Friday, August 30, 2024
This is the way
'Vacuous' Kamala Harris Interview
NY Times columnist says 'vague',
'vacuous' Kamala Harris interview did not help her
'She struggled to give straight answers to her shifting positions on fracking and border security,' Bret Stephens wrote
Gabriel Hays, Fox News
New York Times columnist Bret Stephens published a scathing piece Friday that called Vice President Kamala Harris’ first sit-down interview as a 2024 candidate "vague" and "vacuous."
Stephens, a conservative columnist who’s vehemently opposed to former President Trump, laid into Harris’ performance, saying she offered little details about the policies she would enact as president, avoided straight answers, and relied on flimsy talking points, all while CNN anchor Dana Bash seemed reluctant to ask tough questions.
"But there was too much fluff in this interview to lay to rest doubts about Harris’s readiness for the highest office," Stephens declared.
Harris and Bash won some praise in liberal corners for the interview such as Poynter and a New York Times write-up, but conservatives unsurprisingly were harsher on the vice president and CNN, stating it was light on details regarding Harris’ policy proposals.
Stephens did begin his column with the positive aspects of Harris’ interview, stating, "she came across as warm, relatable and — to recall Barack Obama’s famous 2008 exchange with Hillary Clinton — more than ‘likable enough.’"
He also praised her for refusing "to be baited into the identity-politics trap, emphasizing that she was running for president ‘for all Americans, regardless of race and gender,’" and for distinguishing herself from former President Trump as someone who looks to "lift up" people as opposed to beating them down.
Then came the negatives: "She was vague to the point of vacuous. She struggled to give straight answers to her shifting positions on fracking and border security other than to say, ‘My values have not changed.’"
He added, "she evaded the question of why it took the Biden administration more than three years to gain better control of the border, which it ultimately did through an executive order that could have been in place years earlier," and noted that the interview didn’t clear up "why she reversed her former policy positions."
Even CNN fact-checker Daniel Dale called out Harris after she claimed during the interview that she "made clear on the debate stage in 2020 that I would not ban fracking."
"The fact-check bottom line … is that she did not actually make clear at a 2020 debate that she had changed her previous support for a fracking ban," Dale said, citing transcripts from her debate with then-Vice President Mike Pence that showed she promised President Biden would not ban fracking.
Stephens continued, slamming Harris’ for her talking points, particularly her bit about her policy proposal to prevent so-called price gouging.
"Harris also relied on a few talking points that may not serve her well in the next two months. She mentioned price gouging, but Americans probably won’t believe that grocery chains with razor-thin profit margins are the real culprits when it comes to their rising food bills."
He added, "Her $100 billion plan to give first-time home buyers $25,000 in down payment support would mainly be an incentive for ever-higher home prices. Even Trump may be smart enough to explain just how inflationary the gimmick could be."
Stephens also called running mate Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz's presence during the interview a "bigger weakness" for Harris, writing, "Though he delivered a fine speech at the Democratic National Convention (brightly enhanced by his cheering son, Gus), he was transparently evasive in answering Bash’s questions about his misstatement about his military service, false claims about a D.U.I. arrest and misleading statements about his family’s fertility treatments."
"Tougher questions next time, please," he urged Bash.
The Harris campaign did not immediately reply to Fox News Digital's request for comment.
Wednesday, August 28, 2024
The Examined Life
The Examined Life
Ignorance is not the only thing from which a true liberal education frees us
Robert P. George, Fair For All
Those of us who teach or study at American colleges and universities are facing the academic year that is about to begin with more than a little trepidation. Will there be protests? Encampments? The occupation of buildings? The invasion of classrooms? Riots?
The fact that we are asking those questions should itself prompt us to ask a more fundamental question: What is the purpose of higher education?
Most American colleges and universities proclaim themselves to be providers of “liberal education” (or “liberal arts education”). But what does that mean? Why should students want it? Why should their parents pay—a lot—for them to get it?
The word “liberal” in this context means “freeing.” So, what is it that liberal education is supposed to be freeing us from?
An obvious answer is that liberal education frees us from ignorance. A liberally educated person knows some things—some things worth knowing—about, for example, history, philosophy, literature, politics, economics, religion, civics, art, music, biology, chemistry, physics, and mathematics.
Liberal education is valuable in part because knowing the truth in these domains of inquiry is intrinsically desirable, and ignorance is inherently undesirable.
What’s more, a liberal education nurtures students’ abilities to read carefully, to think rigorously, and to write clearly.
Supporters of liberal education often point to these skills—and the demand for them by employers—when challenged to justify inviting students to devote four years (and tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars) to the study of “impractical” topics.
Ignorance, however, is not the only thing from which a true liberal education frees us. It frees us from conformism—that is, slavery to fashionable opinions and causes. A sure sign that a college or university is failing in its promise to provide a liberal education is the prevalence of ideological dogmatism and intolerance, and the presence of groupthink.
Many Americans today have concerns about higher education. They see spiking university costs and burgeoning student debt. They have entirely legitimate worries that ideological indoctrination has sometimes replaced genuine education. They see double standards on questions of freedom of speech—this is what got the university presidents who appeared before Congress in trouble—and they hear ludicrously false claims about the allegedly wide diversity of viewpoints on campus. They’re appalled that offices supposedly dedicated to “diversity, equity, and inclusion” sometimes promote the very opposite of these principles.
Abandoning the cause of liberal education, though, would be exactly the wrong response to these concerns. Instead, we should reform our colleges and universities by refocusing them on the purposes of liberal education: to form young men and women to be determined truth-seekers, courageous truth-speakers, and life-long learners.
Students formed in that way will lead an examined life, a life of critical—and self-critical—inquiry. People who lead examined lives are best equipped to fulfill their responsibilities as citizens of a democratic republic.
That is the truth James Madison had in mind when he remarked that “only a well-instructed people can be permanently a free people.”
My friend and teaching partner Cornel West says that “the point of a liberal education is to learn how to die.” Students—and parents—are startled by Professor West’s provocative formulation, but it conveys a deep truth: It is from the perspective of our mortality that we can best wrestle with the questions of what is most important in life—what is true and good and beautiful.
There are some things that matter, to be sure, but at the end of the day don’t matter all that much—things like wealth, power, influence, status, prestige, and celebrity. These things aren’t bad in themselves, and it’s not necessarily wrong to want them—after all, they can be used in service of good ends. But they are not good in and of themselves—they are not the things that ultimately matter—those things that are worth having for their own sake.
The things that ultimately matter—the things that are desirable not merely as means to other ends, but as ends themselves—are things like family, friendship, faith, fairness, knowledge, beauty, honor, integrity and other virtues.
To distinguish the things that matter, but not all that much, from the things that really matter, it is necessary to lead an examined life.
Living an examined life constitutes a necessary condition for the pursuit of what the ancient Greek thinker Aristotle called eudaimonia. While the term is often translated from the Greek as “happiness,” it is more precisely understood as flourishing or fulfillment. Eudaimonia requires that we subject our beliefs and behaviors to rigorous intellectual scrutiny—critically evaluating the values we live by and why we live by them, so that our death will mark the conclusion of a well-thought and well-lived life.
The examined life is, fundamentally, one of self-critical challenges—challenging and refining our beliefs, rather than believing whatever is convenient, fashionable, in line with our self-interest or our prejudices or coarse or base desires. It is not a life of doing as we please; it is rather a life devoted to seeking truth and living in line with truth, as best we grasp it, even when that means mastering our own wayward feelings, prejudices, or passions.
Practitioners of the examined life do not treat critics of their beliefs, even their most deeply cherished beliefs, as enemies. Far from trying to silence those who challenge their convictions, as happens so often today on campuses, they engage critics in a spirit of truth seeking, recognizing that we are all fallible and can be wrong—even about the questions most important to us.
Indeed, the acknowledgement of one’s own fallibility should lead the liberally educated person to be his or her own best critic. The process of constant self-examination, and the self-mastery required to live in line with truth as best one grasps it, is what a genuinely liberal education facilitates.
Critics will say that I am proposing “ivory tower idealism” that universalizes a view of education which only our society’s elite possess the time and money to attain. But the intrinsic value of a liberal education does not only extend to students on campuses like Princeton and Harvard, or Amherst and Swarthmore. Everybody deserves—and ought—to live an examined life of the sort that is directly enabled by a liberal education, including those who attend community colleges, or vocational training programs, and even those who finish their formal education with high school.
There’s no reason for community colleges and vocational programs to restrict themselves to providing the information and skills their students need to get a job. Indeed, many such institutions recognize this: students enrolled in professionally oriented programs (nursing or accounting, for example) often nevertheless are required to complete general education requirements through courses in the humanities and social sciences.
Even for students in professional and vocational programs, supplementary courses in the liberal arts contribute to forming them as practitioners of the examined life—people who can distinguish what matters, but not all that much, from what really matters.
Aristotle’s teacher, Plato, famously attributed to his own teacher, Socrates, the axiom that an unexamined life is not worth living. Authentic liberal education places its money on Socrates on that point.
Whatever comes in the new academic year, let’s remind ourselves of the deepest purposes of liberal education: to pursue knowledge that’s worth pursuing not merely as means to other ends, but also for its own sake; and to form students to be determined truth seekers and courageous truth speakers—people who endeavor throughout their lives to liberate themselves from ignorance, prejudice, ideological dogmatism, and slavery to fashionable opinions and their own wayward desires.
Robert P. George is McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence and Director of the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at Princeton University. He has served as Chairman the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom.
Tuesday, August 20, 2024
'The Media vs. Donald J. Trump: the Russia Hoax'
'The Media vs. Donald J. Trump: the Russia Hoax'
Steven F. Hayward, The Pipeline
An excerpt from Against the Corporate Media, coming Sept. 10 from Bombardier Books. "The Media vs. Donald J. Trump: the Russia Hoax," by Steven F. Hayward.
We now know that the “Russian collusion” narrative was cooked up as an opposition research project against Trump initially by the conservative Washington Free Beacon, but soon acquired and propelled by the Hillary Clinton campaign in the middle of 2016, after it became apparent that Trump had a slim but realistic chance of winning the election. The irony of Hillary Clinton and the Democrats mounting accusations of collusion with Russia is that there is scarcely anyone in American history with a deeper record of corrupt collusion with Russian interests than the Clintons.
As President Obama’s first secretary of state, Hillary Clinton famously attempted to “reset” U.S.-Russia relations that had soured during the George W. Bush administration. Behind the scenes, Bill Clinton was assisting Rosatom, a Russian energy company, to acquire complete ownership of Uranium One, a Canadian mining company, that would make Russia a dominant supplier of the world’s uranium supply. (The acquisition required U.S. government approval because some of the company’s mines are in the United States.) Bill Clinton collected $500,000 for a single speech in Russia in 2010, his fee paid by an investment bank that was financing the Rosatom acquisition, and during which visit he met privately with Vladimir Putin.
During these years the Clinton Foundation was scooping up huge overseas contributions (the largest country of origin was Ukraine), all the while denying that Secretary of State Clinton exerted any influence over Russian transactions involving her husband and his foundation. Hillary said she had adopted strict conflict-of-interest rules, but everyone over the age of six understood the value to foreign donors of sending cash to the former president and possible next president. The simple proof of this is the complete collapse of foreign contributions to the Clinton Foundation immediately upon the defeat of Hillary in November 2016. The foundation still has more than $300 million in assets.
You really can't hate them enough.
Following the Rosatom acquisition of Uranium One, the chairman of the Canadian-no-longer subsidiary sent a contribution of $2 million and $350,000 to the Clinton Foundation that the Clintons “forgot” to disclose. Other investors in Uranium One contributed a further $8.5 million to the Clinton Foundation between 2008 and 2010. To their credit, The New York Times and The Washington Post reported these dodgy dealings, though the reporting behind these stories was not done by Times or Post staff, but by independent investigative journalist Peter Schweizer, who gladly supplied the Times and the Post.
Naturally there was blowback in the newsrooms over these stories, and there was little to no follow up by the mainstream media. It is little wonder that Hillary Clinton thought she could easily get away with having an insecure private email server, and with a preposterous slander of her 2016 rival, Donald Trump. In any case, given that the Clintons had serious problems with their own Russia connections, it was perhaps a simple matter of what psychologists call “projection” to gin up an attack on Trump based on nothing more than Trump’s campaign statements expressing criticism of NATO and optimism about achieving the better relationship with Russia that Hillary Clinton and the Obama administration had promised and failed to deliver. In fact, the Clinton campaign’s own internal polling showed that her dubious ties to Russia were one of her largest vulnerabilities with voters.
Is it merely a coincidence that the principal agents in the Trump collusion hoax were former corporate media journalists? If there is a “patient zero” of the Trump collusion hoax (aside from Hillary), it is Glenn Simpson, a former reporter for The Wall Street Journal, who founded Fusion GPS in 2011. Fusion GPS is described as a “strategic intelligence” consultancy based in Washington, D.C., and is the kind of enterprise that can only exist in Washington. Like many other such firms, its “assets” are the personal contacts of its principals (mostly other former reporters like Simpson), engaged in the political version of private investigative work (most frequently known as “opposition research”). Fusion GPS’s first target in 2012 was Mitt Romney, but other targets the company was hired to damage included anti-abortion activists and foreign business figures implicated in Russian money-laundering schemes.
Hillary Clinton’s campaign got its money’s worth, though peddling a preposterous claim of Russian collusion with Trump was pushing on an open door in most newsrooms...
Steven F. Hayward is a resident scholar at the Institute of Governmental Studies at UC Berkeley, and lecturer at Berkeley Law. His most recent book is "M. Stanton Evans: Conservative Wit, Apostle of Freedom." He writes daily at Powerlineblog.com.
Thursday, August 15, 2024
Kamala Harris is an 'empty suit'
Kamala Harris is an 'empty suit',
campaign handlers are worried, says Tulsi Gabbard
Former Democrat says Harris camp thinks voters are 'too stupid' to question VP's record
Fox News Staff, Foxnews.com
While Kamala Harris' campaign works to rebrand the VP as the Democratic presidential candidate, critics are voicing concern over her record on the border, as well as her career as a prosecutor. On "America's Newsroom," Thursday, former Democratic congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard labeled Harris an "empty suit," arguing her campaign "handlers" are worried about what will happen if she has to explain her policy positions.
TULSI GABBARD: I think she revealed in that debate the same thing that I think her campaign handlers are worried about right now... Kamala Harris is an empty suit. They are trying to create this new version of Kamala Harris to match what their pollsters are telling them, so she can say whatever she needs to say to try to win over voters, which is the most offensive thing, I think, because they think we're so stupid as to forget what her record actually is. In 2019, very simply, I confronted her with her hypocrisy of how what she said was very different than what she actually did, and she had no answer for it. She had no explanation. She didn't even try to own or justify what her actions were. And that's going to be the key thing here for voters as we head into this election is Kamala Harris will say whatever she thinks she needs to say. We have to pay attention to her actions, because on every single major issue, you will see that same kind of hypocrisy that I pointed out in 2019 where she'll say one thing, but her record tells a very, very different story.
Gabbard called out Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris' "hypocrisy," referring back to an exchange during a debate in 2019 where Harris struggled to defend her record on criminal prosecutions.
"Senator Harris says she's proud of her record as a prosecutor... but she put over 1500 people in jail for marijuana violations, and then laughed about it when she was asked if she ever smoked marijuana," Gabbard said in July 2019 on CNN.
"I am proud of that work, and I am proud of making a decision to not just give fancy speeches or be in a legislative body and give speeches on the floor, but actually doing the work," Harris responded.
"The bottom line is, Senator Harris, when you are in a position to make a difference and an impact in these people's lives, you did not... And the people who suffered under your reign as prosecutor, you owe them an apology," Gabbard added.
Harris previously held the office of San Francisco District Attorney and California Attorney General prior to her position as vice president. Her extensive 27-year career in criminal prosecution in California may pose challenges in appealing to moderate voters, reminiscent of obstacles she faced during her unsuccessful 2020 presidential bid.
Fox News' Jamie Joseph contributed to this report.
Monday, August 12, 2024
Our Three Silent Mice
Victor Davis Hanson, American Greatness
Biden
President Biden was forced, unceremoniously and unwillingly, to abdicate from his impending reelection nomination. Since then, we have neither seen nor heard much from our sitting President. He has vanished, poof, gone.
This is quite unusual if not alarming. Unlike prior to the June 27 debate, the left now makes no effort to hide Biden’s debility. Indeed, it accepts the reality that an infirm Biden might not be able to finish out his remaining six months. Yet it still cannot decide whether the nation’s exposure to a President Harris prior to November 5 would lend her the advantage of incumbency or (more likely) ensure her defeat given global exposure to her puerility.
In the past, when a vice president took over the party nomination from his sitting president boss, the lame duck president was nonetheless evident and in charge until the duration of his tenure.
When Lyndon Johnson belatedly decided not to run for reelection in 1968, he claimed that he needed to devote his full attention and remaining months to finding a solution to the then-raging Vietnam War. Indeed, Johnson sought to steal interest away from his often-underappreciated vice president, Hubert Humphrey, and the latter’s ongoing (and failed) bid as the Democratic nominee to replace Johnson.
Ronald Reagan was still very busy in 1980 in his last six months as president—even as his sitting “a thousand points of light” vice president, George H.W. Bush, became the Republican nominee and was fixated on campaigning to replace Reagan.
At times in late 2000, during the waning days of Bill Clinton’s administration, a restless, lame duck Clinton seemed almost to compete for the spotlight with his then vice president, party nominee, and would-be Democratic presidential replacement Al Gore.
The vanishing Biden caught another case of COVID in mid-July shortly after his disastrous and historically early presidential debate with Trump. And in the subsequent month, Biden simply disappeared.
He is rarely seen, more rarely heard, even as Iran has promised a theater-wide war against Israel, Putin has more frequently threatened to escalate Russian attacks to existential levels, and the economy has witnessed dramatic stock shocks, dismal job news, and increasing talk of an impending recession.
Americans have wondered what happened to their president. Apparently, Biden was deemed unfit by his party bosses and donors to remain its nominee but still considered hale enough to continue for half a year as America’s president.
Rumors swirled that a depressed, embittered, and unwell Biden was in seclusion licking his wounds, acidic over being betrayed by his erstwhile allies—the Obamas, former speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority leader Chuck Schumer, the left-wing squad, a traditionally obsequious and in-the-tank left-wing media, and perhaps his replacement, the machinating Vice President Kamala Harris.
Biden gave a so-so endorsement of Harris. After that pro forma act, he has somehow evaporated in a fashion that has left the White House even more vacant than during the octogenarian Biden’s prior three years of customary three-day workweeks.
Will or can Biden campaign this summer and autumn for Harris?
And if he were mentally and physically able to do so, would it help or hurt her?
Are his policies—especially those toward Israel at the brink of a war with Iran—unchanged, or will he shift somewhat to help the Harris cause with pro-Hamas/anti-Israel voters in Michigan?
Or perhaps in his sullenness, will Biden remain indifferent to Harris, or at some point, reassert his lost authority even if, or perhaps because, it might prove injurious to her candidacy?
So, for the present, no one knows who is in charge of the United States.
Is it the three-year consortium headed by the omnipresent Obama tandem that had heretofore used Biden as a convenient waxen effigy?
Or is Jill Biden still playing the Edith Wilson role for a non compos mentis and invalid presidential husband?
Or is our de facto Commander-in-Chief the new presidential candidate Kamala Harris? She seems ebullient in welcoming to her team both Obama old-hands and Biden defectors eager for new jobs and billets, in “The king is dead; long live the king!” fashion.
The next six months may be the most dangerous in our modern history. Key geostrategic decisions concerning an opportunistic world eager to fill the widening American void will be made by whom, if anyone, and in what manner?
Harris
But stranger still is the month-long vaporization of Vice President and the now de facto Democratic nominee Kamala Harris. How weird that she sought to hog airtime and attention as vice president (although not via interviews or impromptu remarks), but once she gained an even wider portfolio as the Democratic presidential nominee, she recoiled from interviews and went into hibernation.
In the last month amid the frenzy of the Biden collapse, her coronation, and the selection of her running mate Tim Walz, a mute Harris has made up all the ground Biden lost as the prior nominee.
She is flooded with hundreds of millions of dollars in left-wing tech and Wall Street cash. All are eager to donate given their money will no longer be wasted on a sore loser but might now earn something in return from a future president.
So, a silent Harris is rising in the polls, once the Biden albatross was cut away and relieved Hollywood/Wall Street/Silicon Valley grandees poured in their riches.
Harris has been instructed to xerox the successful tripartite model of the 2020 Biden victory:
One, keep the incoherent and cackling Harris away from the public and journalists, and ration even her teleprompted and staged speeches.
Two, erase 30 years of left-wing demagoguery and socialist activism. Replace her radical chic with faux-centralism of the ol’ Joe Biden from Scranton sort.
In shameless fashion, Harris is now running ads bragging she will hire more border guards, and secure and stop illegal immigration—this from someone who called for ICE to disappear, championed illegal immigration and an open border, and demonized any who sought to secure it. In some sense, she is even appropriating much of the Trump agenda for the next three months.
So, her message to the public is simply, “Before June 27, I was for what you, the public, hated and never gave a damn about the consequences. And now I am going to fool you for 90 days into thinking I am your real border czar— on the expectation that I can delude you a third time once you naifs elect me and I destroy the border again.”
Three, count on 70 percent of the electorate not voting on Election Day without serious audit.
When will Harris give an unscripted interview? In a month as promised, two months, or after Election Day? When will she dare to speak to a neutral audience? Or mix it up with Donald Trump in no-holds-barred debates? When will she be asked, as incumbent vice president, why she doesn’t begin her promised agenda right now during the last six months of the Biden-Harris tenure?
No such candor will follow until she falls 5 points in the polls behind Trump and is thus forced to speak.
So far now, why would Harris confirm to the electorate that she indeed quickly exhausts her five-hundred-word vocabulary, turns off listeners with adolescent cackling, and is a puerile left-wing ideologue mouthing stale platitudes?
The Trump challenge then is to keep hammering her extremist record, her dangerous agenda for 2025 and beyond, and her weird, indeed historic refusal to mix it up with journalists and to speak ex tempore.
Harris knows that Biden thrived by remaining mute and when he could not, he crashed in the polls. So, she accepts that she too would rather be attacked as evasive, afraid, and cowardly than lose when confirmed as childishly incompetent—given the state media can far more successfully reconstruct her silence as incidental to her mellifluous oratory.
As for the objection that surely Harris cannot pull off such a surreptitious candidacy for 80 more days, Harris would surely answer, “If Biden pulled it off for over three years, I certainly can manage it for 10 weeks.”
Walz
Ostensibly, Tim Walz is a boon to the Trump campaign. His home state Minnesota will likely not be in play in 2024. His strange selection only confirms that Harris is proudly “woke” and a far-left “woke” “radical”—as she herself once put it.
Otherwise, we are learning very quickly that Walz is as erratic, error-prone, and dishonest as Harris. He too is already heading for seclusion from the media. The man of the people from the countryside has scoffed, in self-incriminating Mike Bloomberg fashion, that rural Minnesota is little more than “rocks and cows.”
In mere hours after his nomination, he has grown mute about his past and politics except for teleprompted rah-rah speeches—avoiding reporters, interviews, and unscripted moments.
Why?
Because, in less than a week, the nation learned that Walz lied about his military rank, lied that he had deployed to Iraq, and lied that he had carried a weapon in war. The more we learn about Walz’s record as governor in Minnesota, the more it trumps even the disastrous tenure of Gavin Newsom in his imploding doom-loop state that Walz apparently saw as a model for a once can-do stable Minnesota.
The Insurrectionary Radical Mind
Add it all up, and the president, the vice president, the Democratic presidential candidate, and the vice presidential nominee all either cannot or will not speak casually and publicly to elected representatives, reporters, or the people themselves.
Worse still, they retire from their responsibilities of public engagement because these selected officials accept that the alternative of transparency is nearly suicidal to their own agendas. No one is now in charge of America—neither the ghosted president nor the campaigning vice president candidate who both act as if they hold no office.
It gets far worse still. Joe Biden was created by a soft coup of sorts in March 2000 when all his unpalatable left-wing radical rivals mysteriously vanished in unison at a time when an inert “centrist” Biden had not yet won a single primary.
Then Biden was dethroned abruptly 38 months later by the same inside plotters who deemed his sock puppet role was no longer viable—but only after their sure loser in November had become more a liability to the left than any longer a useful, empty vessel of governance. But as for his fitness as a man of the left to continue ruling us, he was just fine.
It continues to get even worse.
Then the same donors, the same politicos, and the same obsequious media grandees pivoted yet a third time. On the morning of June 27, a fit-as-a-fiddle Biden needed not to step down both because of his brilliance and dynamism—and the unthinkable succession of the Harris mediocrity.
By late night June 27, it was decided that a now suddenly enfeebled and unelectable Biden could be forcibly removed. Harris was Phoenix-like just as quickly reborn as the second coming of Obama—glib, in control, cool, and competent.
We are now witnessing yet a fourth coup from the party that warns us that democracy dies in darkness.
They have removed their once robust now demented nominee, nullified 14 million primary voters, repackaged and selected Harris in his place who has never won a single primary—and now plan to continue in power for another four years by silencing the outgoing president, secluding the vice president and muting the Democratic ticket itself.
In sum, leftists endlessly conspire not only because they have little confidence in the people, but because they have absolutely none in themselves.
Sunday, August 11, 2024
A Nightmare for Free Speech
A Harris-Walz administration would be a nightmare for free speech
Jonathon Turley, The Hill
The selection of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D) as the running mate for Vice President Kamala Harris has led to intense debates over crime policy, war claims, gender identity policies and other issues.
Some attacks have, in my view, been inaccurate or overwrought. However, the greatest danger from this ticket is neither speculative nor sensational. A Harris-Walz administration would be a nightmare for free speech.
For over three years, the Biden-Harris administration has sustained an unrelenting attack on the freedom of speech, from supporting a massive censorship system (described by a federal court as an “Orwellian Ministry of Truth“) to funding blacklisting operations targeting groups and individuals with opposing views.
President Biden made censorship a central part of his legacy, even accusing social media companies of “killing people” for failing to increase levels of censorship. Democrats in Congress pushed that agenda by demanding censorship on subjects ranging from climate change to gender identity — even to banking policy — in the name of combatting “disinformation.”
The administration also created offices like the Disinformation Governance Board before it was shut down after public outcry. But it quickly shifted this censorship work to other offices and groups.
As vice president, Harris has long supported these anti-free speech policies. The addition of Walz completes a perfect nightmare for free speech advocates. Walz has shown not only a shocking disregard for free speech values but an equally shocking lack of understanding of the First Amendment.
Walz went on MSNBC to support censoring disinformation and declared, “There’s no guarantee to free speech on misinformation or hate speech, and especially around our democracy.”
Ironically, this false claim, repeated by many Democrats, constitutes one of the most dangerous forms of disinformation. It is being used to convince a free people to give up some of their freedom with a “nothing to see here” pitch.
In prior testimony before Congress on the censorship system under the Biden administration, I was taken aback when the committee’s ranking Democrat, Del. Stacey Plaskett (D-Virgin Islands), declared, “I hope that [all members] recognize that there is speech that is not constitutionally protected,” and then referenced hate speech as an example.
That false claim has been echoed by others such as Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.), who is a lawyer. “If you espouse hate,” he said, “…you’re not protected under the First Amendment.” Former Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean declared the identical position: “Hate speech is not protected by the First Amendment.”
Even some dictionaries now espouse this false premise, defining “hate speech” as “Speech not protected by the First Amendment, because it is intended to foster hatred against individuals or groups based on race, religion, gender, sexual preference, place of national origin, or other improper classification.”
The Supreme Court has consistently rejected the claim of Gov. Walz. For example, in the 2016 Matal v. Tam decision, the court stressed that this precise position “strikes at the heart of the First Amendment. Speech that demeans on the basis of race, ethnicity, gender, religion, age, disability, or any other similar ground is hateful; but the proudest boast of our free speech jurisprudence is that we protect the freedom to express ‘the thought that we hate.'”
As the new Democratic vice-presidential candidate, Walz is running alongside one of the most enthusiastic supporters of censorship and blacklisting systems.
In her failed 2020 presidential bid, Harris ran on censorship and pledged that her administration “will hold social media platforms accountable for the hate infiltrating their platforms, because they have a responsibility to help fight against this threat to our democracy.”
In October 2019, Harris dramatically spoke directly to Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, insisting “This is not a matter of free speech….This is a matter of holding corporate America and these Big Tech companies responsible and accountable for what they are facilitating.” She asked voters to join her in the effort.
They didn’t, but Harris ultimately succeeded in the Biden-Harris administration to an unprecedented degree with a comprehensive federal effort to target and silence individuals and groups on social media.
In my new book, “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage,” I detailed how President Biden is the most anti-free speech president since John Adams. Unlike Adams, I have never viewed Biden as the driving force behind the massive censorship and blacklisting operations supported by his subordinates, including Harris. That is not to say that Biden does not share the shame in these measures. He was willing to sacrifice not only free speech but also institutions like the Supreme Court in a desperate effort to rescue his failing nomination.
The substitution of Harris for Biden makes this the second election in which free speech is the key issue for voters. In 1800, Thomas Jefferson defeated Adams, in large part based on his pledge to reverse the anti-free speech policies of the prior administration, including the use of the Alien and Sedition Acts to arrest his opponents.
With the addition of Walz, Democrats now have arguably the most anti-free speech ticket of a major party in more than two centuries. Both candidates are committed to using disinformation, misinformation and malinformation as justifications for speech controls. The third category has been emphasized by the Biden-Harris administration, which explained that it is information “based on fact, but used out of context to mislead, harm, or manipulate.”
Walz has the advantage in joining this anti-free speech ticket without the burden of knowledge of what is protected under the First Amendment.
With the Harris-Walz ticket, we have come full circle to the very debate at the start of this republic. The warnings of the Founders to reject the siren’s call of censorship remain tragically relevant today. Free speech was and remains our “indispensable right.”
As Benjamin Franklin warned, “In those wretched countries where a man cannot call his tongue his own, he can scarce call anything his own. Whoever would overthrow the liberty of a nation must begin by subduing the freeness of speech….Without freedom of thought there can be no such thing as wisdom, and no such thing as public liberty without freedom of speech, which is the right of every man.”
With her selection of Walz, Harris has decided to put free speech on the ballot in this election. It is a debate that our nation should welcome, as it did in 1800.
The Biden-Harris administration has notably toned down its anti-free speech efforts as the election approaches. Leading censorship advocates have also gone mostly silent.
If successful, a Harris-Walz administration is expected to bring back those policies and personalities with a vengeance. That could be radically enhanced if the Democrats take both houses of Congress and once again block investigations into their censorship programs.
The media has worked very hard to present Harris and Walz as the “happy warriors.” Indeed, they may be that and much more. The question is what they are happy about in their war against free speech.
Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington University. He is the author of “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage” (Simon and Schuster).
Saturday, August 03, 2024
Watch out for August!
Watch out for August!
Think July was historic? History says: beware the eighth month.
Tevi Troy, City Journal https://www.city-journal.org/article/watch-out-for-august
We have just lived through the most volatile, unpredictable, and wild month in the history of presidential politics. In July, we saw a shocking breach in presidential security enabling the near-miss assassination of a former president; his bloody rise from the ground, fist pumping in the air; and a third consecutive convention nomination by his party.
Meantime, establishment forces in government and media flipped their story concerning the health and mental fitness of the incumbent president, leading to an unprecedentedly late change at the top of the ticket. Through a steady barrage of negative headlines and party maneuvering, a president who had spent a half century working in Washington was forced to withdraw so that his party could ignore the results of its own primaries and put forward a younger candidate, launched with an ecstasy unseen (or so we’re told) since Kennedy’s Camelot. Belatedly, the incumbent president addressed the nation to justify his change of heart but wound up explaining little, while demonstrating what everyone already knew.
Whew. That’s a lot.
But could there be more? According to presidential history, August is the month we should really worry about, most especially our incumbent president, who has just implicitly admitted that he is not up to the job. This could be a real problem if August does what it often does—deliver the big, the strange, and the unexpected.
The most dramatic example of this phenomenon, of course, came in 1914, with the arrival of World War I, with what Barbara Tuchman described unforgettably as “The Guns of August.” The United States entered the war in 1917 and lost 116,000 “doughboys” in the fighting.
Another August shock happened in 1923, when President Warren G. Harding died of a heart attack. He was only 57. Vermont congressman Porter Hale tracked down Vice President Calvin Coolidge at his father’s house with the news, and Coolidge’s father (a notary public) swore in the former vice president at 2:47 a.m. using the family Bible.
More recently, the curse of August seems to have accelerated. In August 1965, the Watts riots ignited after Los Angeles police officers tried to arrest 21-year-old Marquette Frye for drunk driving. The riots killed 34 people and cost $40 million in property damage. This was one of the first of the “long, hot summer” riots of the 1960s that plagued President Lyndon Johnson in every summer of his presidency.
Hurricane season in the United States runs from June to November. But for presidents, the worst hurricanes hit in August. In 1969, Hurricane Camille caused the deaths of more than 250 people and $1.4 billion in the Gulf Coast. Richard Nixon was in his first year as president and brought in federal resources, including 16,000 military personnel, to deal with the disaster, He also sent Vice President Spiro Agnew to survey the situation. Agnew’s report led to the recognition of the need for a hurricane severity measure, leading to the Category 1 through 5 scale that we use today.
That scale was in use when Hurricane Andrew hit Florida in August of 1992, but it did not help President George H. W. Bush. Bush was seen as slow to respond to the disaster, and the plaintive cry of Dade County emergency operations director Kate Hale—“Where in the hell is the cavalry on this one?”—helped lead to a perception that Bush was not on top of things domestically. He lost his bid for reelection to Bill “I feel your pain” Clinton that November.
Bush’s son George W. was also partially undone by an August hurricane, 2005’s Hurricane Katrina. When that storm hit, Bush was on vacation in Texas, and a number of key political and communications staffers were away in Mykonos, Greece, attending communications director Nicolle Wallace’s wedding. The team was not at full strength, and Bush got much of the blame for the disaster, which killed over 1,800 people and caused $148 billion in damages.
August isn’t just a month for natural disasters. Some of the biggest international crises have hit in the eighth month. Iraq’s Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in August 1990. Bush 41 recovered quickly and formed an international coalition that went on to oust Hussein from Kuwait. The next August, Bush faced another international crisis, as old-guard Soviets unhappy with Mikhail Gorbachev’s reforms placed the general secretary under house arrest. When Bush’s national security adviser Brent Scowcroft told the president about the coup, Bush complained that U.S. officials were surprised by the development. Scowcroft had the perfect retort: “Yes, so was Gorbachev.”
The final kind of August surprise has been scandal. Neither the Watergate burglary nor the original revelation of Bill Clinton’s affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky happened in August, but the denouement of each scandal did. Nixon resigned in August 1974, elevating his unelected vice president Gerald Ford to the presidency. Clinton, faced with DNA evidence of his affair with Lewinsky on her infamous Gap blue dress, finally ended his repeated denials of the affair. He addressed the nation from the Map Room and confessed that “I did have a relationship with Miss Lewinsky that was not appropriate. In fact, it was wrong.” Here, for once, August proved a respite. Clinton went to Martha’s Vineyard with his family in an attempt to repair the relationships damaged by his admission.
There likely isn’t an American alive who could imagine a month more tumultuous than this past July for presidential politics. By all rational odds, things will calm down from here. Still, history warns: don’t bet on it.
Presidential historian Tevi Troy is a former White House aide and senior fellow at the Bipartisan Policy Center. He is the author of the forthcoming The Power and the Money: Epic Clashes Between Commanders in Chief and Titans of Industry