Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Listen to Joe diGenova



Listen to Joe diGenova
George Parry, The American Spectator 

Now that the Russian collusion hoax has been debunked, and not even the Hillary Clinton acolytes who comprised Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s office saw fit to charge the president with obstruction of justice, the party is about to get very rough for the FBI, Justice Department, and CIA leaders who concocted the hoax and who illegally spied on American citizens. On April 10, 2019, Attorney General William Barr testified before the Senate Appropriations Committee that Donald Trump’s presidential campaign had been spied upon by U.S. intelligence agencies. According to Barr, the “question was whether it [the spying] was adequately predicated.” Barr was careful to state explicitly that he had made no determination as to whether there was adequate justification for the spying, but that he was going to investigate to resolve the issue.

Clearly, Barr was talking about the eponymous and unverified Steele dossier which was used by the FBI and Justice Department to obtain FISA warrants to intercept the communications of Trump campaign associate Carter Page and, by extension, everyone in or out of the Trump campaign with whom he communicated.

Predictably Barr’s testimony resulted in a tidal wave of apoplectic outrage by Democrats and their media adjunct. Some denounced Barr as a shill for Trump while others called for his impeachment.

Now it appears that Barr was only hinting at the enormity of what is actually being investigated.

Joseph diGenova is the former U. S. Attorney for the District of Columbia and a former legal counsel to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. He has also been a frequent commentator on Fox News and Washington’s WMAL Radio. Throughout the Trump-Russia collusion fiasco and Team Mueller’s investigation of the president, diGenova has proven to be a reliable source of information as to what was happening behind the scenes. His pronouncements and predictions have consistently proven to be true.

On April 24, 2019, diGenova appeared on the Ingraham Angle and made his most explosive predictions yet. Here’s the link to the videoWhat follows below is a partial transcript of his remarks starting at 27 seconds into the broadcast.
It has been evident from day one that there was a brazen plot to exonerate Hillary Clinton illegally, and then, if she lost the election, to frame Donald Trump. This [Steele] dossier was a knowing part of that. It was created by Hillary Clinton. It was created knowingly by [former CIA Director] John Brennan as part of a scheme to do everything they could to harm Donald Trump.
The problem for Brennan and [former Director of National Intelligence]Clapper and [former FBI Director] Comey and [former FBI General Counsel] Baker and all of them now is, is that the FISA Court has already communicated with the Justice Department about its findings. And their findings are that from more than four years before the election of Donald Trump, there was an illegal spying operation going on by FBI [private] contractors — four of them — to steal personal information, electronic information about Americans and to use it against the Republican Party.
There are going to be indictments. There’s going to be grand juries. John Brennan isn’t going to need one lawyer. He’s going to need five!
After the discussion turned to the upcoming report by the Justice Department’s Inspector General, diGenova made another stunning prediction, to wit:
There’s another report that everybody has forgotten about that involves James Comey alone. That will be out in two weeks. That report is going to be a bombshell. It’s going to open the investigation on a very high note. 
The FISA Court abuse is the center of this entire abuse of governmental power. The Chief Judge of that court [Rosemary M. Collyer] has already ruled that the FBI broke the law and that the people at the head of the [Obama] Justice Department — [former Deputy Attorney General] Sally Yates, John Carlin, the Assistant Attorney General for National Security, all knew about it and lied to the court, the FISA Court, about it.
Near the end of the show, diGenova concluded his remarks as follows:
There is a hero in this entire story, and it’s not a lawyer. All the bad people in this story are lawyers. There’s a hero. His name is Admiral Mike Rogers. He was the head of the National Security Agency. He discovered the illegal spying. He went personally to the FISA Court and briefed the Chief Judge and worked with her for months to uncover the people who did it. The FISA Court has already told the Justice Department who lied to that court and that has been given to [Attorney General] Bill Barr already.
Much of what diGenova said is partially supported by Chief Judge Collyer’s heavily redacted April 26, 2017, Memorandum Opinion, which is linked here. Reading and understanding the opinion is very difficult due to its use of technical and legal terms and extensive redactions at strategic points. The opinion states that it was the National Security Agency that brought the abuses to the court’s attention and that raw intelligence data from FISA intercepts had been illegally disseminated to “private contractors” working for the FBI. If you make the effort to read it, the juiciest parts start on page 82.

So, there it is. If diGenova’s track record holds, a legal rain of ruin is about to befall the deep state operatives who tried to steal the 2016 election and, failing that, to unwind the result. And if, in fact, the enormous surveillance powers of our intelligence agencies were usurped by the Obama administration to spy for years before the election on the opposing political party, then the implications go far beyond just one election and one presidential candidate. If that happened, then there can be no doubt that, when candidate Obama promised to “fundamentally transform America,” he really meant it. If Obama’s “fundamental transformation” involved not only the atrocious harassment and intimidation of the Tea Party patriots by his Internal Revenue Service but also included surveillance state spying on the Republican Party generally, there must be no question about whether the deep state actors should be punished for their actions.

Think about it. The Watergate burglary was a bungled attempt by the Committee to Re-Elect President Nixon to break into Democrat headquarters to plant listening devices in the telephones. The burglary failed, but the national outrage at the mere attempt drove Nixon from office and sent members of his administration to prison. As bad as that was, at least the Nixon campaign didn’t corrupt the FBI and CIA to do its dirty work. So it is that, if our official law enforcement and intelligence agencies were co-opted by the Obama administration to illegally spy on American citizens and the opposition party, this will be the worst governmental scandal and threat to our civil liberties in the history of the nation.

If Joe diGenova is right, the very survival of the rule of law and our constitutional republic mandates that these treasonous thugs — no matter how highly placed in the Obama administration — be exposed, charged, and imprisoned.

George Parry is a former federal and state prosecutor who practices law in Philadelphia. He is a regular contributor to the Philadelphia Inquirer and blogs at knowledgeisgood.net. He can be reached by email at atkignet1@gmail.com.

Friday, April 26, 2019

Warren’s Student Loan Forgiveness is an Upper Class Entitlement

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Warren’s Student Loan Forgiveness is an Upper-Class Entitlement
Dan Bongino, Debunk-this 

Elizabeth Warren’s idea to forgive the nation’s student loan debt is a fantastic idea – if you’re in favor of redistributing money up the wealth distribution.

Warren wants to forgive up to $50,000 worth of student loan debt for borrowers with household incomes of less than $250,000 (meaning this will essentially apply to everyone who isn’t a med-school graduate), which she believes will cost $640 billion and then an additional $610 billion over 10 years to make college tuition free for future students at public universities.

It’s no secret that those who attend college are generally more affluent than those who don’t – though interestingly, a larger share of poor people attend college in America than in Denmark, where college is tuition free. While I’m certain Warren would like to paint the image of the poor burdened by student loan debt, it’s surprisingly easy for the poor to take on no student loan debt due to existing government programs. The average Pell Grant a poor American student would be eligible for in 2017-2018 of $4,010 was higher than the average community college tuition that year ($3,347), and the maximum Pell Grant of $5,920 covered most of the average in-state college tuition that year ($9,970).

While tuition is hardly the only cost associated with college, I bring up Pell Grants only to make the point that there already is a system making it possible for lower-income earners to incur minimal student loan debt (far below the national average of nearly $30,000). That’s relevant, because it means that the poor wouldn’t be those benefiting from Warren’s student loan forgiveness, as a new analysis from the Brookings Institution shows:

[Under Warren’s proposal] the top 20 percent of households receive about 27 percent of all annual savings, and the top 40 percent about 66 percent. The bottom 20 percent of borrowers by income get only 4 percent of the savings. Borrowers with advanced degrees [Master’s degree or higher] represent 27 percent of borrowers, but would claim 37 percent of the annual benefit.



The logistics of Warren’s debt forgiveness are also inconsistent. While she wants to make public colleges tuition free, she wants to forgive student loan debt from all colleges public and private – but a large chunk of student debt for many students comes from living related expenses (hence why there are similar levels of student loan debt in Scandinavia, where college is tuition free, and America). Student loan debt will still accumulate with “free’ college,” so should we expect a student loan debt bailout every couple of years?

While Senator Warren’s proposal offers “free college” at public institutions (another regressive element given 35 percent of public college students are from families in the top 20 percent of the income distribution), millions of students will continue to borrow to attend private institutions, graduate and professional schools, and to cover living expenses while enrolled. How can we sustain a system with open-ended borrowing and broadly available loan forgiveness?

Some other points worth considering:
Warren’s proposal effectively makes those who never attended college help pay off the debt of those who did. How is this fair, when college graduates out-earn those who never attended? Additionally, as already established, those who attend college in the first place tend to come disproportionately from families in the top 20% of the income distribution.
Playing off the point above, over “90 percent of children from the highest-income families have attended college by age 22 versus 35 percent from the lowest-income families.”
Warren’s cost estimates for “free” public college are conservative, because they aren’t accounting for the fact that there would be a massive influx of new public-college students fleeing private-college tuition.
Warren’s plan would save the poorest student loan borrowers an average of $569 a year, compared to $2,653 for someone in the 80th to 90th income percentile (and the latter far outnumber the former). While Republican politicians have been lacking in drafting solutions to combat the student debt crisis – I can’t imagine it’s hard to come up with a plan better than Warren’s.

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Obama administration’s spying on the Trump campaign




Behind the Obama administration’s shady plan to spy on the Trump campaign
Andrew C. McCarthy, NYPost


In Senate testimony last week, Attorney General William Barr used the word “spying” to refer to the Obama administration, um, spying on the Trump campaign. Of course, fainting spells ensued, with the media-Democrat complex in meltdown. Former FBI Director Jim Comey tut-tutted that he was confused by Barr’s comments since the FBI’s “surveillance” had been authorized by a court.

(Needless to say, the former director neglected to mention that the court was not informed that the bureau’s “evidence” for the warrants was unverified hearsay paid for by the Clinton campaign.)

The pearl-clutching was predictable. Less than a year ago, we learned the Obama administration had used a confidential informant — a spy — to approach at least three Trump campaign officials in the months leading up to the 2016 election, straining to find proof that the campaign was complicit in the Kremlin’s hacking of Democratic emails.

As night follows day, we were treated to the same Beltway hysteria we got this week: Silly semantic carping over the word “spying” — which, regardless of whether a judge authorizes it, is merely the covert gathering of intelligence about a suspected wrongdoer, organization or foreign power.
There is no doubt that the Obama administration spied on the Trump campaign. As Barr made clear, the real question is: What predicated the spying? Was there a valid reason for it, strong enough to overcome our norm against political spying? Or was it done rashly? Was a politically motivated decision made to use highly intrusive investigative tactics when a more measured response would have sufficed, such as a “defensive briefing” that would have warned the Trump campaign of possible Russian infiltration?

Last year, when the “spy” games got underway, James Clapper, Obama’s director of national intelligence, conceded that, yes, the FBI did run an informant — “spy” is such an icky word — at Trump campaign officials; but, we were told, this was merely to investigate Russia. Cross Clapper’s heart, it had nothing to do with the Trump campaign. No, no, no. Indeed, the Obama administration only used an informant because — bet you didn’t know this — doing so is the most benign, least intrusive mode of conducting an investigation.

Me? I’m thinking the tens of thousands of convicts serving lengthy sentences due to the penetration of their schemes by informants would beg to differ. (Gee, Mr. Gambino, I assure you, this was just for your own good . . .) And imagine the Democrats’ response if, say, the Bush administration had run a covert intelligence operative against Obama 2008 campaign officials, including the campaign’s co-chairman. Surely David Axelrod, Chuck Schumer, The New York Times and Rachel Maddow would chirp that “all is forgiven” once they heard Republicans punctiliously parse the nuances between “spying” and “surveillance”; between “spies” and “informants”; and between investigating campaign officials versus investigating the campaign proper — and the candidate.

The “spying” question arose last spring when we learned that Stefan Halper, a longtime source for the CIA and British intelligence, had been tasked during the FBI’s Russia investigation to chat up three Trump campaign advisers: Carter Page, George Papadopoulos, and Sam Clovis. This was in addition to earlier revelations that the Obama Justice Department and FBI had obtained warrants to eavesdrop on Page’s communications, beginning about three weeks before the 2016 election.

The fact that spying had occurred was too clear for credible denial. The retort, then, was misdirection: There had been no spying on Donald Trump or his campaign; just on a few potential bad actors in the campaign’s orbit.

It was nonsense then, and it is nonsense now.

The pols making these claims about what the FBI was doing might have been well served by listening to what the FBI said it was doing.

There was, for example, then-Director Comey’s breathtaking public testimony before the House Intelligence Committee on March 20, 2017. Comey did not just confirm the existence of a counterintelligence probe of Russian espionage to influence the 2016 election — notwithstanding that the government customarily refuses to confirm the existence of any investigation, let alone a classified counterintelligence investigation. The director further identified the Trump campaign as a subject of the probe, even though, to avoid smearing people, the Justice Department never identifies uncharged persons or organizations that are under investigation. As Comey put it:
“I have been authorized by the Department of Justice to confirm that the FBI, as part of our counterintelligence mission, is investigating the Russian government’s efforts to interfere in the 2016 presidential election and that includes investigating the nature of any links between individuals associated with the Trump campaign and the Russian government and whether there was any coordination between the campaign and Russia’s efforts . . .”
The FBI was spying, and it was doing so in an investigation of the Trump campaign. That is why, for over two years, Washington has been entranced by the specter of “Trump collusion with Russia” — not Page or Papadopoulos collusion with Russia. Comey went to extraordinary lengths to tell the world that the FBI was not merely zeroing in on individuals of varying ranks in the campaign; the main question was whether the Trump campaign itself — the entity — had “coordinated” in Russia’s espionage operation.

In the months prior to the election, as its Trump-Russia investigation ensued, some of the overtly political, rabidly anti-Trump FBI agents running the probe discussed among themselves the prospect of stopping Trump, or of using the investigation as an “insurance policy” in the highly unlikely event that Trump won the election. After Trump’s stunning victory, the Obama administration had a dilemma: How could the investigation be maintained if Trump were told about it? After all, as president, he would have the power to shut it down.

On Jan. 6, 2017, Comey, Clapper, CIA Director John Brennan and National Security Agency chief Michael Rogers visited President-elect Trump in New York to brief him on the Russia investigation.

Just one day earlier, at the White House, Comey and then–Acting Attorney General Sally Yates had met with the political leadership of the Obama administration — President Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and national security adviser Susan Rice — to discuss withholding information about the Russia investigation from the incoming Trump administration.

Rice put this sleight-of-hand a bit more delicately in the memo about the Oval Office meeting (written two weeks after the fact, as Rice was leaving her office minutes after Trump’s inauguration):
“President Obama said he wants to be sure that, as we engage with the incoming team, we are mindful to ascertain if there is any reason that we cannot share information fully as it relates to Russia. [Emphasis added.]”
It is easy to understand why Obama officials needed to discuss withholding information from Trump. They knew that the Trump campaign — not just some individuals tangentially connected to the campaign — was the subject of an ongoing FBI counterintelligence probe. An informant had been run at campaign officials. The FISA surveillance of Page was underway — in fact, right before Trump’s inauguration, the Obama administration obtained a new court warrant for 90 more days of spying.

In each Page surveillance warrant application, after describing Russia’s espionage operations, the Justice Department told the court, “The FBI believes that the Russian Government’s efforts are being coordinated with Candidate #1’s campaign[.]” Candidate #1 was Donald Trump — now, the president-elect.

The fact that the Trump campaign was under investigation for collaborating with Russia was not just withheld from the incoming president; it had been withheld from the congressional “Gang of Eight.”

In his March 2017 House testimony, answering questions by Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY), then-director Comey acknowledged that congressional leadership was not told about the Trump-Russia probe during quarterly briefings from July 2016 through early March 2017, because “it was a matter of such sensitivity.” Let’s put aside that the need to alert Congress to sensitive matters is exactly why there is a Gang of Eight (comprised of bipartisan leaders of both chambers and their intelligence committees).

Manifestly, the matter was deemed too “sensitive” for disclosure because that would have involved telling Republican congressional leadership that the incumbent Democratic administration was using foreign counterintelligence powers to investigate the Republican presidential campaign, and the party’s nominee, as suspected clandestine agents of the Kremlin.

How to keep the investigation going when Trump took office? The plan called for Comey to put the new president at ease by telling him he was not a suspect. This would not have been a credible assurance if Comey had informed Trump that (a) his campaign had been under investigation for months, and (b) the FBI had told a federal court it suspected Trump campaign officials were complicit in Russia’s cyber-espionage operation.

So, consistent with President Obama’s instructions at the Jan. 5, 2017, Oval Office meeting, information about the investigation would be withheld from the president-elect. The next day, the intelligence chiefs would tell Trump only about Russia’s espionage, not about the Trump campaign’s suspected “coordination” with the Kremlin. Then, Comey would apprise Trump about only a sliver of the Steele dossier — just the lurid story about peeing prostitutes, not the dossier’s principal allegations of a traitorous Trump-Russia conspiracy.

This strategy did not sit well with everyone at the FBI. Shortly before meeting with Trump on Jan. 6, Comey consulted his top advisers about the plan to tell Trump he was not a suspect. In later Senate testimony, Comey admitted that there was an objection from one FBI official:

“One of the members of the leadership team had a view that, although it was technically true [that] we did not have a counterintelligence file case open on then-President-elect Trump[,] . . . because we’re looking at the potential . . . coordination between the campaign and Russia, because it was . . . President-elect Trump’s campaign, this person’s view was, inevitably, [Trump’s] behavior, [Trump’s] conduct will fall within the scope of that work.”

Note that Comey did not refer to “potential coordination” between, say, Carter Page or Paul Manafort and Russia. The director was unambiguous: The FBI was investigating “potential coordination between the Trump campaign and Russia.”

Perspicaciously, Comey’s unidentified adviser connected the dots: (a) because the FBI’s investigation focused on the campaign, and (b) since the campaign was Trump’s campaign, it was necessarily true that (c) Trump’s own conduct was under FBI scrutiny.

Then-director Comey’s reliance on the trivial administrative fact that the FBI had not written Trump’s name on the investigative file did not change the reality that Trump, manifestly, was the main subject of the “Crossfire Hurricane” investigation.

Remember last year’s hullabaloo over special counsel Robert Mueller’s demand to interview the president? What need would there have been to conduct such an interview if Trump were not a subject of the investigation? Why would Trump’s political opponents have spent the last two years demanding that Mueller be permitted to complete his probe of collusion and obstruction if it were not understood that the investigation — including the spying, or, if you prefer, the electronic surveillance, the informant sorties, and the information gathered by national-security letter demands — was centrally about Donald Trump?

That brings us to a final point. Congressional investigations have established that the Obama Justice Department and the FBI used the Steele dossier to obtain FISA court warrants against Page.

Clinton campaign, DNC helped fund infamous Trump dossier
The dossier, a Clinton campaign opposition research project (again, a fact withheld from the FISA court), was essential to the required probable-cause showing; the FBI’s former deputy director, Andrew McCabe, testified that without the dossier there would have been no warrant.

So . . . what did the dossier say? The lion’s share of it alleged that the Trump campaign was conspiring with the Kremlin to corrupt the election, including by hacking and publicizing Democratic Party e-mails. This allegation was based on unidentified Russian sources whom the FBI could not corroborate; then-director Comey told Senate leaders that the FBI used the information because the bureau judged former British spy Christopher Steele to be credible, even though (a) Steele did not make any of the observations the court was being asked to rely on, and (b) Steele had misled the FBI about his contacts with the media — with whom Steele and his Clinton campaign allies were sharing the same information he was giving the bureau.

It is a major investigative step to seek surveillance warrants from the FISA court. Unlike using an informant (a human spy), for which no court authorization is necessary, applications for FISA surveillance require approvals at the highest levels of the Justice Department and the FBI. After going through that elaborate process, the Obama Justice Department and the FBI presented to the court the dossier’s allegations that the Trump campaign was coordinating with Russia to undermine the 2016 election.

To be sure, no sensible person argues that the government should refrain from investigating if, based on compelling evidence, the FBI suspects individuals — even campaign officials, even a party’s nominee — of acting as clandestine agents of a hostile foreign power. The question is: What should trigger such an investigation in a democratic republic whose norms strongly discourage an incumbent administration’s use of the government’s spying powers against political opponents?

The Obama administration decided that this norm did not apply to the Trump campaign. If all the Obama administration had been trying to do was check out a few bad apples with suspicious Russia ties, the FBI could easily have alerted any of a number of Trump campaign officials with solid national-security credentials — Rudy Giuliani, Jeff Sessions, Chris Christie. The agents could have asked for the campaign’s help. Instead, Obama officials made the Trump campaign the subject of a counterintelligence investigation.

That only makes sense if the Obama administration’s premise was that Donald Trump himself was a Russian agent.

Andrew C. McCarthy, a former federal prosecutor, is a contributing editor of National Review.

Friday, April 12, 2019

THE VAST DEEP STATE CONSPIRACY




THE VAST DEEP STATE CONSPIRACY
Joseph Sullivan


After almost 3 years of continuous vitriol from Democrats and the “mainstream media” about Donald Trump and “Russian Collusion”, I’m experiencing a renewed  “spring” in my step over the past several weeks.

After watching Delusion and Mania playing-out right before our eyes, William Barr’s short, concise comments earlier this week speak volumes.  The chalk-lines around the real “body of evidence” are about to be drawn, and William Barr’s investigation is likely to find the skeletons heretofore hidden in the inter-connected closets of the Obama administration.

What’s becoming apparent is that the highest officials of the FBI, CIA, NSA, and Obama’s DOJ all conspired to keep Donald Trump from being elected President – and by extension – to ensure that Hillary Clinton would become be.  Had this plot succeeded,  all of these henchmen would most likely have remained at the top levels in the ill-fated Hillary Clinton Administration and the American people would simply have been none-the-wiser.
 
The FISA Court judges - all of whom operate in anonymity - received false and tainted reports from the FBI.  Yet they duplicitously went along with the “schemes” enabling the FBI to spy on and twist Trump’s allies into being witnesses for the PERsecution…  Only one of them (Cohen) ever did (and then to a very limited degree which did not implicate Trump in either “collusion” or “obstruction of justice”).  General Flynn and others were subjected to intense investigative pressure which obligated them to defend themselves at great personal expense.  A few of these finally buckled under the financial strain and pleaded guilty to process crimes totally unrelated to their connections to Mr. Trump.  This was a clear case of “prosecution by persecution”.  All along the way, those shadowy characters serving anonymously on the FISA Court provided the warrants and authorities necessary for American citizens to be spied-upon by the highest levels of the American Security Services.

Let’s keep in mind that this whole sack of fertilizer was completely contrived based on a false “dossier” from a former British spy and was bought and paid-for by the Hillary Clinton Campaign.  All of the conspirators knew it - even as they pressed-on with a modern-day coup d’état – played out in plain view.
 
These crimes were not only committed against President Trump - they were pursued against the expressed will of the American people - demonstrated by the results of the 2016 Presidential election…

 … yet none of that stopped any of them, and any single one of them could have brought an end to this conspiracy.  Obviously, they were “all in” for a Clinton presidency.

As for me, it’s never been just a simple matter of my support for President Trump or my general satisfaction with his administration of the Executive Branch.   It’s so much more than that!  Because had the allegations against him been proven to be true – I would be bound by my core-beliefs as a constitutional-conservative to support Trump’s impeachment and removal from office.

Ironically, we’re now able to paraphrase Hillary Clinton herself - because this was indeed a ‘vast deep state conspiracy’ of entrenched government officials to defeat candidate Trump or (subsequently) remove him from office as the duly-elected President of the United States.  But now, the “conspiracy” directly implicates Hillary Clinton and (potentially) President Obama himself!

What I find simple beyond credibility is how Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi can express “disappointment” that Attorney General Barr might begin to look into the Who, How and Why of this treason and treachery ever happened in the first place.  On the other hand, what else should we expect from Democrats – given their open hostility to Donald Trump and his supporters who now expect and demand that the “Department of Justice” turn its focus upon those who so richly deserve to have the full investigative power of the Department of Justice turned upon them.   The fact that they fell just short of achieving their coup might “disappoint” many Democrat-Socialists in their on-going efforts to permanently relegate our country to third-world status…

Instead, it’s time for “The Reckoning” – and not just because we’re vindictive, but because we owe it to our children and grandchildren to remove this disgusting cancer upon the American body politic.  We are obliged to punish the guilty harshly as an example to all about what real justice brings to traitors, conspirators and swamp rats who are so clearly driven by their hate for those who politically oppose them.  To do anything less brings shame upon our system of justice and gives satisfaction to our adversaries all around the world who wish us no good.  Worse yet, it tells those in struggling democracies that they should not follow our lead anymore.

We are about to find out if we have the courage to prove to the world that we can apply blind justice “due process”, while holding the guilty accountable regardless of their perceived “prestige” associated with being high-profile public figures.  We must re-assert the principle that “equal justice under law” still rules in the greatest democratic republic in the world.
 
Every crisis and challenge presents us with opportunities to make this great country even greater…

HEALTHCARE – A “Right” or a “Privilege”?



HEALTHCARE – A “Right” or a “Privilege”?
Joseph Sullivan

Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders - the declared Socialist candidate for President in 2020  - is releasing his new initiative today which would provide government-paid health insurance for all. 



He asserts that “healthcare is a right - not a privilege!”...



Not so fast Bernie!...



Like so many Democrat-Socialists these days, Sanders uses the spoken word to elevate his statement-of-opinion up to the level of being a statement-of-fact.  Socialists are all adept at claiming “facts” and “rights” where none actually exist.  It’s as if saying that something is a “fact” - absent any proof - makes it a fact from that point onward!  Those unable to apply “critical thinking” are easily drawn-in by such things.



In fairness to Senator Sanders, he’s certainly not breaking any new ground with his assertion that “healthcare for all” is a “right” in our country.  So far, it’s been just beyond their reach.  Their ultimate objective is a distribution model based on “Medicare” - modified as a platform for universally provided - and taxpayer-paid healthcare for all while driving the healthcare insurance industry out of business which is attractive and desirable among anti-capitalists.  


What they claim as a “right” is actually a “service” where medical providers and hospitals deliver healthcare to patient-consumers.

Previously, payment for healthcare services varied - ranging from self-pay (cash or monthly payments), private health insurance as well as government-funded “entitlement” programs.  The government-paid model was originally intended as a “safety-net” for those who lacked the ability to pay and/or did not have privately paid health insurance.  Medicare was later passed into law as a part of Social Security and was intended primarily for senior citizens and disabled Americans.  As such, these benefits were passed into law with strong bi-partisan support.



The Social Security Trust Fund was originally designed to take payroll taxes collected from current wage-earners and place them into a secure fund for the eventual benefit of those aforementioned seniors and disabled Americans.  Congress subsequently  “raided” the SCTF repeatedly to finance other forays into additional social programs.  Further, the definition of “disabled” has been broadened over time to include persons unable to work due to drug addiction and alcoholism, etc.  Most recently, non-citizens can now qualify to receive Medicare and Social Security benefits so long as they have paid into the Social Security System through payroll tax deductions.



Currently, the Social Security Trust Fund is overly committed and under-funded because of the combined effects of an exploded base of beneficiaries and Congressional re-appropriation of SCTF funds into programs that should have been funded otherwise.  (Congress has accomplished this by essentially putting an IOU into the SCTF -promising some unspecified future date of payment).

And so, the Democrat-Socialists have pressed-on with their abuse of the government-funded “safety-net”, putting the future solvency of the entire program in jeopardy.  As is always the case, they are ready and willing to expand programs into deficit-spending - ”kicking the can” of paying for this bloated, sinking system down the road for someone else to resolve – most likely the next generation of American tax-payers.   None of this has been resolved to date...  and no solutions are offered by those serial-abusers of the “social safety net”.  

The manner by which “opinions” are asserted to be “facts” is a political tactic designed to confound a simple-minded audience who lack the ability to differentiate between “opinions” and “facts” – instead of feeding on class-envy…  

When matter-of-fact statements such as Sanders (and others) make about providing “services” without cost (to the individual) - there is a false presumption created that the services are “cost-free”.  This accounts for why healthcare consumers go to the Emergency Room to obtain re-prescription of medications or treatment for “ailments” such as a common cold or flu – (none of which require treatment at an “Emergency Room”).  This demonstrates that when there is no cost to a consumer - there is no self-imposed discipline that would limit the consumer from frequently using (abusing) the opportunity to receive medical services in a place intended to treat real “emergencies”.



Real “facts” are stubborn things... as they should be.  As such, the assertion of “facts” and “rights” needs to be held up to the sterilizing light of day.  In a world filled with “takers” and “givers”, it’s an important distinction.  Unchecked, individual “rights” codified into law will always reach-out beyond their original intent. 

“Incrementalism” is the gradual process of growing the scope of standing law into purposes that were not intended as a part of the original law when it was passed and implemented.  Social justice activists too often succeed in incrementally changing the law through legislative action, liberal court decisions and by over-reach by government regulators. 

[Remember this the next time you encounter someone who complains that voting in elections is just a waste of their time – or when someone tells you that it’s actually a good thing when the Congress is controlled by a political party which opposes the administration of the current president.]

 “Eternal Vigilance” must be the watch-word… and this describes and defines us as “Conservatives”.  

Monday, April 08, 2019

All the Progressive Plotters

The Trumpeter...

All the Progressive Plotters
Victor Davis Hanson ~ American Greatness 

Right after the 2016 election, Green Party candidate Jill Stein—cheered on by Hillary Clinton dead-enders—sued in three states to recount votes and thereby overturn Donald Trump’s victory in the Electoral College. Before the quixotic effort imploded, Stein was praised as an iconic progressive social justice warrior who might stop the hated Trump from even entering the White House.

When that did not work, B-list Hollywood celebrities mobilized, with television and radio commercials, to shame electors in Trump-won states into not voting for the president-elect during the official Electoral College balloting in December 2016. Their idea was that select morally superior electors should reject their constitutional directives and throw the election into the House of Representatives where even more morally superior NeverTrump Republicans might join with even much more morally superior Democrats to find the perfect morally superior NeverTrump alternative.

When that did not work, more than 60 Democratic House members voted to bring up Trump’s impeachment for vote. Trump had only been in office a few weeks. Then San Francisco billionaire Tom Steyer toured the country and lavished millions on advertisements demanding Trump’s removal by impeachment—and was sorely disappointed when he discovered that billion-dollar-fueled virtue-signaling proved utterly bankrupt virtue-signaling.

When that did not work, celebrities and politicians hit social media and the airwaves to so demonize Trump that culturally it would become taboo even to voice prior support for the elected president. Their chief tool was a strange new sort of presidential assassination chic, as Madonna, David Crosby, Robert de Niro, Johnny Depp, Snoop Dogg, Peter Fonda, Kathy Griffin, and a host of others linguistically vied with one another in finding the most appropriately violent end of Trump—blowing him up, burning him up, beating him up, shooting him up, caging him up, or decapitating him. Apparently, the aim—aside from careerist chest-thumping among the entertainment elite—was to lower the bar of Trump disparagement and insidiously delegitimize his presidency.

When that did not work, during the president’s first year in office, the Democrats and the media at various times sought to invoke the 25th Amendment, claiming Trump was so mentally or physically impaired that he was not able to carry out the duties of president. At one point, congressional Democrats called Yale University psychiatrist Dr. Bandy X. Lee to testify that Trump was unfit to continue. In fact, to prove her credentials, Lee edited The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump that offered arguments from 27 psychiatrists and other mental health experts. In May 2017, acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein met secretly in efforts to poll Trump cabinet members to discover whether they could find a majority to remove Trump from office—again on grounds that he was mentally unbalanced. According to McCabe, Rosenstein offered to wear a wire, in some sort of bizarre comic coup attempt to catch Trump off-guard in a confidential conversation.

When that did not work, 200 congressional Democrats in late 2018 sued in federal court to remove President Trump, claiming he had violated the esoteric Emoluments Clause of the Constitution that forbids federal officials from taking gifts, jobs, and titles from foreign governments. They alleged Trump’s presidency has enhanced his overseas real estate holdings and interests. Yet, according to some sources, the various Trump companies have lost some $1 billion in value after he took office—to the delight of the same critics who swore he has profited enormously as president.

When that did not work, the ongoing “Resistance” both covertly and overtly sought ways to retard or destroy the Trump presidency—often by leaking presidential memos, conversations, and phone calls. An anonymous op-ed published in the New York Times on September 15, 2018 boasted of a plan of resistance to his governance and initiatives from those in the administrative state from inside the Trump Administration, most of them allegedly establishment Republicans.

When that did not work, progressive heartthrob lawyer and now indicted Michael Avenatti reintroduced pornographic film star Stormy Daniels to the public. He claimed that Daniels had somehow been tricked into signing a supposedly improper and now invalid non-disclosure agreement not to talk about an alleged sexual encounter of a decade earlier with private citizen Trump in an exchange for a payment of $135,000.

Allegedly, Trump’s acquiescence to Daniels’ veritable blackmail demands had now impaired her own opportunities of further profiting to a far greater degree from the past alleged tryst with a now President Trump. Until his recent indictment for a number of felonies, Avenatti himself had translated his work with Daniels into media celebrity-hood, appearing over 100 times on cable news shows to damn Trump, predict his impeachment, and prep his promised 2020 presidential run against Trump.

When that did not work, federal law enforcement officials stormed the offices of Trump lawyer Michael Cohen, in search of incriminating materials. Cohen quickly was leveraged by federal attorneys, flipped, and offered anti-Trump testimonies and documents in exchange for leniency. He produced stealth tapes of private conversations with his own client Trump—and shortly afterward was disbarred by the New York State Supreme Court for pleading guilty to a series of felonies.

When that did not work, Russian collusion hysteria continued to sweep the country. The moribund phony Steele dossier (that had failed to derail the Trump campaign and transition) was reignited by the media and progressive politicos after the firing of FBI director James Comey, leading to the recusal of Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and the emergence of Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein.

Rosenstein then appointed Robert Mueller as special counsel—in a series of events prompted by none other than fired James Comey, who admitted that he illegally leaked confidential, if not some classified, presidential memos to create the conditions necessary for such a special appointment. Mueller’s subsequent media darling attorneys—praised as the “dream team,” “all-stars,” “army,” “untouchables,” and “hunter-killer team”—of mostly Democratic partisans, some Clinton donors, and a few who had defended either the Clinton Foundation or Clinton aides then spent 22 months, and between $30-40 million trying to build a case. In the end, they leveraged mostly minor Trump satellites on process crimes, misleading testimonies, or past business deals in hopes of finding collusionary guilt. Leaking was a Mueller team trademark as each week the collusionary media announced another “bombshell” or “noose tightening” around the neck of Donald Trump—or mysteriously showed up at the home of the next Mueller victim, to wait for the arrival of SWAT teams to swoop into make an arrest.

When that did not work, congressional committees and the left-wing mob next went after William Barr, Trump’s “hand-picked” attorney general (are not all AGs “hand-picked” by the president?). Barr’s crime was that he had followed the law to the letter. And so Barr spent a few days after the arrival of the exonerating Mueller collusion report to ensure first, before releasing it to the public, that it did not endanger national security or besmirch the reputations of innocent named individuals. If in a blink, “collusion” had died, soon in its death throes it birthed “obstruction”—as if Trump’s objections to vast resources wasted on chasing an imaginary non-crime of collusion was obstruction

When that did not work, congressional committees mobilized to sue and force Trump to release at least six years of his private income tax records, elements of which already in bits and pieces had been leaked.

Are such efforts in the future to be institutionalized?

Will the Left nod and keep still, if Republicans attempt to remove an elected Democratic President before his tenure is up? Are appeals to impeachment, the 25th Amendment, the Emoluments Clause, the Logan Act, and a Special Counsel the now normal cargo of political opposition to any future elected president?

Is it now permissible in 2020 for Trump’s FBI director to insert an informant into the campaign of the Democratic presidential nominee? If Joe Biden is the 2020 nominee, will the Trump Justice Department seek FISA warrants to monitor the communications of Biden’s campaign team—in worries that Biden son’s business practices in the Ukraine had earlier compromised Biden who had intervened on his behalf by threatening to cut off aid to Ukraine? Will they investigate Biden’s propensity to hug and kiss under-aged girls? Will Trump’s CIA director contact foreign nationals to aid in spying on Biden’s aides? Will National Security Advisor John Bolton request that the names of surveilled Biden campaign officials become unmasked as a way of having them leaked to the media? Will Trump hire a British ex-spy to gather together rumors and gossip about Biden’s previous overseas trips and foreign contacts, especially in the Ukraine, and then see them seeded among the Trump CIA, FBI, Justice Department, and State Department? Is that the sort of country we have now?

America over the last half century had been nursed on the dogma that the Left was the guarantor of civil liberties. That was the old message of the battles supposedly waged on our behalf by the ACLU, the free-speech areas on campuses, and the Earl Warren Court.

Not now. The left believes that almost any means necessary, extra-legal and anti-constitutional or not, are justified to achieve their noble ends. Progressive luminaries at CNN and the New York Times have lectured us that reporters need not be disinterested any more in the age of Trump—or that it might be a crime to shout “lock her up” at a Trump rally. Will those standards apply to coverage of future Democratic presidents?

No reporter seems to care that Hillary Clinton hired a foreign national to work with other foreign nationals to sabotage, first, her opponent’s campaign, then his transition and his presidency, along with the wink and nod help from key Obama officials at the Department of Justice, State Department, National Security Council, FBI and CIA.

The final irony? If the CIA, FBI, and DOJ have gone the banana republic way of Lois Lerner’s IRS and shredded the Constitution, they still failed to remove Donald Trump.

Trump still stands. In Nietzschean fashion what did not kill him apparently only made him stronger.