It’s Not About the Crime. It’s About the News Coverage

I completely John Lefevre and Wilbert Reilly. The biggest story about this murder of a man riding a bicycle is not about this particular (horrific) crime. It's about the "news" media working nonstop overtime to find racism, but only in one direction. There is no corporate news coverage of this story. Reverse the "races" in this story, however, and this story would dominate the news cycle.

The "news" media are dividing us from each other in numerous ways, trying to make us suspicious of each other, to make a dollar. When a "racial" minority is the victim, they pursue a narrative that divides hundreds of millions of complex human beings into two--count 'em--two colors. As a race abolitionist, I oppose this practice. News stories about crime should point out dangerous people who should be removed from the street, regardless of their "color."

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Sasha Stone: Calling Out Gender Ideology

It's time to stop sitting on your hands and to start saying what you are seeing. Sasha Stone will help you. This episode is "Welcome to America's Religious War: America at the Hands of a Cult, Part Two."

Are we living through a culture war or a religious war? Can we even tell the difference by now?

The Left demonized the religious for nearly all of my life, yet here we are, a country at the hands of a cult, and the intellectuals can’t get us out of it — No proper boundaries to protect children, no guiding principles beyond categorizing us by skin color or gender identity, a godlessness that has left us awash in narcissism and hollowed out morality.

Progressivism is an invasive species. It can’t stop on its own. It has to blow through everything.

The #MeToo and Times Up movements collapsed. The funds dried up for Black Lives Matter. The box office in Hollywood is like a ghost town. All they have left now is to invade the minds and hearts of children to indoctrinate them into this bizarre new cult that seemingly came out of nowhere (aka Tumblr, Circa 2012).

There is no question that the pendulum is ready to swing, as the Left is long past its sell-by date, and Americans are just done. It is not a question of if, but when. If the Republicans can’t find a way to rescue this country in 2024, as Ronald Reagan did in 1980, they must be the most inept political party in American history.

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Real Election Interference: American Style

Glenn Greenwald comments:

"The FBI and CIA corruptly manipulated the last 2 elections, first by concocting a Russiagate investigation with no legal predicate (Durham) and no evidence to establish it (Mueller), then with the lie that reporting on the Bidens was "Russian disinformation"..."

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Remember the 3.4% DEATH Rate Gas Lighting?

Matt Orfalea formerly worked for Bernie Sanders' campaign. Now he uses his video-editing skills to piss off the elite by stating facts. Consider how panicked ordinary people SHOULD get if they are repeated told the lie that the DEATH rate of COVID is 3.4%. Elite rent-seekers knew exactly what they were doing when they repeatedly told this lie.

You can also follow Matt on Rumble, the free speech alternative to Youtube.

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About “Insurrections” “Rebellions” and Trump

Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment provides as follows:

Section 3 Disqualification from Holding Office No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice-President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.

At Reason, Constitutional Law Scholar Eugene Volokh takes a close look at the meanings of "insurrection" and "rebellion," as used in Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.  Why is this important, even for those of us who are not supporters of Donald Trump?  Volokh notes that several serious legal scholars with solid conservative credentials are proposing a broad interpretation of this constitutional provision and its related enforcement statute:

Congress has enacted a statute, 18 U.S.C § 2383, which covers participation in rebellion or insurrection, and which provides that those found guilty "shall be incapable of holding any office under the United States."

It is noteworthy that not one of the hundreds of people so far prosecuted for their Jan 6 misconduct (not even Donald Trump) has been criminally charged with "insurrection under Section 2383.

Volokh cautions that we should be wary of interpreting these terms loosely, in that they allow political operatives to disqualify their opponents from running, something that we instinctively find to be cringe-worthy when we see it in other countries.

If abused, this is profoundly anti-democratic. "The right to vote freely for the candidate of one's choice is of the essence of a democratic society, and any restrictions on that right strike at the heart of representative government." Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533, 555 (1964). The broader and more nebulous the definition of engaging in insurrection, and the fewer the procedural safeguards, the greater the danger.

About the terminology:

Section 3 speaks of "insurrection" and "rebellion." These are demanding terms, connoting only the most serious of uprisings against the government, such as the Whisky Rebellion and the Civil War. The terms of Section 3 should not be defined down to include mere riots or civil disturbances, which are common in United States history. Many of these riots impede the lawful operations of government, and exceed the power of normal law enforcement to control. Are they insurrections or rebellions, within the meaning of Section 3?

I have not done the historical work to speak with confidence, but I would hazard the suggestion that a riot is the use of violence to express anger or to attempt to coerce the government to take certain actions, while insurrections and rebellions are the use of violence, usually on a larger scale, to overthrow the government or prevent it from being able to govern.

I was personally outraged by the January 6 incursion, because I consider the Capitol to be a sacred civic space. Making things even worse, Congress was in session, meaning that the trespassers were directly interfering with the operation of my government. I am happy to see all those involved aggressively prosecuted. That said, I am also highly concerned that the U.S. Government itself, though its law enforcement arms (including the FBI), encouraged the protestors to invade the Capitol. See here and here and here and here.  But then, on July 13, 2022, the NYT, which has generally been horrified by the January 6 incursion,  published this bizarre article sympathetic to Ray Epps, who is on several January 6 videos encouraging protestors to go into the Capitol.  Follow up NYT story on July 14, 2022. Consider the second paragraph to the July 13 NYT story:

Ray Epps has suffered enormously in the past 10 months as right-wing media figures and Republican politicians have baselessly described him as a covert government agent who helped to instigate the attack on the Capitol last year.

Completely befuddled by the slant of this NYT coverage of Ray Epps, Tucker Carlson commented: "It's all very strange. The New York Times is mounting a propaganda campaign on behalf of a self-described Trump voter insurrectionist." Enough of this detour for now. Back to the Constitutional analysis.

Volokh also looks closely at the Constitutional requirement that one "engage in" one of these prohibited activities in order to be barred from office. In Volokh's analysis, barring someone from running for office requires more than applauding on the sidelines:

Moreover, Section 3 uses the verb "engage in," which connotes active involvement and not mere support or assistance. Significantly, Section 3 also uses the term "give aid and comfort to"—but this is reserved for giving aid and comfort to the "enemies" of the United States, which has historically meant enemies in war. Bas v. Tingy (1800). That Section 3 uses both terms, with different referents, strongly suggests that "engage in" means more than just give "aid and comfort" to an insurrection... In the absence of actual engagement in actual insurrection, judged as such by competent authorities, we should allow the American people to vote for the candidates of their choice.

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