A favorite leftist smear—employed for decades now—is the claim that everyone on the right is a “fascist.” So the question must be asked: What is fascism? Where does the term come from? What is its underlying ideology? In this week’s video, Dinesh D’Souza, best-selling author of The Big Lie, introduces us to Giovanni Gentile, the philosopher of fascism, whose writings make clear that fascism is a movement not of the political right, but of the left—which seeks to foist it off onto the right in an attempt to distance itself from its ugly history. Watch the video here.
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One down, God knows how many more to go. (See 1 below.)
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The Supreme Court hands Trump a temporary win as I would have thought they would. The eventual win comes later.
Anti-Trumpers are blinded by their hate and they are also blinded about what the Constitution allows by way of the president's authority. (See 2 below.)
Has the FBI been corrupted by Comey et. al. (See 2a below.)
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Is Trump going to split hairs and punt so as to not create more Middle East indigestion? (See 3 and 3a below.)
How many more behinds must our presidents kiss of corrupt leaders? We have been sucking up to the Palestinians for eons, same for N Korea and Iran. What ever happened to doing what is right and letting the corrupt learn they will not longer be coddled?
Probably not diplomatic enough for the sycophants in our State Department and the Politically Correct who are intent on destroying our world.
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Sorting out sex classifications is not easy because the phrase "ladies and gentlemen" leaves out a lot of people who travel. Transgenders would not know where to go and might not understand how to make more transfers. (See 4 below.)
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Dick
First Coast News reports:
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++A judge sentenced former congresswoman and convicted felon Corrine Brown to 5 years in federal prison Monday morning during a short hearing at the U.S. federal courthouse in downtown Jacksonville.
Judge Tim Corrigan issued the sentence for Brown to serve 60 months, about 5 years, in federal prison after she was found guilty on 18 counts of corruption.
Brown, who was emotional following the lengthy sentencing, is also required to pay $62,650.99 in restitution to the IRS. She must also pay a portion of $452,515.87 in restitution to others.
All three defendants will be able to voluntarily surrender to prison sometime after Jan. 8, 2018, Corrigan said. All three defendants will be required to turn over passports.
2)
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3)
Trump to Keep Embassy in Tel Aviv, but Recognize Jerusalem as Capital
WASHINGTON — President Trump plans to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital but not to move the American Embassy there for now, people briefed on the deliberations said on Friday, a halfway gesture intended to fulfill a campaign pledge while not derailing his peace initiative.
Mr. Trump is expected to announce the decision in a speech next Wednesday, these people said, though they cautioned that the president had not yet formally signed off on it and that the details of the plan could shift.
Those details, experts warned, are fiendishly complicated. The diplomatic status of Jerusalem is one of the world’s most contested issues, with Israel and the Palestinians claiming it as their capital. Its holy sites are sacred to Jews, Christians and Muslims, and any change in its status would have vast repercussions across the Middle East and other Islamic-majority countries worldwide.
Mr. Trump promised to move the American Embassy to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv as one of his first acts as president — a pledge that was popular with his evangelical supporters as well as with powerful Jewish donors, like the casino mogul Sheldon Adelson.
American presidents must sign a national security waiver every six months to keep the embassy in Tel Aviv. In June, Mr. Trump deferred a decision to move it to Jerusalem, under pressure from Arab leaders, who warned that it would ignite protests, and from advisers, including his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who worried that it could strangle the administration’s attempt to foster peace in the generations-long dispute.
With another deadline looming next Monday, Mr. Trump is expected to sign an order keeping the embassy in Tel Aviv. But he will couple that with a statement that the United States recognizes Jerusalem as the capital — something that no president, Republican or Democrat, has done since the state of Israel was established in 1948.
Given the extreme sensitivities surrounding Jerusalem, Middle East experts said Mr. Trump’s plan was fraught with risk. Even after extensive consultations with Arab leaders, which the White House has not done, such a move could provoke volatile reactions.
“The devil is in the details of what they announce,” said Martin S. Indyk, who served as American ambassador to Israel under President Bill Clinton. “If this is not framed properly, far from resolving this issue, it will land the administration in even hotter water.”
Among the questions, Mr. Indyk said, are whether Mr. Trump will restrict recognition to West Jerusalem, whether he will mention Palestinian claims to East Jerusalem and how he will deal with Jerusalem’s status as a holy city — a factor that could determine whether Saudi Arabia supports or abandons his peace project.
News of Mr. Trump’s decision came amid fresh disclosures about how, even before he took office, he worked closely with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to scuttle a United Nations Security Council resolution critical of Israel’s settlement policy — subverting then-President Barack Obama, who had decided to allow a vote to go ahead.
Documents filed in connection with the guilty plea of Michael T. Flynn, Mr. Trump’s former national security adviser, revealed that on Dec. 22, 2016, a “very senior member” of Mr. Trump’s transition team instructed Mr. Flynn to contact foreign officials, including from Russia, “to influence those governments to delay the vote or defeat the resolution.”
Lawyers identified the senior transition official as Mr. Kushner. Russia rebuffed Mr. Flynn’s request and voted for the resolution, which passed after the United States abstained.
3a) Saudis move toward Netanyahu's vision on the Palestinians
TimesofIsrael.com, Alexander Fulbright
An American peace plan rumored to be backed by Saudi Arabia has reportedly fueled concerns among Palestinian and Arab officials that Washington has adopted Israel’s views on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Under a proposal presented by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas during the latter’s visit to Riyadh last month, the Palestinians would receive a non-contiguous state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip without full sovereignty over the territory they control; the vast majority of Jewish settlements in the West Bank would not be evacuated; the Palestinians would not receive East Jerusalem as their capital; and Palestinian refugees and their descendants would not be allowed to return to Israel, The New York Times reported late Sunday.
The report came as speculation was mounting over whether US President Donald Trump would recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and the effect such a move would have on American efforts to revive peace talks.
The report said the plan, many of whose tenets mirrored those favored by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, raised consternation among Abbas and other Arab officials as to the US’s intentions for an Israeli-Palestinian peace plan and whether the powerful crown prince was acting on behalf of the Trump administration.
Among the elements of the Saudi proposal outlined in the report were establishing the capital of a future Palestinian state in Abu Dis, a suburb of Jerusalem in the West Bank, east of Israel’s security barrier.
Another reported element of the Saudi pitch was to propose adding portions of Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula to Gaza in exchange for territories in the West Bank that the Palestinians would cede to Israel. Egypt has rejected such proposals in the past, with former president Hosni Mubarak recalling last week that he shot down the idea when it was raised by Netanyahu in 2010.
The report said Abbas was told by the Saudis he had two months to either accept the plan or face pressure to step down in favor of someone more amenable to the proposal.
The Times said details of the proposal presented to Abbas by the Saudi crown prince were confirmed by numerous sources, including a senior figure in Abbas’s Fatah party, a Palestinian official in Lebanon, a Lebanese politician, Western officials, and Israel’s Joint (Arab) List MK Ahmad Tibi.
Tibi denied the Saudis had presented Abbas with an American peace plan and dismissed Monday as “fake news” the notion that the crown prince had suggested Abu Dis become the capital of a Palestinian state. He said US officials had directly — rather than through the Saudis — “thrown around” proposals that the Palestinians would never accept, as they did not include “full sovereignty, the dismantlement of settlements or the end of the occupation.”
Tibi also warned that any move by Trump toward recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital would end the possibility of a peace deal, and called the city’s status “a red line.”
Washington denied to The Times that the reported proposal was in fact its peace plan, while Riyadh insisted it remained committed to its own longstanding Arab Peace Initiative, which would include an Israeli withdrawal to the 1967 lines and a Palestinian capital in East Jerusalem in exchange for normalization with the Arab world.
The Saudi crown prince’s reported proposal to Abbas came only weeks after he met with Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and point man on the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. The two are said to have developed a close rapport.
The Times report came as Kushner made rare public remarks on the White House’s push to revive peace talks, and as Monday’s deadline for Trump to sign a waiver delaying the move of the US embassy to Jerusalem inched ever closer.
Speaking on Sunday at the Saban Forum, Kushner said Trump remained undecided on moving the embassy or recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.
Kushner also said his team’s goal is to build trust between the sides, which he emphasized was increasing due the absence of leaks on the US peace plan.
A flurry of reports in recent days said that while Trump is expected to sign the waiver delaying the embassy move, he will give a speech on Wednesday recognizing Jerusalem as the Jewish state’s capital.
Such a statement would be highly controversial, upsetting not only the Palestinians but also other Sunni Arab allies, including Saudi Arabia and Jordan
A Palestinian delegation reportedly met with Kushner on Friday, warning him that relocating the embassy to Jerusalem, or formally recognizing the holy city as Israel’s capital, would “kill the negotiations” and mark the end of the peace process.
Both the head of the Arab League and Jordan’s foreign minister warned on Sunday that recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital could lead to regional violence and derail attempts at renewing peace talks.
Eric Cortellessa and Dov Lieber contributed to this report.
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4) Sorting out sex is not easy for the earnestly politically correct
Some of our “genders” are out of control. It was never like this when everyone had not a gender, but a “sex,” for better or worse. Anyone confused about which could look at a driver’s license, or a student ID, and there it was, in black and white. But this was not good enough for the arbiters of political correctness.
The New York subway system is doing away with the perfectly accurate if not politically correct terminology of “ladies and gentlemen,” as used on its public-address system. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority announcements of delays, detours and derailments to the multitudes aboard or waiting impatiently on the platforms will henceforth will be addressed to “riders” or “passengers.” This follows the example of the London Underground, where “ladies and gentlemen” have been replaced by “Hello, everyone.”
This is intended, so we’re told, to make sure all passengers feel welcome. “We have reviewed the language that we use in announcements and elsewhere,” said Mark Evers, a spokesperson for the Underground, “and will make sure that it is fully inclusive, reflecting the great diversity of London” (though not necessarily reflecting that the trains run on time). Clarity in communications was once what language was meant to achieve, but that, apparently, is much too 20th century.
This is the usual solution in search of a problem, since it’s not at all clear that anyone ever felt “unwelcome” or “excluded,” except for turnstile-jumpers, most of whom readily identify as male.“Ladies and gentlemen” does not, to be sure, cover all 71 “gender” options used by Facebook in the United Kingdom, about a dozen more than in the United States, but if each “gender” should get a call-out in an announcement of a delay, for example, the repairs will probably have been made by the time the announcer gets through 71 “genders.” By that time, a transgendered passenger might have returned to his original “gender.”
The LGBT lobby, which includes a lot of “genders,” should be cheered by the neutering or spaying of delegates in the Virginia General Assembly. When the House of Delegates reconvenes in January, says Majority Leader M. Kirkland Cox of Colonial Heights, a Republican, its members will no longer be called as “the Gentleman from Goochland” or “the Gentlewoman from Grundy,” for example, even if that’s what, to all outward appearances, they are. Instead, these worthies will become merely the “Delegate from Goochland, or Grundy,” as the case may be. Mr. Cox thinks “gentlelady” and “gentleman” are outdated, which sounds pretty un-gallant for a Southern gentleman, if such is still found in the assembly.
Resistance to change has come, ironically, from Democrats, who are expected to be hip and modern, with Republicans trying to catch up with the program. Some Democrats suspect that the reason Republicans want to make the change now is to avoid confusion about what to call Danica Roem, the Gentle-Transgendered Person from Prince William County. She was once Dan and is now Danica.
Kenneth Plum, who has been a delegate from Fairfax County as a male Democrat for 18 years, says the change of honorifics is “shameful” and “unfortunate,” and he is disappointed that the House of Delegates is unduly “singling out” his soon-to-be colleague. Confusion not only reigns in Richmond, but is officially celebrated. Alas, there’s no night train back to reality, in London, New York or elsewhere. Even if there were, “ladies and gentlemen” could probably not get a ticket.
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