Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America are pleasantly stunned to see liberal California Gov. Jerry Brown veto bills from his even more liberal legislature, including one that guts due process for those accused of sexual assault on college campuses and another that would ban morals clauses for employees of religious institutions. They also throw up their hands over reports that the FBI spent years documenting Russia’s shady but successful efforts to steer U.S. nuclear policy and uranium deals its way during the Obama years – but never made any of it public until now. And they get a kick out of the Republican congressional candidate in Florida who claims to have been abducted by aliens and communicated with them telepathically several times since.
Archives for October 2017
Iraqis, Kurds Clash in Iraq
While ISIS is pushed to the brink of extinction, the Shia militias and Kurdish fighters who drove the purported caliphate out of Iraq are now fighting each other over control of key areas in northern Iraq and a decorated U.S. general says the ones who benefit are the mullahs in Iran.
NBC News reports Monday that Shia militias are launching a “major, multi-pronged attack” aimed at taking away the critically important city of Kirkuk from Kurdish control. The Kurdish peshmerga successfully defended Kirkuk from ISIS three years ago as the Islamists were sweeping through northern and western Iraq and prompting the official Iraqi forces to throw down their weapons and flee from the invaders.
Further complicating matters is the non-binding Kurdish referendum on independence last month. The vote passed easily but was seen by the Iraqi government and other anti-Kurdish elements as inflammatory.
When ISIS was routed out of Mosul earlier this year, retired U.S. Air Force Lt. General Tom McInerney was sobered by the key role of Shia militias loyal to Iran in that victory. He says the same groups are now turning on the Kurds.
“The people attacking them are primarily Shi’ite organizations that the Iranians set up for the Iraqi military. So I think we’ve got to get our hands on it very quickly and not let it get out of control,” said McInerney.
When asked if any U.S. sympathy for the Kurdish position would drive the Iraqi government even closer to their Shia brethren in Iran, McInerney says that ship has already sailed.
“Let’s not kid ourselves. The Iraqi government is already in the hands of Iran. Whether they can go further or not is another question
“We’re having out own challenge with the Iranian government on the JCPOA, the nuclear agreement. I think you can see this is only going to get worse because of the expansive nature of Iran,” said McInerney.
While acknowledging this is a complicated and delicate diplomatic dance for the U.S., McInerney says the sacrifices of the Kurds over the years need to be recognized.
“This is very complex. My gut feel is clearly that we should be supporting the Kurds. They resurrected Kirkuk when ISIS tries to take it over an d the Iraqi government fled. So they should be given credit for that.
“I’m not sure where our government’s going to go, but I do believe that we ought to make it so that since the Kurds saved Kirkuk from ISIS that they ought to be given credit for that,” said McInerney.
McInerney is quite sympathetic towards the creation of an independent Kurdish nation, known as Kurdistan, but also points out that creating that state is contrary to the interests of several nations in the region, since the Kurdish population centers would lead to a nation carved out of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey.
While admitting the issue is so thorny that he does not have any specific proposals to solve the sectarian schism that’s now turning deadly, he says decisive U.S. leadership could well play a key role in preventing the escalation of these renewed tensions.
“It’s going to take State Department and Defense working closely together with all parties to create a solution that is satisfactory. But it will take U.S. leadership, strong leadership to do that.
“I’m delighted that we’ve got President Trump who’d be willing to make some of the hard decisions on what transpires over there right now. No clear, easy answer,” said McInerney.
Ultimately, McInerney believes any long term stability will require dealing with the Iranian regime. McInerney says Iran will likely work behind the scenes to kill any agreement that the U.S. finds palatable. He says as long as the mullahs are pulling the strings there and in their own nation, peace will be elusive.
“Iran is on a path that we need a regime change with the mullahs. We ought to admit it and there are so many allies over there that will help us change that regime and create a different calculus over there. We need to be looking at that very seriously,” said McInerney.
Bergdahl Pleads Guilty, Iraq Devolves Again, Newsweek’s Hate
Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America react to Bowe Bergdahl pleading guilty to desertion and misbehavior before the enemy, glad that justice is being done and not being swept under the rug in the case of the soldier who left his unit in Afghanistan and was returned by the Obama administration in exchange for five top level Taliban detainees. They also groan as Iraqi forces are now fighting with the Kurds over territory in northern Iraq when they’re supposed to be finishing off ISIS. And they unload on Newsweek for it’s reckless reporting, including such gems as interviewing pedophile and former House Speaker Dennis Hastert about politics and declaring the Family Research Council a hate group.
John Adams Takes Aim at Activist Attorney General
He’s not the same John Adams that played a key role in America’s founding, but he is related to our second president and is running for attorney general in Virginia to restore the rule of law and adherence to the Constitution to an office he says is being used for political activism.
“I actually am from the same family in Massachusetts and I always tell people I think we’re going to be in good shape as long as Thomas Jefferson doesn’t get into the race,” said Adams.
The contest for attorney general is one of three statewide races in Virginia, along with contests for governor and lieutenant governor. The Old Dominion is one of only two states in the U.S. electing top leaders in 2017. New Jersey is the other.
Adams is an attorney in private practice who has never before run for public office. But he points to plenty of public service, including time in the U.S. Navy and serving as a federal prosecutor, a clerk for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and associate counsel in the President George W. Bush administration.
He is challenging incumbent Democrat Mark Herring, who scored a razor-thin and controversial victory over Republican State Sen. Mark Obenshain in 2013 to become attorney general. Adams says Herring has turned the office into a political apparatus for the Democrats.
“Our attorney general in Virginia has politicized the office and he’s taken it from being the law firm of the Commonwealth of Virginia, which has a lot of important things to do, and he’s turned it into almost a political weapon for his causes. To me, that’s just entirely improper,” said Adams.
“In our form of self-government,once the citizens of Virginia decide what they want the law to be and the law is passed, it’s the job of the attorney general to defend that law and to support the citizens of Virginia as their lawyer, not to pick and choose what laws he’ll defend or even attack,” said Adams.
Adams says there are several issues on which Herring abdicated his responsibility to defend existing and instead held the opposite position.
The most well-known example came on the definition of marriage. Virginia voters approved a state constitutional amendment to define marriage as the union of one man and one woman. As a state lawmaker, Herring himself voted to preserve traditional marriage.
However, upon entering office in 2014, Herring soon announced he would not defend the amendment against court challenges and actively supported the couples challenging it.
Adams says regardless of what voters think about the definition of marriage, Herring’s actions were way out of line.
“Setting aside what your belief is on the issue, it was not his right as our attorney general to sue his own client on that case and take a position opposite to the people who hired him to be their lawyer. That’s really problematic,” said Adams.
But Herring’s activism extends to many more issue and costs Virginia taxpayers a lot of money.
“Our voter ID law was challenged. He refused to defend that. That cost Virginia taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars, going out and hiring another law firm to do the job the AG should have done,” said Adams.
Another alleged abdication came on the issue of right to work, a which Virginia law embraces.
“He doesn’t like right to work laws. He filed briefs in the U.S. Supreme Court in a case last year, arguing that public schoolteachers in California should be required to join a union to get a job. but that’s not the law and policy of Virginia. And we shouldn’t have an attorney general using our attorney general’s office to pursue his own political agenda,” said Adams.
Adams is also slamming Herring for being a political activist on issues such as concealed carry and illegal immigration.
“(Herring) singlehandly revoked concealed carry reciprocity, which was so outlandish that he was overruled by that bastion of conservatism, (Virginia Democratic Gov.) Terry McAuliffe. Mark Herring did that and people remember it and they know it.
“His decision on allowing in-state slots and in-state tuition for illegal immigrants is something he did on his own,” said Adams.
In addition to defending laws on the books, Adams says the attorney general needs to exercise good judgment in deciding which cases to prosecute and he says Herring has dropped the ball there as well.
“As the attorney general, when do you use the power of the attorney general’s office to go on offense to sue, typically the federal government, could be another state or other entities. Clearly Mr. Herring uses that power in a very highly political, highly partisan way,” said Adams.
As an example, Adams pointed to Herring challenging the Trump administration’s travel ban.
“His challenge to the immigration executive order, which he called unconstitutional and un-American. They lost 9-0 in the U.S. Supreme Court. Even Ruth Bader Ginsburg didn’t agree,” said Adams.
There are also major ethical concerns, including Herring’s repurposing of money from a fund created from seized assets that the previous attorney general had set aside to assist victims of human trafficking. The Associated Pres reported earlier this year that Herring used that money to give raises to his lawyers and other staff.
“As a policy matter, we don’t allow them to use that money for pay raises or bonuses because that gives terrible incentives to give those in the government [reason] to seize assets,” said Adams.
With that track record over the past four years, Adams says it’s not hard to make a case against another term for Herring.
“He’s actually not running on his record. I’m running on his record. He’s trying to run from it. but he’s got it. We’ve gotten a lot of attention and we feel great about it coming down the homestretch,” said Adams.
Adams is well-versed on his indictment of Herring, but how would he conduct himself as attorney if elected.
“I’m a lawyer. I have a client and my client is Virginia. If the federal government, for example, exceeds its legal authority and harms Virginia, then I will go on offense because that’s my job. I’m a lawyer and I know how to do it,” said Adams, noting that he has experience as a prosecutor and Herring does not.
He says he has no problem filing suit against an administration of either party if he believes it is violating the law and harming Virginia.
“I’ll go against the federal government whether there is a Democrat president or a Republican president. It doesn’t matter to me. What matters to me is I have a client. That client is the sovereign Commonwealth of Virginia. The citizens of Virginia have a right to govern themselves. If their rights are infringed by the federal government, I will take action to defend those rights,” said Adams.
Adams says it goes without saying that he will vigorously defend all laws on the books in Virginia and that he will also take aim at growing problems like the opioid epidemic and rising crime due to the scourge of gang violence in several Virginia cities.
With federal politics playing out just across the river in Washington and two other races higher on the ballot, it would be easy for the attorney general’s race to take a very low profile, but Adams says Herring’s record is well known by the voters even before they hear his message.
Adams promises Virginians will “be sick of me by the end of the next few weeks” as he plans an aggressive campaign to highlight Herring’s record and his own promises.
As always, Adams says the results come November will depend upon turnout.
“This is coming down to the wire. The most important thing is for people to get out and vote on November 7th. Call all your friends, your family, your friends from church, your co-workers. If we’re going to restore some sanity to the attorney general’s office, we need to get everyone out to vote on November 7th,” said Adams.
Trump Decertifies Iran Deal, Health of GOP Senators, Media’s Giant Blind Spot
Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America welcome President Trump’s refusal to certify that Iran is honoring its part of the 2015 nuclear deal but wonder whether the deal will eventually be scrapped or be allowed to stick around. They also approach the delicate issue of aging Republicans missing considerable time in the U.S. Senate and when the right time is to decide another term is not a good idea. And they shake their heads as Chuck Todd of MSNBC rightly castigates the rise of activism cloaked as journalism but cannot see or admit that’s what his employer does on a daily basis.
‘They’re Desperate for Relief and This is Going to Help the People’
Frustrated by congressional gridlock and endless reports of massive premium hikes for the coming year, President Trump Thursday signed an executive order that utilizes the free market to give struggling Americans more and cheaper health care options until lawmakers come up with something permanent.
The executive order directs the Department of Labor to allow the creation of association health plans, or AHP’s, which give the green light for Americans to pool resources and negotiate better rates for premiums, deductibles, and co-payments. It also suggests current law can be interpreted to allow for the purchasing of health coverage across state lines.
Free market health policy experts have been pushing these policies for years as a way of leaving the power and flexibility with the people rather than force everyone onto government-approved plans. Galen Institute President Grace-Marie Turner says President Trump just couldn’t wait any longer for Congress to move.
“Clearly, the president is using the authority he has under existing law to give people relief from Obamacare. Congress has tried and has not yet succeeded in getting actual legislation passed,” said Turner, who expects the GOP-controlled Congress to try again on health care early next year.
But even as Trump signed the executive order to advance conservative policy goals, critics on the right and the left publicly question whether he can do that unilaterally or whether that sort of change can only come through an act of Congress.
Turner is confident that Trump is on solid constitutional ground.
“This is legal. They have to go through a rule-making procedure in order to be able to propose the rule, get public comment, then go to the final rule. Then it will be awhile before it can be implemented. So this is not going to be something that’s implemented overnight,” said Turner.
She is hopeful that at least some aspects of the executive order can be in place by the start of 2018.
Turner is bullish about several options afforded to Americans through the executive order, staring with association health plans, which she says are a great alternative to those trapped in the Obamacare exchanges.
“As we know, many people say those (Obamacare) plans are so generous and so rich that they just can’t afford the premiums. This will allow people to purchase policies that fit them better and can aggregate people across state lines,” said Turner.
Another area of relief could be Trump’s expansion of low cost short-term limited duration insurance, or STLDI.
“The Obama administration limited these policies to simply three months, a one-time purchase. What that meant is that if somebody was in a transition between jobs and they wanted to keep their health insurance and they’ve taken a year to find a new job, then they could be without health insurance for three or four months or longer,” said Turner.
The Trump version of STLDI would last one year.
The executive order also offers greater flexibility in the use of Health Reimbursement Arrangements, or HRA’s.
“They’re sort of like Health Savings Accounts, but run by employers and allow people to use those deposits to purchase their own health insurance,” said Turner.
“The way that might work is if two people, a husband and wife, both have the offer of health insurance at work, they can decide which policy they want as a family policy. Then the other person could contribute to the premium out of their Health Reimbursement Arrangement or use that money to pay deductibles or co-payments,” said Turner.
Watching insurer after insurer announce major premium increases in the individual market exchanges is forcing the issue here. Turner says Trump had to act.
“Without this, we are going to see uninsured rates rise. We’ve got to give people relief,” said Turner.
Turner says the renewed flexibility patients will have in deciding what their plans cover will invariably lead to lower premiums. While the price drop will vary from state to state, Turner is confident many people could see premium reductions of 20 percent or more.
Democrats are hammering the executive order as a terrible idea that will lower the quality of coverage and still leave Americans with steep premiums. Turner says the status is simply no longer an option.
“They’re saying, ‘Oh, this is going to destabilize the pools and all the younger, healthy people are going to join these plans and they’re going to leave the exchanges.’ The exchanges are collapsing anyway. They’re being pushed out of Obamacare,” said Turner.
“People who don’t get subsidies are getting hammered by Obamacare because they can’t afford the policies. You just can’t have premiums continuing to go up 20 and 30 percent a year. Right now people are paying more for their health insurance in many cases than they’re paying for their rent or their mortgage.
“That is not sustainable so they’re desperate for relief and this is going to help the people who are not getting subsidies,” said Turner.
“We’ve got to give tens of millions of struggling Americans help. This is a step in that direction,” said Turner.
NFL Waving White Flag? Twitter vs. Free Speech, Hannity vs. Sasse
Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America are glad to see the NFL concluding that the national anthem protests need to move to an actual effort to improve community-police relations and that the players ought to stand. They also slam Twitter for the second time this week, this time for suspending the Twitter account of actress Rose McGowan, who was assaulted by Harvey Weinstein and has called out actor Ben Affleck for not admitting he knew of Weinstein’s past. And they shake their heads as Fox News host Sean Hannity hammers Sen. Ben Sasse for being critical of President Trump’s call for licenses of media outlets to be challenged over “fake news.”
‘It Leads to A Trail of Corpses’
Free college, free health care, and government-defined income levels are all increasingly popular notions among the political left in the United States, but they are also raising concerns among opponents that some of the basic tenets of communism are alive and well in the United States.
This month marks 100 years since the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia that led to the creation of the Soviet Union and the murders of tens of millions of people. After a century of economic and humanitarian horrors, the growing embrace of socialist and communist principles in the political and academic realm is clear.
But why are these ideas still popular given communism’s track record of bloody failure?
“Education, education, education. Or maybe I should say miseducation, miseducation, miseducation or ignorance, ignorance, ignorance. It all kind of goes together,” said Grove City College Political Science Professor Paul Kengor, who is also the author of “The Politically Incorrect Guide to Communism: The Killingest Idea Ever.”
“This is the natural byproduct of our K-12 public schools, our government schools, and especially our universities failing to teach people the horrors of communism,” said Kengor.
He says academia at all levels dropped the ball on the atrocities of the past 100 years and beyond.
“They’ve done a bang-up job teaching the evils of Nazism and fascism. But for the 100th anniversary of Bolshevism and the Communist Revolution, which is what we’re at right now in October 2017. Everybody should be able to say, ‘Oh yeah, they killed a hundred million people, didn’t they?'” said Kengor.
Kengor says parents need to stop sending their kids to expensive schools only for their kids to be indoctrinated by ’60s radicals who are sympathetic to communism.
“If you took Johnny or Susie, who you spent the first 18 years of his or her life teaching them the right things and then you send them off to that secular college, that liberal insane asylum, and handed twenty to thirty to forty thousand dollars a year of your life savings and at Christmas-time came back with their own definitions of marriage and gender and telling you why you’re a fascist for not supporting government funding of Planned Parenthood, you helped make this possible. You should not send your kids to these colleges,” said Kengor.
He says knowingly sending your kids to schools to embrace socialist and communist ideas is doing exactly what radicals like Lenin would have wanted you to do.
“These are academic indoctrination centers and if you send your kids to these schools, you are going to be paying for them to have their minds destroyed.
“Vladimir Lenin said, and I quote this in the book, ‘Give me four years with a child and the seed that I plant will never be removed,” said Kengor.
In the book, Kengor says the education on communism is so bad that a survey a few years back showed roughly a quarter of Americans thought George W. Bush killed more people than Joseph Stalin.
He points out Stalin’s death toll even dwarfs that of Adolf Hitler.
“I’m sure that the vast majority of Americans think that Hitler killed more people than Stalin, when in fact Stalin killed – by some accounts, including Alexander Yakovlev – he said Stalin alone killed 60-70 million people. Hitler killed about 10 million.
“Stalin’s not even the greatest killer. Mao is,” said Kengor referring to communist Chinese despot Mao Zedong.
“This is a frightful dangerous ideology. People don’t know that because we fail to educate them,” added Kengor.
Defenders of Marxism and communism suggest bad leaders are responsible for the genocide rather than the ideology itself. Kengor says the record is clear.
“People have done it right. That’s what it comes down to. What other ideology or system that has been tried by so many different people on every different continent and every different ethnic group and nationality, and yet everywhere it goes it leads to a trail of corpses,” said Kengor.
He says genocide is a necessary aspect of communism, and the proof is right there in “The Communist Manifesto” by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.
“Like Marx and Engels themselves said, ‘Despotism will of course be necessary in implementing this,” said Kengor.
GOP Plays Hardball on Judges, Trump & Free Press, NBC Spiked Weinstein Story
Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America applaud Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell for squashing the “blue slip” system and expediting the confirmation of judicial appointments. Even though they’re pretty sure President Trump is joking about pulling network licenses in response to “fake news,” they explain why a president should never be threatening the existence of a media outlet over their content. And they cheer Ronan Farrow for his impressive reporting on the extent of Harvey Weinstein’s sexual assaults and harassment, while also blasting NBC for its lame explanation for refusing to run the story months ago.
EPA Scraps Obama ‘Clean Power’ Plan
An Obama-era plan to drastically reduce carbon emissions is on its way to the regulatory scrap heap after the Environmental Protection Agency Tuesday announced a repeal of the Clean Power Plan.
For Americans already struggling with much higher energy costs, this news will be welcome in many households trying to make ends meet.
“This was designed to cause electricity rates, according to [Obama] to necessarily skyrocket. So that won’t happen. The seniors, the poor on low and fixed income who had to choose between heating and eating will now, we hope, not have to,” said Horner.
The Trump administration projects this move will result in $33 billion in avoided costs due to the proposed policy. Horner suspects the actual number is much higher.
Even though the plan was never implemented, Horner says it still exacted a heavy toll on blue collar America.
“He put a lot of people out of work. A lot of communities were devastated. There’s an inescapable connection between the opioid epidemic in that region and the devastation that was wrought by what was clearly a political and not an environmental agenda,” said Horner.
“He thought he was punishing corporations. He harmed badly many communities and the people in them,” added Horner.
Horner says the outlook is getting brighter and will be helped by Tuesday’s EPA action. But he says a lot of the damage is permanent.
“Employment in that industry is rebounding. I don’t know that it will ever get to where it was before it faces the awesome power of the federal government,” said Horner.
What makes the toll even more tragic, according to Horner, is that the Obama administration freely admitted the crackdown on carbon emissions wouldn’t actually accomplish anything.
“The former EPA administrator under President Obama (Gina McCarthy), who is decrying the climate impact of this decision, testified that there was no detectable climate impact from this rule. There is actually a consensus on this,” said Horner.
So what was the point of the tougher emissions standards if they weren’t going to improve our climate? Horner says Obama was very clear about it.
“He said in four speeches, in the exact same deliberate phrase, ‘This to finally make renewable energy profitable in America. That’s what this was about. It was never about the climate,” said Horner.
But while Horner and his allies celebrate Tuesday’s decision, he says the fight is far from over.
“We will start a rule making process. Today begins the repeal, a 60-day comment period to be followed by another request for comments about what to replace it with if anything,” said Horner, who is urging Trump and EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt to scrap another Obama-era finding.
“They also made a declaration that carbon dioxide, a marginal greenhouse gas produced at the margins by man – not just through exhaling but by combusting hydrocarbon energy, the stuff that works, the reliable, affordable, abundant stuff. The administration now has to determine whether that really does endanger human health and welfare,” said Horner.
In urging the EPA to go further, Horner also applauds Trump and Pruitt for a move on Tuesday that he believes many other Republicans would be reluctant to take.
“We say pull it out root and branch. This is a very good start. I have to say most establishment Republicans would have shied from it and hoped for the best from the courts. We’re asking, now that these people have shown that they’re serious, fix the problem and undo the endangerment finding,” said Horner.
He says that explicit step is critical since domestic activists and even the United Nations are asking the courts in the U.S. to effectively make policy instead of the executive branch.
“You will have to replace it because this doesn’t have to go through Congress anymore. There’s enough on the books that the courts will take this over. The UN is issuing reports calling on attorneys general and private parties to ask the courts to take over this policy now, including the United States, to impose the Paris Treaty on us and so forth,” said Horner.
He says defenders of freedom need to stand in the gap against that unconstitutional effort and any future efforts to repeat Obama’s moves.
“It was a cruel gesture. It was virtue signaling. Thank God the EPA has said, ‘We’re going to formally repeal this rule.’ Let’s fix the problem and make it more difficult for someone like a President Warren to just come in and do this again,” he said.