven weeks into his administration, we have seen nothing from President Trump on infrastructure, on trade, or on any other serious job-creating initiativeor when an event, trend, or development reflects unfavorably on the actor. So negative stories are either stories that quote someone griping about Trump, or stories about developments that cast a negative light on his performance.

And heres a key point, as it relates to that first category: Republican voices, wrote Patterson, accounted for 80 percent of what newsmakers said about the Trump presidency, compared to only 6 percent for Democrats and 3 percent for those involved in anti-Trump protests. So the coverage has not featured a bunch of liberals complaining about TrumpDemocrats and those engaged with the anti-Trump resistance were few and far between. The fact that Trump has received more negative coverage than his predecessor is hardly surprising, the report says. The early days of his presidency have been marked by far more missteps and miss-hits, often self-inflicted, than any presidency in memory, perhaps ever.

Stories about events that reflect poorly on the White House have in large part been driven by leaks (a fact that infuriates Trump and his supporters). We cant know the ideological breakdown of the people speaking to reporters anonymously, but we do know that Trumps own staffpeople close to himhave been the source of a number of negative stories, and we know, thanks to White House leaks, that Trumps staff often leaks information to the press because, as the very conservative Erick Erickson reported, sometimes the president will not take advice. Sometimes the president treats suggestions as criticism. More often than not, the president is vastly more interested in what the media says about him than what his advisers in his employ say to him. According to Erickson, who personally knows an ardent Trump supporter in Trumps orbit who was the source of one such leak, White House staff have ample incentive to leak to the press when they believe the president needs to pay attention or be admonished. Just think for a moment how often youve read a story in which an anonymous source criticizing the president is identified as a current or former supporter or adviser or donor.

THE STAKES ARE HIGHER NOW THAN EVER. GET THE NATION IN YOUR INBOX.

Law-enforcement and intelligence agencies have been the other big source of leaks. Theyre not all right-wingers, of course, and their motives for leaking include, depending on how you look at it, either revenge for Trumps many assaults on the intelligence community, or a principled defense of institutions they see as vital to our national security. Neither of those things represents ideological bias.

One might certainly argue that many of the Republicans who dominate the public discourse about Trump were hostile towards his presidency from the beginning. Prominent #NeverTrump conservatives like Ana Navarro, Stuart Stevens, David Frum are easy to find on cable TV and social media. But when a reporter doing her best to cover the president fairly sees similar criticisms coming from both the left and the right, when her story reflects those views, its not a matter of bias. Thats how he said-she said journalism, for all its obvious flaws, has always worked.

Ironically, the Shorenstein study did find significant bias at one media outlet: Fox News was a lone outlier in that almost half of its Trump coverage was positive. Looking back at 100 days marked by chaos and failure, its hard to imagine what a truly fair and balanced news outlet possibly could have covered in order to run so many positive segments.

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The Liberal Media and the Art of High-Tech Lynchings – NewsBusters (blog)

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The Liberal Media and the Art of High-Tech Lynchings
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On a scale of political insults to the liberal media that ranges from 1 to 10 with 1 being least offensive to a most insulting 10, the Thomas nomination was 110. So what to do? Suddenly America was presented - thanks to anonymous white staffers for ...

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Stormy Liberal notches first graded stakes triumph – Daily Racing Form

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Norberto Arroyo Jr. rides Stormy Liberal to victory in the Daytona on Saturday.

ARCADIA, Calif. Stormy Liberal is the king of the hill.

For the fourth straight time this year, Stormy Liberal on Saturday won a downhill turf sprint stakes race at Santa Anita, but his victory in the $147,000 Daytona was the most significant to date, as it was his first graded stakes win, with the Daytona being a Grade 3 event.

The Daytona was reduced to four horses by the scratches of Eddie Haskell on Friday and then Roy H earlier Saturday; as a result, there was no show wagering. Stormy Liberal ($3), the 1-2 favorite, pressed the pace outside Blackjackcat and Ambitious Brew, then held a safe margin over Ambitious Brew the length of the stretch after Blackjackcat retreated. He won by a neck, with Ambitious Brew second by 1 1/2 lengths over Blackjackcat. Home Run Kitten trailed.

Stormy Liberal was timed in 1:12.43 for about 6 1/2 furlongs down the hill. Norberto Arroyo Jr. was aboard, as he had been for victories earlier this meet in the Clockers Corner, Joe Hernandez, and Siren Lure.

Hes the best claim Ive ever made, said trainer Peter Miller, who claimed Stormy Liberal on behalf of Gary Hartunians Rockingham Ranch in October after the horse was recommended to him by David Lanzman, a horse owner who is friends with both Miller and Hartunian.

He ran a 100 Beyer the day we got him, so I dont know if hes gotten better or stayed the same, Miller said. Hes maintained his form. We got lucky. We caught someone stealing.

Stormy Liberal was claimed when returning from a six-month layoff. He won that day, then was second in a pair of races for Miller before embarking on his current win streak.

Stormy Liberal, 5, is a gelding by Stormy Atlantic. He has now won seven times in 20 starts, and is 7 for 12 coming down the hill. He earned $90,000 on Saturday to bring his career earnings to $432,070, but he has won $232,200 this year alone, quite the return on investment for a $40,000 claim.

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Stormy Liberal notches first graded stakes triumph - Daily Racing Form

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Montana election proves that liberal outrage isn’t enough – The Daily Herald

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By Paul Kane, The Washington Post

WASHINGTON Democrats received a strong reminder from Montana voters that it takes more than just liberal outrage against President Donald Trump and the GOP agenda to win seats that lean toward Republicans.

It takes serious candidates and a policy agenda of their own.

Their nominee, Rob Quist, hailed by liberal activists as a cowboy poet, delivered what most observers in Washington felt was an average performance in a race that was closely watched even before the Republican nominee was charged with assaulting a reporter on the eve of Thursdays special election.

Some Democrats have responded to Trumps victory, which they believe resulted at least partly from fame derived from his reality-television career, by searching for their own unique candidates. But after receiving just 44 percent of the vote, Quists performance may demonstrate the limitations of quirky, first-time candidates.

The showing also raises the stakes for Democrats in the June 20 runoff election for the race to replace Tom Price, the health secretary whose former House district north of Atlanta is seen as political ground zero this season because of its more competitive nature the other special elections held so far.

There, a 30-year-old neophyte and former congressional staffer, Jon Ossoff, is locked in a dead heat. Now more than ever, some party strategists fear that if he cannot put the race away ahead of June 20, late-breaking voters will not view him as a serious enough alternative in these politically turbulent times.

What Montana showed was the need to field candidates with backgrounds that appeal to voters who have tended to back Republicans in congressional races. Its not necessarily an ideological requirement to be a centrist serious candidates, such as Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., or Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., can reside at the edge of the ideological spectrum. But they nearly always need more gravitas than Quist brought from a decades-long career as a guitar player in a popular bluegrass band in the Mountain West.

There are exceptions, of course. Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota is one though its worth noting that Franken spent his first eight years in office avoiding the comedy shtick he was known for on Saturday Night Live because he recognized the need to get serious fast.

Of the three special elections, Quist clearly delivered the worst performance, based on a measure crafted by the smart analysts at the Cook Political Report. Democrats received 49 percent in the initial balloting in Prices old district and almost 47 percent in the race in southern Kansas, better than Quists 44 percent.

Moreover, based on recent presidential races, the Kansas nominee performed 12 percentage points better than an average Democrat would have been expected to show, according to Cook. In Georgia, Democrats performed seven percentage points better than an average nominee.

Quist outperformed an average Democrat by just 5 percent. And he lagged woefully when compared with Montanas Democratic governor, Steve Bullock, who won by four points in November against Republican Greg Gianforte the businessman who beat Quist on Thursday despite being charged with assaulting a reporter the night before.

Democrats in Washington saw that as justification for their decision to invest only $500,000 in the race, dismissing Quist as a candidate from backers of Sanders who did not realize he had a hard ceiling around 43 to 45 percent among voters.

DCCC took a smart chance with its investments, refused to waste money on hype, Meredith Kelly, communications director for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, wrote in a Friday memo.

Because it was a special election, Quist won the nomination at a party convention where the most liberal activists held sway, rather than a broad statewide primary.

The complaints about money are misguided when comparing this race to the Kansas special election. There, Democrats nominated another Sanders acolyte, James Thompson, who ran in a more conservative district than Quist, on a shoestring budget of just $1.4 million. He received nothing close to the $500,000 Quist got from the DCCC.

Yet Thompson got a larger share of the vote than Quist, who raised and spent more than $6 million.

Perhaps if Montana Democrats had found a nominee with Thompsons profile, they would have been better served.

Homeless as a teenager, Thompson enlisted in the Army and used the GI Bill to finance his education, serving as a civil rights lawyer for 13 years before launching his long-shot bid for Congress.

In their early recruiting for the midterms now 17 months away, Democrats have tried to thread this needle. They are tapping into the anti-Trump energy with first-time candidates who can appeal to anti-establishment progressives but also with personal backgrounds that will demonstrate a serious devotion to governance intended to appeal across party lines.

This has produced an early focus on military veterans more closely aligned with Thompsons background.

In the suburbs east of Denver, Jason Crow is a former Army Ranger and local attorney running in a district where Democrats have underperformed year after year. In a similar district outside Philadelphia where Democrats have failed to put together strong challengers, Chrissy Houlahan is an Air Force veteran who helped run a basketball apparel company and worked in the nonprofit sector.

Beyond candidate recruitment lies a deeper question about the partys agenda and whether Democrats need an update on their policy proposals.

Quist aggressively painted Gianforte as someone who would support Republican efforts to dismantle the Affordable Care Act without ensuring protections for those with preexisting conditions.

Ossoff has been hitting his opponent, Republican Karen Handel, for her efforts to deny funds to Planned Parenthood, while promising to be a problem solver who will work across the aisle to deliver results.

But theres been very little in terms of a specific Democratic agenda should they win the 24 seats needed to take back the House majority next year.

On Thursday, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., joined Sanders at an event to endorse his proposal to create a $15 minimum wage, something Sanders touted in his 2016 presidential campaign.

It showed party leaders were drifting toward the Vermont socialists economic views, but it is likely to do little to generate votes come November 2018.

Raising the minimum wage is an issue that always polls off the charts. But Democrats have pushed this issue in three straight elections, and it has done next to nothing for their candidates, because most voters want a lot more than a minimum-wage job.

Democrats might pull off the win in Prices seat, but if they are going to ride a wave all the way to the majority, they probably need more experienced candidates than Ossoff and Quist and with a sharper message than Ossoffs introductory ad a few months ago.

Ill work with anyone to do whats right for our country, he said.

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May and Corbyn offer ‘retreat from international liberalism’ says Osborne – The Guardian

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George Osborne: I have to call it as I see it as editor. Photograph: Victoria Jones/PA

Theresa May has joined Jeremy Corbyn in offering a retreat from international liberalism and globalisation, which marks a sharp shift in direction from David Camerons administration, former chancellor George Osborne has said.

Osborne contrasted the prime ministers approach with what he called the socially liberal, pro-business and pro-free market values he wants to promote in his new role as editor of the Evening Standard.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4s Political Thinking, the former Conservative MP stood by criticisms of Mays policies on social care and immigration, which have been the subject of stinging headlines and editorials since he took the helm at the Standard.

He denied that he was taking revenge on the woman who sacked him from the cabinet last July, but said he would not pull punches in his coverage of the Tory government.

Osborne declined to say whether Londons evening paper would endorse the Conservatives for the 8 June general election. Both Theresa May and Jeremy Corbyn are offering, in very different ways, a retreat from international liberalism and globalisation, said Osborne.

That is quite a development in British politics, and I think there are quite a lot of people who are uncertain whether that is the right development and I want to make sure that the Evening Standard is asking on their behalf questions about that.

Shying away from classing the Standard as part of the Tory press, Osborne said: I am taking a slightly different approach, which is that there are a set of values that the Evening Standard has, which are that we are socially liberal, we are pro-business and pro-free market, and we want Britain to have a big role in the world and those values we then apply to whatever the issues are.

Asked if the Standards attacks on Mays policies were a matter of revenge, he said: No. What the paper is doing is standing up for a set of values that the paper has long espoused and by a happy coincidence are also the values I applied as chancellor.

Osborne made clear he was taking a hands-on approach to setting the Standards tone, though he insisted that headlines which have included the damning Strong and stable? PMs care U-turn turmoil were the result of a team effort.

He stood by the papers description of the Conservative manifestos social care proposals, saying: They were clearly badly thought through, because the prime minister herself decided to rethink them.

Osborne explained its denunciation of Mays pledge to cut net migration below 100,000 as politically rash and economically illiterate, saying: The Evening Standard is saying you have got a promise to reduce immigration so tell us how you are going to do it.

Which section of industry is not going to have the labour it currently needs? Which families are not going to be able to be reunited with members of their families abroad? Which universities are not going to have overseas students?

If the Conservative government can answer those questions, all well and good. If they cant, the Evening Standard is going to go on asking the questions. We will also be as ferocious in asking questions of the Labour party and, indeed, I am not particularly kind about the Liberal Democrats or Ukip.

The Standard will definitely make a recommendation on which way it thinks its readers should vote on 8 June, said Osborne. But asked by presenter Nick Robinson whether it would endorse the Tories, he said: You have got to go on picking up your free copy of the London Evening Standard and you will find out, Nick.

Osborne identified the immigration pledge, alongside the failure to reconstruct Libya, as shortcomings in the record of the Cameron administration. He said he was proud of what the former PMs team had achieved but would not spend his time as editor trying to defend its record to the hilt.

He said: I have to call it as I see it as editor. Of course everyone knows I was a Conservative MP for 16 years and I was a member of the Conservative cabinet and I know many of the people in the Conservative government, but it is also my responsibility as the editor to interpret what is going on in politics for my readers. Im not pulling punches, because I would be doing my readers a disservice.

Asked if he was missing politics after stepping down from the Commons, Osborne said: Actually, Im not missing it at all. Im really enjoying covering the campaign as an editor. Its a very different perspective and its good fun.

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Donald Trump Applauds Win As Greg Gianforte Apologizes For Response To Liberal Journalist Trumpcare Question – Deadline

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Only after winning Montanas special election for the states one seat in the House of Representatives did Greg Gianforte apologize for allegedly body slamming a reporter who had asked him a question about House-passed Trumpcare legislation.

Last night I learned a lesson; last night I made a mistake, Gianforte told his fans while taking his election victory lap.

And we forgive you! someone interrupted.

and I took an action that I cant take back, the politician continued, adding, Im not proud of what happened. I should not have responded in the way that I did, and for that Im sorry.I should not have treated that reporter that way. And for that Im sorry, Mr. Ben Jacobs.

But Gianforte had taken two actions on Thursday night: allegedly attacking Jacobs and then issuing a statement blaming the Guardian reporter for having caused Gianforte to allegedly attack the liberal journalist. Jacobs told CNNs Don Lemon the statement was in some ways far worse than the incident itself.

Within a period of hours, Gianforte was formally charged with assault and was elected Montanas new member of House of Representatives, beating Democratic folk singer Rob Quist with just over 50% of the vote. Media called the special election to replace Ryan Zinke, who now is Trumps Secretary of the Interior, an early test of Trumps popularity, which POTUS acknowledged in an unsolicited shout-out from the G7 summit in Italy. Great win in Montana! Trump said.

Veep Mike Pence spoke at slightly greater length, tweeting: Congrats on great win & gracious speech. Look forward to having you help @realDonaldTrump #MAGA

Here is Gianfortes official statement as to what occurred on the eve of the election:

Tonight, as Greg was giving a separate interview in a private office, The Guardians Ben Jacobs entered the office without permission, aggressively shoved a recorder in Gregs face, and began asking badgering questions, his office said in a statement after the candidate allegedly attacked the reporter. Jacobs was asked to leave. After asking Jacobs to lower the recorder, Jacobs declined. Greg then attempted to grab the phone that was pushed in his face. Jacobs grabbed Gregs wrist, and spun away from Greg, pushing them both to the ground. Its unfortunate that this aggressive behavior from a liberal journalist created this scene at our campaign volunteer BBQ.

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Extremism vs the liberal ideals – Prothom Alo (English)

Posted: at 8:08 am

Europes resolve is being tested by the extremists as they carry out a series of terrorist attacks in France, Germany and in the United Kingdom. Europe has been the traditional power house of development in the journey of human civilization for several centuries now and the honour was only shared by the US in the last one and now perhaps by China.

Europes history isnt just about worldwide empires and industrial revolution; its also about modernity as a whole. European countries gave birth to great things of human civilization like liberty, freedom, democracy, impartial administration, equality, peoples state i.e. republics, rule of law , human rights, media, civil society and also modern artistic and literary creativeness. As the law of the nature in erstwhile times, the stronger European nations created vast empires and colonies across the globe defeating the local kingdoms. But they spread these modern systems and ideas to those conquered places as well. Places like Asia, Africa and America wouldnt have seen all these in the times they encountered those if it was not for the Europeans.

The Europeans also took in a huge number of people from the countries they previously ruled. America did the same. And the immigrants, like the natives, now get all the amenities offered by these welfare states. It was a matter of great wonder for the people of the Orient and Africa that Europeans accepted people of oriental culture in their country with relative ease. In fact the ideas of multiculturalism and celebrating diversity have been the hallmark of European and North American liberal ideals over the last few decades. A sizable percentage of these immigrants were and, still are, Muslims and they form Muslim communities in those countries. Many families have lived in their adopted countries for more than a generation now. However, the same isnt really the case in the countries from where these Europe bound migrants originated.

Unfortunately, a section of these immigrant Muslim communities has embraced radicalism and carry out heinous terrorists acts in the countries where they live. In the process, these people are earning a bad name for their communities, the countries of their origin and Muslims worldwide. Now it seems that these radicals take advantage of European liberalism to live and spread their extreme ideologies and do everything to destroy those very liberal ideals that have allowed them to practice their faith and culture peacefully in the first place. The whole phenomenon has now turned out to be a complex and perplexing one. Its apparent that a sizable section hasnt embraced liberal ideals of Europe in the true spirit despite taking advantage of those. They are out there to spread hatred and violence with the aim of achieving an improbable and regressive Islamic theocracy in European countries.

The European governments are trying to tackle the situation as far as they can without undermining their liberal values. But its not easy. Nowadays a terrorist doesnt need guns or explosives. A suicidal terrorist can just drive a vehicle into a crowd and kill innocent people. Its about time the Muslim communities in Europe also take care of their community members and cooperate with the authorities to identify and deter radicalization and de-radicalize the already indoctrinated ones. Or else, it could be too late and they may eventually lose the degree of freedom, opportunities and welfare they had been enjoying in the liberal western societies so far like the other citizens. Every situation in the world is contingent upon certain explicit and tacit conditions of civility. If it is breached by one side, then its natural that others will eventually react. And that may not be a good thing to experience.

*Sarwar Jahan Chowdhury is a freelance contributor on politics, society and international relations. Currently, he works for BRAC Institute of Governance and Development, Dhaka, Bangladesh.

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The Trump administration wants us to think 2 + 2 = 5 – Los Angeles Times

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The Trump administration got caught attempting to commit fake math last week. It didnt succeed.

Heres what happened: Every year, the president is required to send Congress a budget proposal, to lay out his wish list for taxes and spending. President Trump ordered up a plan that would lower taxes, increase military spending and balance the budget within 10 years, all without cutting Social Security or Medicare.

And thats what his budget director, Mick Mulvaney, delivered. But to meet his bosss unrealistic goals, Mulvaney produced a document that didnt make much sense.

Thats not just my view; its the view of fiscal experts in both parties, including several senior Republicans in Congress who quickly declared the presidents budget dead on arrival.

To reach Trumps target, Mulvaney assumed that the economy will grow by an average of 3% a year for the next decade, a rate higher than any mainstream forecast. And he cut spending deeply on almost every non-defense function, from cancer research to Medicaid and other programs for the poor.

Even Republicans said the cuts were unrealistic.

Meals on Wheels, even for some of us who are considered to be fiscal hawks, may be a bridge too far, said Mark Meadows, chairman of the achingly conservative House Freedom Caucus.

Then it got worse. Budget experts noticed an oddity in Mulvaneys arithmetic. The proposal estimated that his 3% growth in the economy would produce more than $2 trillion in increased tax revenue, helping to balance the budget. Most of that growth, in the administrations view, would be produced by the big tax cuts its seeking.

But the budget didnt mention the revenue that would be lost by the tax cuts a number that could reach, oh, $2 trillion or so. Instead, it listed the tax cuts as revenue neutral, meaning theyd produce as much revenue as they lost thanks, of course, to 3% growth.

In short, the White House counted the same $2 trillion twice once to pay for the tax cuts and once to reduce the deficit.

That wasnt the only oddity. The budget called for abolishing the estate tax, but nevertheless counted $330 billion of revenue from estate taxes. It called for funding Trumps wall on the border with Mexico, but provided less than 10% of what the Department of Homeland Security says a wall would cost.

Of course, the Trump administration and its allies have had problems with arithmetic before.

Theyve raged against the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, which last week estimated that the House Republicans healthcare bill would result in 23 million more people without health insurance and raise costs for millions more.

The [CBO] is simply incompatible with the Trump era, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich wrote with a double meaning that was presumably unintentional. It is a left-wing, corrupt, bureaucratic defender of big government. (The current CBO director was appointed by the Republican leaders of Congress.)

Trump officials have also contested the governments estimates of unemployment except when the number goes down, in which case they claim credit for the change.

Theyve claimed that Trump was the victim of widespread vote fraud on Election Day, despite the absence of evidence, arithmetical or otherwise. Theyre even spending federal money to investigate the problem.

And the president still thinks he drew the largest crowds in history to his inauguration, even though photographs and calculations prove him wrong.

This refusal to accept that 2+ 2 = 4 isnt ordinary political spin or the quirk of a former real estate developer who once promoted a 58-story building as offering 68 floors. The Trump administrations war on math is just one front in a broader war on facts including the new practice of dismissing any negative report as fake news.

And its strategic. Its aimed at avoiding accountability.

Trumps proudest claim, now that hes president, is that hes keeping the promises he made to voters in his campaign. Only he isnt. His unrealistic budget plan wont produce a balanced budget. The health care bill he backs wont cover everyone, wont reduce their costs, and wont protect Medicaid. The tax cuts he said would benefit the middle class would flow mostly to the wealthy instead.

Whats an embattled president to do when he cant deliver? Attack the scorekeepers whether they are journalists, the CBO, or the budgeteers.

Most people, however, arent buying what Trumps selling.

Being president, as Trump has complained, is harder than being a real estate promoter. Theres far more scrutiny.

In the case of the budget flimflam, for example, Trump may have outfoxed himself. One budget expert, former Senate Democratic aide Stan Collender, says the administrations unrealistic numbers have probably killed Republicans chances for passing a tax bill this year and maybe next year too.

If hes right, thats a big problem for Trump. Those tax cuts were the core of the presidents economic program, the key to producing anything like 3% growth. No tax cuts means no Trump bump. And voters would notice.

Trump is still waging his war on facts. But the facts are pushing back.

doyle.mcmanus@latimes.com

Twitter: @DoyleMcManus

Follow the Opinion section on Twitter @latimesopinion or Facebook

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Liberal Fight Against Freedom Turns Violent – Star Parker – Townhall – Townhall

Posted: at 8:08 am

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Posted: May 24, 2017 12:01 AM

Intolerance, at times exploding into violence, is spreading throughout our society. And it's coming from the political left.

It's happening on college campuses. Most recently, students walked out on Vice President Mike Pence's commencement address at Notre Dame University.

Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos was interrupted by boos and jeers at her commencement address at historically black Bethune-Cookman University.

Conservative scholar Charles Murray was met with violent protests and physically assaulted at Middlebury College. Another conservative scholar, Heather MacDonald, was violently shut down in a presentation she was giving at Claremont McKenna College. These are just a couple examples.

Now it's spreading off college campuses with reports of violence and threats toward Republican members of congress, and their families, as they hold town halls in their districts.

A column in The Hill newspaper bears the headline, "Republicans fearing for their safety as anger, threats mount."

What is happening?

A recent commentary in Forbes Magazine from a London School of Business professor calls this "The Post-Truth World."

He describes a prevailing feeling of helplessness as individuals inhabit a world in which knowledge is, in general, exploding but each individual knows, relatively, less and less. And he points to a world in which business and politics are becoming increasingly interdependent.

New York University psychologist Jonathan Haidt attributes what's happening to a culture in which young people are not forced to deal with opposing viewpoints. This, says Haidt, is amplified by social media, which serves to reinforce existing biases.

But all this doesn't explain why the intolerance and violence is coming mainly from the political left.

A new survey from the Pew Research Center sheds light on this. Sixty-six percent of Republicans compared to 29 percent of Democrats say that a person is rich "because they worked harder than most people" rather than because of having personal advantages in life. This 37 percent difference in attitudes of Republicans and Democrats about why some people are rich is 12 points larger today than where it stood just three years ago in 2014.

Seventy-one percent of Democrats compared to 32 percent of Republicans say someone is poor because of "circumstances beyond a person's control," rather than because of "lack of effort." This 37 percent difference between Republicans and Democrats in attitudes regarding why someone is poor is 19 points larger than where it stood three years ago in 2014.

The nation is becoming increasingly polarized on the very fundamental question regarding the extent to which individuals have control over their own life.

Across the nation's whole population, 53 percent feel poverty is the result of circumstances beyond an individual's control compared to 34 percent who see poverty as the result of lack of effort.

What is the meaning of freedom in a country where more than half its citizens feel fate rather than choice governs their life?

Not surprisingly, for the first time in 8 years, according to Pew, more Americans (48 percent) say they want bigger government than say they want smaller government (45 percent).

Conservatives are exposed to the same cultural and technological forces as liberals. But it's not what comes from outside that determines human behavior. It's what comes from inside -- the individual's attitudes and approach to life.

Liberal mentality, increasingly dominated by moral relativism, produces a culture of victimhood. The victim sees life exclusively in political terms, seeing political power and government as the means to a better life, rather than freedom and personal responsibility.

With Republicans now in power, trying to restore economic vitality and fiscal balance by limiting government and expanding personal freedom, the left sees this as a threat, not an opportunity.

We all should be deeply troubled that, in the "land of the free and home of the brave," some are turning to violence to battle the prospect of becoming freer.

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