Tuesday, May 24, 2022

Another Explosive Green Deal! So What's New? Vicious, Creepy Jewish anti-Semites Threaten Israel. Goldman Advises. Methodology Mismatch.

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Another Green Deal More Explosive Than Obama's Paris Accords!

By Derek Hunter

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Joe Biden's Buffalo Speech Was the Speech of an Indecent Man

By Dennis Prager

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The Conservative Populist Coalition Has Grown in Pennsylvania. What That Means Going Forward Is Important

By Salena Zito

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National School Boards Association Wanted Federal Troops Deployed at Local Meetings

By Matt Vespa

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So what's new?

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Joe Biden and Racial Demagoguery  Joe Biden’s cognitive challenges have stripped away his political savvy and left him in the raw, revealing his real essence—a racialist of the first order.  By Victor Davis Hanson

Posted By Ruth King

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Do all vicious, creepy, weak knee'd, anti-Semitic Jews, whose last name's begin with S, condemn Israel - Soros, Sanders, Schiff. Schumer and have Democrats turned against Israel as they have against our own country?

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Who’s winning Bernie Sanders’s war on AIPAC?

The Vermont Socialist and allies like AOC are the main obstacles to the pro-Israel organization’s efforts to stop the left’s anti-Israel campaign to transform the Democratic Party.


JONATHAN S. TOBIN


(May 23, 2022 / JNS) Last week, 57 Democratic members of the U.S. House of Representatives signed a letter calling on the U.S. State Department and the FBI to launch an investigation into the death of Shireen Abu Akleh, a Palestinian American journalist who worked for Al Jazeera. Abu-Akleh died from a gunshot wound suffered during a battle between Israeli forces and Palestinians who were resisting a counter-terrorism raid launched in response to the recent wave of deadly terror attacks in Israel. The letter was worded in accordance with the Palestinian narrative that took as a given that the reporter was deliberately killed by the Israelis when the facts indicate that it was an unfortunate accident in a combat zone, and that the fatal bullet was just as likely to have been fired from a Palestinian weapon than an Israeli one.


It was the latest indication of the inroads that anti-Israel propagandists have been making among progressives. While the more extreme members of the Democratic “Squad” are explicitly supporting the nakba narrative that demands Israel’s destruction, other left-wing Democrats are backing this up by supporting different measures aimed at buttressing the big lie about an “apartheid state.” They’re spreading other canards that make the argument that Israel’s measures of self-defense are illegitimate. The goal of efforts like the Abu Akleh letter is to undermine the U.S.-Israel alliance by depicting Israel as an oppressor and Palestinians as helpless victims rather than the perpetrators of violence. That a quarter of the Democratic caucus in the House signed on to it shows how much ground Israel’s enemies have gained in the party in recent years.


That’s the context for what is shaping up as an increasingly bitter fight between those who dub themselves “progressives” and mainstream pro-Israel groups over the future of the Democratic Party. That battle has been playing out all across the political map in recent weeks as Democratic congressional primaries in which left-wing critics of Israel are facing off against other members of their party who are seen as friendlier to the Jewish state.


Pro-Israel political donors and political action committees have been rallying to the support of those seeking to prevent the entry into Congress of future “Squad” members. The mainstream pro-Israel lobby AIPAC formed its own PAC last year to help in this effort, joining with others such as the Democratic Majority for Israel (DMFI). They’ve had their victories, especially when supporting incumbents like Rep. Shontel Brown (D-Ohio) against left-wing insurgents like Nina Turner, who was national chair for Sen. Bernie Sanders’ (I-Vt.) presidential campaign in 2020. Brown beat Turner in a special election in 2021 and again earlier this month with pro-Israel groups spending heavily on her behalf.


But they aren’t winning every fight, and one of those most determined to see the Democrats take a hard-left turn is Sanders. Last week, he took particular satisfaction in seeing Summer Lee, another progressive he supports, beat Steve Irwin, a pro-Israel moderate for the Democratic nomination for a Pittsburgh-area congressional seat, despite the efforts of pro-Israel PACs. Lee was also strongly backed by “Squad” leader Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.).


The New York Times depicted that race as evidence that Sanders was preparing for “war with AIPAC,” as well as proof that he can win it. To that end, he is seeking to get Democrats to reject all super-PAC funding. Though there are plenty of left-wing fundraising groups, such a move would hurt pro-Israel groups far more than their opponents.


Sanders is a bitter critic of the Jewish state but doesn’t oppose its existence. He told the Times that his confrontation with AIPAC and its moderate allies wasn’t really about Israel but because such groups are “doing everything they can to destroy the progressive movement in this country.” He holds a grudge against DFMI for the way it helped derail his presidential hopes in 2020 in the early primary states when he was temporarily anointed as the frontrunner until the rest of the Democratic field united behind President Joe Biden.


In response, DFMI merely echoes what AIPAC’s goal has been since it began several decades ago, saying that its purpose is to do what it can to ensure bipartisan support for Israel. But, though DFMI and AIPAC are, contrary to Sanders’ statement, not interested in preventing the Democrats from tilting as far to the left on economic and social issues, it’s impossible to separate the party’s ideological shift on a wide range of topics from its attitudes towards Israel. The same applies to the troubling manner in which much of the leadership of the Democratic Party has shown itself prepared to accept the mainstreaming of anti-Semitic causes like BDS, even while personally opposing it, in order to avoid an open break with “Squad” stars like AOC, and Reps. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) and Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.).


So, while Jewish activists say they’re not at war with progressives per se, progressive leaders like Sanders and AOC do consider themselves to be “at war” with the pro-Israel community because AIPAC and DFMI are among the principal obstacles to their goal of taking over the party.


Over the last half-century, the two parties have exchanged identities when it comes to Israel. Republicans have gone from largely indifferent to Zionism to being nearly unanimous on the issue and a lockstep pro-Israel party. Democrats were once almost uniformly pro-Israel but are now, as the recent primary battles show, deeply divided over it.


Complicating matters is that bipartisanship is out of fashion in both parties. So it wasn’t just Sanders and AOC expressing outrage when AIPAC endorsed a slate of pro-Israel Republican incumbents that Democrats were intent on smearing as “insurrectionists” because of their support for challenges to the 2020 presidential election results. Lately, Democrats have been damning all Republicans and their voters as beyond the pale for their support for former President Donald Trump and even somehow to blame for a mass killing in Buffalo last week that was perpetrated by a racist anti-Semitic extremist with a history of mental illness. That means the business of crafting a bipartisan coalition for Israel may be an increasingly impossible task.


The stakes involved in this Democratic civil war are about more than Sanders’s attempt to settle scores with DFMI or the resentment towards AIPAC elsewhere on the left. The younger generation of Democrats getting into politics is heavily influenced by fashionable ideologies like critical race theory and intersectionality, which demonize Israel and give a permission slip to anti-Semitism. That means they are far more inclined to side with the left on Israel and other issues, leaving pro-Israel Democrats increasingly out of touch with their party’s base. Despite the wins chalked up by pro-Israel activists in some races, the number of House Democrats who identify as progressives and/or want to join the “Squad” is growing with each congressional election cycle.


That creates a situation where Democratic office-holders are willing to sign on to Palestinian propaganda like the Abu Akleh letter even if they are not yet ready to back Tlaib and Omar when they propose resolutions predicated on Israel’s destruction. It was no small irony that one of the co-sponsors of the letter was Rep. Lou Correa (D-Calif.), who has actually been endorsed by AIPAC.


Given the increasing volume of slanders that are tossed at Israel and Jews about “apartheid,” this also means that anti-Semitic lies are going to be getting a hearing among Democrats, instead of being dismissed as they should be. As that becomes the norm, the pro-Israel community’s worries about preserving bipartisanship will become increasingly irrelevant. As the older generation of septuagenarian Democrats who pay lip service to support for Israel leaves the stage and are replaced by younger people who make no bones about their intersectional ideas, the more important battle will be the one to preserve support for Israel among those who understand that the progressive movement is a threat to America’s future, as well as to the Jewish state.

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Goldman tells it's clients:

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''The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the realist adjusts the sails.''

By WILLIAM ARTHUR WARD


What Goldman Sachs Is Telling Its Clients About a Recession

Companies.


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Managing a World Order in Crisis

Biden’s foreign policy revs up but observers abroad are skeptical of an economic plan that has caused record inflation and gas prices.

By Walter Russell Mead 


Davos, Switzerland


As business and political leaders flocked to the World Economic Summit in Davos this weekend, they could hardly help noting that Biden administration foreign policy is going global and kicking into high gear. In the past week alone, President Biden met with Southeast Asian leaders at a special Washington summit, talked with the Swedish and Finnish prime ministers about joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, shepherded $40 billion in aid for Ukraine through Congress, and embarked on a trip to South Korea and Japan. The Asian trip will culminate in a Tokyo meeting of the Quad, where leaders from India, Australia, Japan and the U.S. will discuss their deepening cooperation in the Indo-Pacific.


Meanwhile, the State Department is planning the 2022 Summit of the Americas, a meeting of Western Hemisphere leaders scheduled for Los Angeles in June even as American diplomats work to shore up relations with such key Middle East allies as Saudi Arabia ahead of a presidential visit to the Middle East.


This is not activism for activism’s sake. The intensification of the American foreign-policy agenda reflects a perception that the international political and economic system American presidents have labored to build since the time of Franklin Roosevelt has fallen into a deep crisis. The President’s team seems to grasp the gravity of the situation. The question is whether they have developed a workable plan.


The war in Ukraine is only one indicator pointing toward what begins to look like a great unraveling of the tapestry of world order that Americans and their allies have been weaving since 1945. The eruption of the greatest war in Europe for the last 70 years and a rising potential for a NATO-Russian nuclear standoff comes as military tensions rise across the Indo-Pacific. Military budgets are increasing around the world.


At the same time, the economic underpinnings of world peace are showing signs of strain. The economic ties between China and the West are fraying. Protectionism is gaining ground in the U.S and around the world. Last week President Xi Jinping ordered China’s communist elite to divest their foreign-based assets, a move aimed at limiting the power of future Western sanctions and at tightening Mr. Xi’s control over wealthy Chinese.


China’s apparent transition to long-term slower growth upends many assumptions behind corporate spending and investment plans around the world even as markets keep a nervous eye on the health of long-pampered Chinese real estate companies. A deadly combination of rising inflation and interest rates with food and fertilizer shortages due largely to the war in Ukraine threatens to ignite political unrest in many countries.

 

Global disruption is on the minds of those in Davos this week for the first full meeting of the World Economic Forum since 2020. The 2021 meeting was canceled during the pandemic, and the Omicron wave forced postponement of this year’s meeting from January to May. CEOs who based their strategic planning on globalization must adjust to a world growing less seamless with every passing day. Political leaders who expected to steer their countries through the quiet waters of the end of history are instead raising defense spending and reviewing their military alliances.


Many traditional American allies welcome the new U.S. activism and share White House hopes that a revived alliance of democracies can calm the troubled geopolitical waters. But the president’s low poll numbers undermine confidence in the continuity of American foreign policy and foreign observers see little to celebrate in the administration’s economic agenda.


President Biden and many of his advisers appear to believe that the strength of the American world system depends on the global appeal of American values, and that the best way to protect the American order is to double down on democracy promotion, the strengthening of international institutions and the defense of human rights. Foreigners, for the most part, are more pragmatic and often judge the American system based on its ability to deliver economic gains.


Wilsonians like to say that such values as democracy and freedom are universal, and foreign admiration for the principles of American foreign policy is the key to U.S. international popularity and success. The sad truth is that money often matters more. The opportunities that easy access to American markets offered people all over the world did more to legitimize the American international system in many eyes than global admiration for our high moral character and noble ideals.


The faltering American commitment to trade liberalization, a blundering energy policy and the administration’s history of blindness to inflation have substantially diminished international confidence in the administration’s capacity for economic leadership. Abroad as well as at home, “It’s the economy, stupid!” is a good slogan for Presidents to keep in mind.

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Trump's victory in 2016 was an act of voter desperation brought about by continued decades of failure by progressives now turned radical Democrats and the fact that Obama used the race card to divide America.


The tragedy is, as I have stated before, there is a mismatch in methodology that is serious and yet, I have no answer.  Radicals are active, zealous ideologically and work at their goals 24/7. Most middle road Americans speak their mind every second year and spend the rest of their time living the "good life" provided by out constitution and capitalism.


By the time they vote  half the loaf has been eaten and they are left to change the crumbs.


Well America is now crumbling and Biden is blaming everyone else for his own stupidity. Even voters can't fix stupidity.

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