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Category Archives: Liberal
What Muslims expect from the Liberal government in 2020 – Toronto Star
Posted: January 9, 2020 at 3:46 am
The Canadian Muslim community is an engaged member of the Canadian family, consistently turning out at higher than average rates in both federal and provincial elections. Community leaders, organizations, mosques and Imams across the nation are actively engaging with the community and the government at all levels on issues affecting Canadian Muslims.
Leading up to Octobers federal election, Imams across the country used their Friday sermons to encourage and educate Canadians to participate in the democratic process. Partnering with civil liberties advocates and various segments of Canadian minority communities, the Muslim community has also taken steps to fight Quebecs Bill 21 in the courts. Young Muslims, students and activists have led protests, rallies, and engaged in public discussions to raise the Muslim communitys concerns.
With the federal election behind us and a new cabinet in Ottawa, it is imperative that issues concerning Canadas Muslim community are on the governments agenda for 2020.
The community is looking to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his cabinet to take up the issues Canadian Muslims have been advocating for and confronting over the years.
Like all Canadians, climate change, affordable housing, jobs and reconciliation with Canadas Indigenous communities are primary concerns of the Muslim community. Beyond that, the community expects the Liberal government to prioritize issues uniquely affecting the Muslim community.
Four issues above all are of immediate concern.
The Liberal government must reject the rise of violent white supremacy and hate groups in Canada and vow to take actionable steps to confront Islamophobia. Addressing the spread of online hate and misinformation, and initiating public discourse surrounding immigration and refugee policies to welcome new Canadians into an environment of acceptance are also essential in confronting this growing problem.
A number of ministries and government institutions are essential to policies impacting the Muslim community. They include the Ministry of Public Safety, Ministry of Justice and Attorney General of Canada, Ministry of Immigration and Refugees and Citizenship, Ministry of Diversity and Inclusion and Youth, and Global Affairs Canada.
As the federal government takes the Muslim communitys concerns into account, it is vital that the community is part of the discussion and policy formation process. As the leading Muslim national organization in Canada, the Muslim Association of Canada must be part of initiatives regarding education and public safety.
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Other organizations, such as the National Council of Canadian Muslims and Canadian Muslim Lawyers Association, should be part of discussions and reforms in the areas of social justice and human rights; Islamic Relief Canada on international development; and Justice for All Canada on international human rights and foreign policy.
Finally, it is important to note that the Canadian-Muslim community is as diverse as the nation itself and has many political leanings. As such, rather than a divisive political discourse over Muslim issues, the Muslim community expects its issues to be part of the policy platform of all major parties. And we hope to see all political leaders united in defence of Canadian Muslims, their rights, and aspirations for a stronger, more just and inclusive Canada.
Sharaf Sharafeldin is Executive Director of the Muslim Association of Canada, a national non-profit organization providing religious and educational services for the Muslim community in Canada. MAC serves more than 50,000 Muslims across the country.
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LILLEY: Shootings up but Trudeau Liberals look to the wrong solution – Toronto Sun
Posted: at 3:46 am
The numbers are staggering, 484 shootings in Toronto last year with 764 victims.
Compare that to 2014, just five years earlier, when there were 175 shootings and 237 victims. Or compare it to Torontos infamous Year of the Gun in 2005 where there were just 262 shootings and 367 victims.
The number of victims has gone up every year since 2014, now there are more than three times as many victims as half a decade ago. The number of shootings has gone up every year but 2017 when it took a bit of a dip but overall, shootings in 2019 are sitting at almost triple the rate of 2014.
Toronto isnt alone in dealing with this problem.
In this file photo taken on July 10, 2018, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau addresses a joint press conference with his Latvian counterpart following their meeting in Riga, Latvia.ILMARS ZNOTINS / AFP/Getty Images
Shootings are up in Calgary with 83 by the end of November compared to 47 the year before and still well above their multi-year average of 71 shootings. In Ottawa, there was a slight decrease after years of increases and the nations capital is still well above where they were in 2014.
Its a function of an increased drug trade due to fentanyl, mostly smuggled in from China, being protected by guns snuck in from the United States.
As members of the street gangs are protecting their environment for the distribution piece of that drug activity, this is where it comes, this is where there is the big game-changer, Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders said in a year-end news conference on Dec. 19.
The chief says that there is no one act that can or will solve the problem in his city but that there needs to be a multifaceted approach. Still he acknowledged that the problem is driven by gangs selling narcotics while using illegal guns.
I believe 82%, give or take, of the crime guns in the city are coming from the United States, Saunders said.
So, if the reasons driving this are drugs from China and guns from the United States, both of which are illegal, why is the Trudeau government trying to solve the problem by banning rifles used in hunting and target shooting?
Mostly because it is easier than dealing with the problem of stopping guns at the border.
There are new sophisticated ways that guns come into the city, Saunders said when asked about methods of gun smuggling such as attaching guns to the bottom of cars. He wouldnt elaborate but tales of cross-border shoppers being used by organized crime to unwittingly smuggle guns across the border abound.
A car is targeted at a cross-border shopping centre, guns and a tracking device are attached to the car and after the shopper returns home, the guns are retrieved.
Stopping that is part of the problem. Instead, the Trudeau government is about to spend twice as much, $600 million, to buy back guns, as they plan on spending over five years to fight guns and gangs in our cities and towns $327 million.
The feds have earmarked only $86 million over five years for the border.
Calgary Police Chief Mark Neufeld told the Calgary Herald that the federal governments actions dont match with what his city is dealing with.
I guess the issue that will have to be reconciled is that with the shootings were having in Calgary, theyre not being perpetrated by lawful, law-abiding handgun owners, Neufeld said.
The Trudeau Liberals are even promising to allow municipalities to ban handguns despite refusing to release any data that suggests banning licenced firearms would reduce shootings by gangsters with illegal weapons.
The battle over guns promises to be one of the big political stories of 2020. Lets hope that the Trudeau government starts to live up to their claim of the first term that they are evidence-based policymakers.
If so, they will abandon their gun buyback and handgun ban ideas and start focusing on actually reducing gun crime at the source.
In 2017, the federal Liberal government announced a five-year plan to fight guns and gangs across Canada. Of that money, $214 million was to be made available to the provinces.
On the border specifically, the government said: $86 million is provided to the CBSA and RCMP to help prevent illegal firearms and concealed goods from coming into the country illegally, while providing necessary resources for firearms investigations.
In September 2019, the Liberals made an election promise saying a re-elected Trudeau government would move fast on banning all military-style assault rifles, including the AR-15.
The promise included a proposal to buy back up to 250,000 rifles from licenced gun owners at a cost of $600 million. Despite being used in several mass shootings in the United States, there is no history of that rifle being used as a crime gun in Canada.
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In Condemning the Occupation, Liberal Jewish Organizations Accept the Anti-Israel Position – Mosaic
Posted: at 3:46 am
Secretary of State Mike Pompeos announcement last November that the U.S. would no longer consider it illegal for Israelis to reside in the West Bank brought widespread condemnationsome of it from mainstream Jewish leaders and organizations. To Asaf Romirowsky, these critics misunderstand not only the historical and legal issues at play but also the underlying causes of the Israel-Palestinian conflict:
The president of the Union for Reform Judaism, Rabbi Rick Jacobs, said the U.S. governments new position on Israeli settlements will undercut the fight against the movement to boycott, divest from, and sanction Israel (BDS) , . . . specifically on college campuses.
It is not clear when Rabbi Jacobs was last on a college campus, but the debate in North American universities is not about the so-called occupation but about whether Israel has a right to exist, period. Pro-BDS groups, including Jewish ones, are talking about the illegitimacy of the 1949 armistice lines, not those of 1967. Moreover, a recent survey . . . shows that most students who care strongly about the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories do not have knowledge of even basic facts on the subject.
Far more than American policy, it is the language of occupation that plays a key role in [the accepted dogma about the] Israel-Palestinian conflict. The main feature of this dogma is the Palestinian claim that their alleged territories are occupied by Israel, regardless of where they are located on the map, much less in any legal sense under international law. The mantra of occupation, and the demand that Israel be shunned until the occupation is endedmeaning the time when Israel is dissolved by the implementation of the Palestinian right of returnis the key demand of the Palestinians and the BDS movement.
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More about: BDS, Israel on campus, Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, Settlements
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In Condemning the Occupation, Liberal Jewish Organizations Accept the Anti-Israel Position - Mosaic
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Overwhelmingly liberal media distort the news and threaten traditional values – cleveland.com
Posted: at 3:46 am
The mainstream media through their hatred and disdain of President Donald Trump have twisted the narrative of what actually happened with the 2016 election, which resulted in the fair and honest election of Trump. The American publics confidence in news reporting is at an all-time low because most Americans with common sense now realize that no one has done more to influence past and future elections than the mainstream media, including newspapers and television networks.
What once was merely an obvious liberal media has now become a leftist-leaning, Democratic partisan arena in which pseudo-journalists and news analysts are not only liberals, but focus on attacking conservatives, depicting them as racists, bigots and homophobes.
Compared to this liberal extremism, conservatism advocates commonsense principles in governance based upon positive traditional values such as our Constitution, law and order, and personal and religious freedoms. Todays liberals denounce nearly all traditional values, claiming they represent an era of racism and bigotry. They choose to ignore positive traditional values like family unity, nationalism based upon a foundation of legal citizenship, and especially the need to enforce our laws against illegal immigration. Those who enter this country illegally with no intention of becoming citizens should not be welcomed - period.
Richard A. Koss,
Wickliffe
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Naming and reclaiming the liberal ideal – OCRegister
Posted: December 29, 2019 at 11:45 pm
On New Years Day, 2000, Nobel laureate James Buchanan challenged his fellow classical liberals to save the soul of liberalism. People need something to yearn and struggle for, he wrote. If the liberal ideal is not there, there will be a vacuum and other ideas will supplant it.
Twenty years later, Buchanans fears seem prescient. Contempt for liberalism is growing at both ends of the ideological spectrumfrom the nationalist right and progressive left. Illiberal ideas and attitudes have seeped into the American mainstream, dismissing not only market liberalism but even more basic principles, like respect for the autonomy and dignity of the individual. At one extreme we see the resurgence of white nationalism; at the other, the renunciation of First Amendment principles.
Now is the time for any liberals left to answer Buchanans challengeto save the soul of liberalism by reclaiming the liberal ideal.
The first step is to name it. The liberal ideal is the good society: a pluralistic and tolerant society in which intellectual and economic progress are the norm, and where individuals and communities flourish in a context of openness, peaceful and voluntary cooperation, and mutual respect.
It was this liberal ideal that animated the American Founding, arguably the first great liberal experiment. This is why in his book The Conservative Sensibility, George Will writes that American conservatives are the custodians of that tradition. They are seeking, Will reminds us, to conserve the Founding principles, the self-evidentiary truth that all men are created equal, and that the role of government is to secure the rights that follow from that truth. Wills conservatism, in other words, is a liberal conservatism that invites the openness and whirl and fluidity of modern life people, ideas, and capital flowing hither and yon.
The second step is to remind ourselves and others that liberalism is the modern worlds greatest achievement. As Deirdre McCloskey argues in her Bourgeois Virtues trilogy and her recently released Why Liberalism Works, since 1776 liberalism produced increasingly free people, wave after wave, including, slaves, lower-class voters, non-Conformists, women, Catholics, Jews, Irish, trade unionists, colonial people, African-Americans, immigrants, socialists, pacifists, women again, gays, people with disabilities, and above all the poor from whom most of us descended
Liberalism, McCloskey argues, is the mother of the Great Enrichmentthe 3,000 percent increase in material abundance over the last 250 years. Far more than pragmatic materialism, the Great Enrichment is a story about liberalisms highest values. Dignity and respect for the common personthe person who offered other common people his wares at a reasonable pricewere the catalyst that tapped humanitys creativity, ingenuity, and productive capacity.
Bundled with other liberal principles such as the rule of law, private property rights, and broad enjoyment of civil liberties, the liberal sensibilities of equality and dignity left dramatically improved conditions, longer lifespans, and more space for economic, scientific, and cultural experimentation in its wake.
But reclaiming the liberal ideal also requires that we take its critics seriously. Contemporary critics on the left and right will point out that liberalisms professed commitment to equality before the law tends to privilege those who already have power. Material abundance, they argue, creates new forms of oppression. Patrick Deneen, for example, argues that far from liberating women, the global marketplace has subjected us to a far more encompassing bondage, leaving a degraded culture in its path.
Liberal social scientists and commentators are no doubt forming their counterarguments in their head. No, we admit, we havent yet achieved the liberal ideal, but with every step forwardthe abolition of slavery, the Civil Rights, Womens Rights, and Gay Rights Movements the liberal ideal has guided our steps. And though the marketplace presents challenges, it also creates viable exit options for those seeking to escape the grip of traditional expectations.
But if we liberals leave this mental conversation there, we will not succeed in addressing Buchanans challenge. The critics of liberalism are casting a vision a vision of a society that is stable, controlled, fair, and certain. What is our response?
Liberals whether we identify as left-of-center, classical liberal, or conservative must recapture the animating spirit of liberalism. We can do this, in part, through practice: by valuing discourse over echo-chamber snark, truth-seeking over tribalism, scholarship over partisanship. Along the way, we must also draw attention to the marvels of liberalism the human flourishing that is made possible whenever and wherever liberal principles have taken hold.
Most importantly, we must acknowledge that the liberal project is incomplete. Working toward the liberal idealtoward a world that embraces openness and individual freedom and rejects nativism and strong-man authoritarianismis the most important work we can be doing. To paraphrase another Nobel laureate, F.A. Hayek, we must once again make the building of a liberal society an intellectual adventure; a deed of courage.
Emily Chamlee-Wright is president of the Institute for Humane Studies.
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Theres a lesson in Boris Johnsons jolliness. Liberal miserabilism is a turn-off – The Guardian
Posted: at 11:45 pm
How miserable are you feeling as you contemplate 2020? Putting aside our individual circumstances, the answer is often closely linked with how we are minded politically. A series of body blows to centrist thinking since the honeymoon period after the cold war gave way to a financial crisis and bitter backwash, followed by the arrival of Donald Trump and a gaggle of nationalist-populists around the globe. Add a resounding Boris Johnson majority at home, midwifing a Brexit on untrammelled terms and liberal grumpiness has its reasons.
But it feels like the right moment to ask whether the gloom-deploying strategy has been so smart. A far-left Labour party served up a recipe of predictions of disaster to dim the fairy lights of the holiday season and suffered calamity at the polls. More broadly, liberals (and not just the Lib Dem kind) need to think about how unattractively miserable they have become and what they might do about it.
One key reason Johnson has prevailed is his ambition and direction. This is being linked with a less attractive character trait, namely recklessness. But here is a politician who has carefully exploited Barnumesque moments to emphasise that he is different from the dreary run of his peers. Some people deem that innately hilarious; others find the antics and confection of his speeches wearing a man-child in leaders clothing.
Still, it would require a political tin ear not to heed his appeal to parts of the country that rejected his partys forebears with such gusto.
North-west Durham, where I grew up, and nearby Bishop Auckland (which has acquired Agincourt significance for victorious Conservatives) are two such fiefs. They switched political course in large part because they were fed up waiting for the Brexit moment to come and because of the not unreasonable view that if you feel left behind in an area where for decades the only language has been Labour, it makes sense to change the language.
A stalwart Labour-voting friend in a Durham constituency told me a couple of weeks before the election that he kept encountering people who were considering switching intentions because Johnson was someone you could sit down for a beer and have a laugh with.
Back in the enclosed political drawing room of Remainy central London, the denunciations of his moral turpitude were a repeated theme. I wish he would just go away, snapped one acquaintance (pointlessly, it turned out).
Reality check it was Anna Soubrys Independent Group for Change that shut up shop at the end of 2019. When I email a prominent Tory defector to the Lib Dems to ask what comes next, he replies simply: Time to do something else. Sands today shift extremely fast and perceptions can differ widely, even before we reach the extremes of politics. Where Johnsons critics saw egregious moral weakness, an on-off relationship with the truth and a threadbare promise to deliver more spending while dealing with the economic and logistical challenges of leaving the EU, a lot of other people disagree. As one of his cabinet puts it: Boris is a personal Rorschach test, in which the inkblot takes on multiple meanings.
Enthusiasm, even if misdirected, is more alluring than bearing a grudge about someone elses vision. Yet the tentacles of pessimism have spread much more broadly among liberals, who traditionally believed in harnessing the best of human endeavour. Liberalism acknowledges the continuing fight of individuals and society against overweening power or obscurantism, but it also needs determination and flexibility.
Does the language of centrist progressives still say this with any gusto? Or is it locked into predicting disasters? The overuse of catastrophic to describe a range of Brexit outcomes is followed by a new contender in the cliche charts deeply troubling (in which the deeply bit means something happened that one had not predicted and is thus confused about).
If the BBC gets unfairly into hot water on charges of skewed impartiality, I might suggest to commissioners, including my beloved bosses at Radio 4, that the tone and range of ideas can tip too easily into woe is us. As much as we relish the Greta Thunberg blasts on climate warnings and lawyers giving stern takes on how democracies might perish, it does reflect a mindset captured by the Pet Shop Boys satirical Miserabilism: Make sure youre always frowning/ It shows the world that youve got substance and depth.
Somehow, the Conservatives have acquired a key liberal trait and vice versa. Tories have long been aligned to a view of mankind with roots in stoicism and gradual change. Yet the leap to leave the EU was also a moment when headstrong instinct prevailed over caution.
Liberals (in the British tradition) flourished politically as the Whig party, embracing institutional and social reform. Even when they miscalculated or sometimes failed (as in the liberal interventions of the early 2000s), the guiding desire was to engage with an evolving world. This did not always make them right, but it did make them a force to be reckoned with in democracies and on the international stage.
These days, the general mode of communication is a miffed sense of being rejected, while telling everyone they were right all along and you will one day realise this. I keep thinking back to Jo Swinsons election night speech, which wanted to tell us that she stood by an open, welcoming, inclusive society (so far, so good), but ended blaming nationalism for eviscerating her party, rather than a poorly thought through Brexit strategy. After a rollicking SNP defeat, we can forgive a bad note or two, but that sourness needs to be dealt with by her successors or anyone with an intention to revive a third force between the far poles of British politics.
Just telling voters that they are the dupes of some vague but regrettable force does not feel open about why the progressive project is struggling in Britain and beyond. Battered centrists, who exist across the parties and beyond them, will need to respond to a new political settlement. They may have to bite their tongues as the prime minister, seeing a changed Conservative landscape before him, boosts investment in the north of England and entrenches in political territories that the centre-left deemed, in the fond but patrician language of Blairism, our people.
The projected reopening of the Newcastle-Ashington-Blyth railway line to boost deprived towns isolated by poor infrastructure will serve as a symbolic moment for the Johnson re-engagement with northern lands (and a useful fillip for more devolution, since the idea was hatched locally, before the election).
Such prospects also offer openings for local people, since they demand attention to the kind of detail and practical decision-making that centrists have long cared about how projects work in practice, the consequences and opportunities for communities and environmental protections. Decentralising will encourage fresh thinking about how to reboot sagging projects such as the city academies for areas outside the metropolis and strategies for public sector revival that go beyond raising spending levels. That is the kind of progress liberals should hold the government to delivering, when the honeymoon is over.
To recover relevance, liberalism needs to change the way it sounds and how it thinks about itself, to make the arguments that matter on how societies heal and flourish, the balance of state and market, and the need to engage voters fully on climate change without alienating them by preachiness. Too many of these arguments will go unheard if the overall tone is self-pity and Bregret. A Greek chorus telling us how awfully the national drama is going will not sell tickets to the great progressive revival.
Lesson one: cheer up a bit. Then figure out how to take on the battle of ideas that still counts.
Anne McElvoy is senior editor at the Economist and presents Across the Red Lines on Radio 4
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GOP wants apology from liberal PAC over ‘regretful’ Trump voter who didn’t vote in 2016 – The Washington TImes
Posted: at 11:45 pm
An allegedly regretful Trump voter in Pennsylvania, highlighted in videos by a Democratic political action committee and by The New York Times, never actually voted in 2016.
News organization JET 24, an ABC affiliate, found after checking county voting records that Mark Graham of Erie County, Pennsylvania, did not vote in the presidential election three years ago.
Mr. Graham is featured in videos funded by America Bridge, a Democratic PAC, as part of a $5 million advertising campaign in the battleground states of Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan.
In an ad, Mr. Graham states, I voted for Donald Trump in 2016 because I thought he would make a change. But he laments the change was not for the good, and complains that the president plays favorites for people like himself he doesnt understand life around here.
He was also featured in two New York Times articles about dissatisfied Trump voters and swing voters. The Times has since issued corrections and verified that Mr. Graham did not vote in 2016.
After it was learned that he didnt vote in 2016, Mr. Graham told Erie News Now that hes a registered Republican and that the ad nevertheless represents his views about the president. He said he participated in a focus group involving Republicans who supported Democrat Ron DiNicola in his failed bid for a U.S. House seat in 2018.
But the Trump campaign noted Friday that American Bridge has yet to take down its ad or apologize.
Well, well, tweeted Trump campaign communications director Tim Murtaugh. Guy who says he voted for Trump and now regrets it didnt actually vote for Trump. In fact, didnt vote at all in 2016. Its cool, though. Democrats at American Bridge (liberal PAC) still put him in an ad and wont take it down.
The Republican Party of Pennsylvania also has called for the PAC to take down the ad and apologize.
The ad is false, its premise is false and its messenger has been discredited, said state Republican Chairman Lawrence Tabas in a statement. The organization could easily have determined that Graham had not voted in 2016 by checking the publicly available records at the Erie County elections office.
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An Order That Shuts Down Christian Charities Doesn’t Deserve To Live – The Federalist
Posted: at 11:45 pm
It is a basic Christian teaching that good works are insufficient for spiritual salvation. We should also remember they are unlikely to suffice for cultural and political salvation either.
Chick-fil-As abandonment of The Salvation Army is yesterdays news, but its lessons should be remembered, for they explain our cultural and political trajectory. That the chicken chain capitulated even though everyone was eating mor chikin is instructive regarding the power of the LBGT lobby and its allies. That they directed this power against a Christian organization dedicated to feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, and sheltering the homeless including those who identify as LGBT is even more instructive.
It exemplifies how hard-liners are driving the cultural left. It is not clear that a majority even of those who identity as LGBT hate The Salvation Army. For example, Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg volunteered for the organization (albeit for a photo op) a couple of years back. Now he is facing criticism from LGBT activists, as those running the movement want total victory, not coexistence. And they are winning.
The campaign included government officials from Buffalo, New York, to San Antonio, Texas, retaliating against Chick-fil-A for its support of The Salvation Army. Even without full control over the government, the left has been aggressive in its use of government power against Christians who believe traditional teachings on human sexuality. The left seems to target particularly those engaged in charitable work, rather than protecting them on account of their good works.
The lefts legal wing is trying to compel Christian hospitals to perform abortions and sex-change surgeries, Christian schools to affirm same-sex relationships, and Christian charities such as womens shelters to pretend men can be women. A purportedly serious Democratic presidential candidate wanted to tax dissenting Christian organizations, including churches, into oblivion.
The left wont even spare elderly nuns. When the Trump administration ended Barack Obamas legal campaign against the Little Sisters of the Poor, various Democratic attorneys general made a point of continuing that unholy effort.
This should not surprise us. Jesus promised that the powers of this world would hate his followers, not that they would love us if we were virtuous. While we Christians should always strive to be more like Christ, we should not succumb to a quasi-Pelagianism that presumes our winsomeness determines how others receive the gospel. Christ himself was crucified, and the grace and charity many martyrs exemplified did not save them from persecution unto death.
But that we should expect trouble in this world does not mean we should be disinterested regarding politics, nor does it excuse governments that oppose the church and oppress its people. That our nation seems to be starting down this path has intensified Christian reconsiderations of liberal political theory. Although our government ostensibly protects the freedoms of religion, association, and speech, procedural liberalism increasingly appears insufficient to protect our rights or to ensure a culture of tolerance and pluralism that includes Christians who maintain the traditional teachings of our faith.
The supposedly neutral principles of the legal left consistently restrict the rights and opportunities of orthodox Christians, and the left always pushes the envelope. Christian litigators should, of course, do their best to defend our rights, and thank God for their efforts, but it should be no surprise that more and more Christians are intrigued by varieties of post-liberal thinking, including previously marginalized ideas such as Catholic integralism. It is understandable that Christians are turning against the system of liberal democratic capitalism as it turns against them.
Post-liberal Christians are unlikely to find their minority status daunting, for they see that minorities can win if they are determined and the institutions they face are weak and full of cowards. After all, a minority of hard-line leftists control cultural, economic, and political pressure points that grant them power far beyond their numbers.
For example, the 2020 Democratic field is so radically pro-abortion that even The New York Times has noticed. The Democratic Party stands for abortion today, abortion tomorrow, and abortion forever, as Sen. Elizabeth Warren illustrated in promising that at her inauguration angels and ministers of grace defend us! she will wear swag to rep the nations largest abortion chain.
Christian post-liberals on the right have seen how readily the liberal center-left and the Chamber-of-Commerce right surrender to the extreme and illiberal left and wonder: Why not us? A decadent and despairing culture with weak institutions and degraded elites is precisely the sort that a determined minority might govern.
Thus, they see an opportunity as our culture disintegrates despite its wealth and technological prowess. Liberal individualism seems to be devouring itself: Fertility is down, loneliness and depression have increased, and deaths of despair from suicide, drugs, and alcohol are way up.
Perhaps it is time to be bold and reorder society toward the highest good, rather than accepting liberalisms dishonest promises of live and let live neutrality. As some post-liberal thinkers note, we increasingly live in a non-Christian integralist society that mandates belief in sectarian dogmas, such as the mystical belief that a man may become indeed, may already be a woman. Therefore, they see the alternative to post-liberal Christian politics not as liberalism, but as some sort of post-Christian illiberal politics.
I am sympathetic to some of the post-liberal thought developing on the right. I see the appeal, especially as liberalisms promise of legal neutrality is exposed as so much fiction. I share many of the critiques of liberal political theory and find its discourse far more interesting than the stale talking points of neoliberals and neoconservatives.
But I am neither Catholic nor Calvinist enough to be much of an integralist, and I remain more skeptical of the likelihood of governmental efficacy and rectitude than many post-liberals seem to be. I also remain attached to many liberal practices, such as the right to trial by jury.
I am, in short, still thinking over these matters and am not entirely in either camp. From this in-between, I would recommend post-liberal thinkers reflect on the frailty and fallibility of human institutions. I also suggest that the defenders of liberal democratic capitalism take the critiques of post-liberals seriously. A liberal order that seeks to shut down Christian charities for nonconformist views on human sexuality does not deserve to survive.
Nathanael Blake is a Senior Contributor at The Federalist. He has a PhD in political theory. He lives in Missouri.
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Liberals are piling on JK Rowling because they aren’t used to disagreeing with artists they like – Washington Examiner
Posted: at 11:45 pm
J.K. Rowling caused quite a stir last week by tweeting out a defense of a British researcher who was fired for having the wrong opinion on transgenderism.
My colleague Madeline Fry wrote about the substance of the controversy, but one thing that has struck me about the tone of the criticism has been the sheer level of sorrow from liberals that an author they liked could take a position they found so problematic. The New York Times ran an op-ed headlined, "Harry Potter Helped Me Come Out as Trans, But J.K. Rowling Disappointed Me.'" An author at Vox declared that Rowling had "ruined Harry Potter."
As conservatives, we're used to disagreeing politically with artists and entertainers who we like. Sure, we may take potshots at Hollywood celebrities or authors, but those of us who consume art, literature, or popular entertainment more or less expect that the producers of such media are going to have political views that we find noxious. It's not as if conservatives just sit around reading C.S. Lewis over and over and watching Clint Eastwood movies. And we aren't shocked if some author, actor, or musician says something we find objectionable. It's our expectation that they will.
But for liberals, there's a broad assumption that artists are going to be more or less on the same page as they are. So that's why it's especially jarring to them if an icon such as Rowling displays insufficient wokeness. And it's why the cultural Left is so quick to jump over any statement by any popular artist or entertainer that deviates from liberal orthodoxy.
In a way, it's similar to why liberals get so irrationally angry about Bari Weiss writing for the New York Times or at conservatives being given a platform at universities. They believe that they should have control over all such institutions.
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Demolishing the Trump campaign’s holiday guide to debating liberal ‘snowflakes’ | TheHill – The Hill
Posted: at 11:45 pm
On Christmas Eve the Trump campaign launched a website to guide its supporters in holiday political debates with their liberal, snowflake relatives. To assist any snowflakes on the receiving end of the campaigns falsehoods and blatant distortions of fact, a point-by-point takedown follows:
The Trump Economy: In demonstrating how strong the Trump economy supposedly is, the campaigns holiday debate guide highlights job growth since Trump assumed office. But job creation has slowed significantly since January 2017. Despite Trumps relentless self-aggrandizing and bragging, a whopping 1 million fewer jobswere created during Trumps first 34 months in office compared to Obamas last 34. Period.
The Trump campaign also points to record low unemployment. In response, snowflakes should show their Trump-supporting friends and relatives a graph of the unemployment rate over the last decade and challenge them to point out where exactly things magically changed when Trump took over. Unsurprisingly, Trump supporters have no response. Unemployment has declined at a consistent rate since early 2010, meaning that nothing changed after Trump became president. Trump is loudly taking credit for the Obama administrations aggressive economic recovery measures which, according to the experts, saved the American economy.
Moreover, Trump promised to bring manufacturing jobs back to the United States. But the truth is that manufacturing now accounts for the smallest shareof the American economy in 72 years.
Thanks to Trumps tariffs, which amounted to the largest tax increase on Americans in decades, farm bankruptcies and farmer suicides have spiked.
Meanwhile, median household income, an important economic measure, has remained largely stagnant over Trumps first three years in office. Trump administration spin aside, increases in household income trail those under Obama, which grew steadilytoward the end of his administration.
Despite Trumps overblown boasts about the economy, his campaign is suspiciously silent on the most important economic measure of them all: Annual economic growth. With Trumps promises of 4 percent, 5 percent, even 6 percent economic growth, his campaigns silence is not surprising. Growth will slow significantly this year, demolishing Trumps absurd predictions of 6 percent growth. Indeed, Trump will end his first term with a high of 2.9 percent growth (in 2018), tying Obamas economic record.
Moreover, stock market gains under Trump lag significantly compared to those under Obama and President Clinton.
When it comes to the economy, Trumps schoolyard boasting is just louder and more relentless than his more-humble predecessors.
Immigration: Deportations are far lower at this point in the Trump administration than they were during the Obama administration.
The Trump campaigns holiday debate guide also attempts to link immigration detention cages to the Obama administration. To be clear, separating migrant families was a Trump administration policy. There was no blanket policy separating children from their parents under previous administrations.
Military Spending by Allies: Trump often takes credit for persuading countries in the NATO alliance to spend more on defense. But our NATO allies have been steadily increasing defense spending since 2014, when Russia invaded eastern Ukraine.
America is now the laughingstockof the world. And, with Trump siding with authoritariansand dictators around the world, American credibility and popularity on the international stage have plummeted to historic lows.
Trade Deals: Without relentless insistence by Democrats on labor and environmental protections, Trumps U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement would have been nearly identical to NAFTA. This is not a win for Trump.
Health care: Trump (and GOP) efforts to undo the Affordable Care Act resulted in 1.1 million Americanslosing health coverage in 2018. This breaks a 10-year streakof rising numbers of insured Americans.
Two-thirds of Americans filing for bankruptcydo so because they cannot afford to pay medical bills often despite having health insurance. Perhaps worse, America is seeing an alarming increasein deaths of despair, particularly among the white, working-class citizens who came out in droves to vote Trump into office. Perhaps their votes for the angry, scapegoating candidate were grounded in a dramatic decline in their health, economic fortunes and overall quality of life.
The Trump Tax Cuts: The Trump campaign claims that Trumps massive tax cuts his only legislative accomplishment are driving economic growth. But a devastating analysis by the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service found that the Trump tax cuts had virtually no effect on the economy. Moreover, the Trump tax cuts did not boost workers wages. Instead, they went to corporate stock buybacks, which benefit the ultra-wealthy.
This stunning lack of economic growth begs the question: Why are we racking up trillions of dollars in debt (much of it bought up by China) thanks to the massive Trump tax cuts for the rich?
Indeed, as a direct result of Trumps tax cuts,2018 was the first year ever that tax revenues actuallydeclined in a relatively strong economy. This paved the way for the Trump administration to post the largest monthly deficit in U.S. history, exploding the federal debt. Where is the Tea Party outrage on this?
While many commentators blame Obama for skyrocketing debt during his administration, they conveniently ignore that those increases according to the U.S. Treasury were overwhelmingly due to the long-term effects of the George W. Bush tax cuts for the ultra-wealthy. This graph makes it quite clear.
Beyond Trumps astronomical debt increases, the only other discernible effect of the Trump tax cuts appears to be an explosion in wealth and income inequality. Indeed, inequality in America is now at levelsnot seen since 1929, when Wall Street greed caused the Great Depression.
For his part, Trump told his ultra-rich friends that You all just got a lot richer immediately after his tax cuts were passed.
Impeachment and Quid Pro Quo: Given the facts, there is zero doubt that Trump withheld crucial military assistance to an ally at war for personal political gain. That is the definition of corruption.
Trumps own political appointees (including his acting chief of staff and budget director), widely-respected diplomats, a Purple Heart recipient,foreign policy professionals, career budget officials (rightly concerned with obeying federal law) and a leading Fox News analyst have all made the presidents corrupt intent an indisputable fact. Indeed, why was critical military aid to Ukraine halted just 91 minutes after Trumps (not-so-perfect) call with the Ukrainian president?
More importantly, if Trump did nothing wrong and has nothing to hide, why is the White House refusing to let four key officials testify? Do innocent people go out of their way to bury the facts?
Why are Republicans supposedly impartial jurors in an impeachment trial engaging in total coordination with the accused? In any other American court the judge would immediately order such jurors removed and replaced before going to trial.
It should hardly be surprising that 55 percent of Americans support Trumps impeachment and removal from office. That number will only grow as more details of Trumps corrupt actions emerge.
Bonus fact: Trump wasagainstproviding lethal military aid to Ukraine, blowing up a favorite Republicantalking point.
Joe BidenJoe BidenWarren: 'If there's a lawful order for a subpoena, I assume' Biden would comply Former Democratic senator on McConnell impeachment strategy: 'Unfathomable' Biden clarifies previous statements about not testifying in Senate impeachment trial MORE and Ukraine: Americas NATO allies, the European Union, the International Monetary Fund and Ukrainian anti-corruption activists all publicly called for the removal of a corrupt and ineffective Ukrainian prosecutor. To the relief of Americas allies and patriotic Ukrainians, Biden managed to get him fired.
Importantly, the Ukrainian company that hired Bidens son was not under investigation when Biden intervened. Moreover, there is zero evidence of wrongdoing by either Biden. On the contrary, the removal of an ineffective prosecutor represented an enormous victory in the fight against endemic corruption in Ukraine. Biden should be commended for his efforts.
Trump, on the other hand, undercut and sidelined the most effective voices against corruption in Ukraine for personal political gain.
The Trump Economy, the Environment, and Oil Production: The Trump campaigns holiday guide claims that Trump has taken important steps to restore, preserve, and protect our land, air, and waters.
Could the campaign be referring to Trump green-lighting toxic emissions of mercury from coal-fired power plants? Or perhaps the litany of ways the Trump administration has dismantled laws and regulations protecting healthy, safe and clean drinking water? Could the campaign be referring to Trump exposing American workers to toxic particulates and dust? The list goes on and on, and its not pretty.
As detailed above, the rollback of these critical health and environmental regulations did not result in a spike in economic growth, making their repeal utterly unnecessary not to mention dangerous for all Americans.
Lastly, the Trump campaign takes credit for the United States becoming the worlds largest oil producer. But this trend began in 2011. Trump had nothing to do with it.
More importantly, with a staggering 120,000 weather records broken in the U.S. this year alone and the worlds top companies projecting at least $1 trillion in costs due to climate change, Trump has very little to crow about.
Marik von Rennenkampff served as an analyst with the U.S. Department of States Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation, as well as an Obama administration appointee at the U.S. Department of Defense. Follow him on Twitter @MvonRen.
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