Category: Politics

  • All politics are local

    All politics are local

    I wanna explain something you may not realize, see this Finnish girl, you and her have much in common, she married a yooper, not everyone has yooper, you people have me and just like her, ain’t you lucky, of course you are.

    As you know I have two crows (cleanup crew), been hanging around for years, few times I have put some stuff down with-in a foot of their beaks, best not to push my luck, what little of it I do have. What they leave me are bones which I do make bone chimes, fair trade least around here. Yesurday was really nice,no snow and the sun was out, great time to fire the grill/smoker. If you don’t have one of these get one, they’ll fit in your oven just fine.

    Ever go to a renaissance Festival, example, this is Jenny, Jenny O’Connor of the O’Connor clan, aka the hot violist

    I have, picked up a bad habit which I use out back, I can toss bones over my shoulder towards the bone pit without worry. Since Dog has moved in, things have changed greatly. There’s only that refuses to go with the program, a leg off rack as I was carrying it

    Normally I would toss to bone pit, not with dog here

    Those two birds seen it fall, waiting for the hail Mary that didn’t come, you shoulda heard the screeching, one even flew up an divebombed me. I won’t turn my back on them ever again while eating outside, trust, what trust are you talking about

    Now that we got through poltics, which got me hungry (2nd breakfast time no wonder).

    But I ain’t this hungry

  • Rep Al Green Censured

    Rep Al Green Censured

    Following an embarrassing outburst, Rep Al Green (D-TX-9) was removed from the audience of the Presidents joint speech to Congress.

    Well, Al had some more bad news today. He was officially censured by the House of Representatives.

    The votes broke down this way:

    • 224 in favor (Yea)
    • 198 against (Nay)
    • 2 voting “present”

    As would be expected, the vote broke mostly along party lines. There were 10 Dems who broke ranks and voted Yea. They were:

    • Ami Bera (California)
    • Ed Case (Hawaii)
    • Jim Costa (California)
    • Laura Gillen (New York)
    • Jim Himes (Connecticut)
    • Chrissy Houlahan (Pennsylvania)
    • Marcy Kaptur (Ohio)
    • Jared Moskowitz (Florida)
    • Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (Washington)
    • Tom Suozzi (New York)

    Green himself and Shomari Figures from Alabama voted present.

  • The Cultural Cycle Is Upon Us Again

    The Cultural Cycle Is Upon Us Again

    The Cultural Cycle Is Upon Us Again


    “May you live in interesting times.”

    — Ancient Chinese proverb

    By: Glenn Spitzer for American Thinker

    What is happening right now? Why are we dismantling or reconfiguring governmental institutions at a pace not seen in 80 to 90 years?

    All of this is actually quite normal. The Romans called this cultural cycle a saeculum, which refers to a period about as long as a human life (80–90 years). In modern times, we refer to these cycles as “turnings,” a term popularized by demographers William Strauss and Neil Howe. A turning is approximately 22 years, and the fourth turning is one in which there is radical social upheaval. We are plainly in a fourth turning right now.

    Fourth turnings often (but not necessarily) resolve in violent revolution. The last fourth turning resulted in World War II; the one before that resulted in the Civil War; the one before that resulted in the Revolutionary War and establishment of the Constitution; and the one before that resulted in the Glorious Revolution. The cycles repeat throughout history like clockwork—as predictable as human nature.

    But the last fourth turning did not result in violent revolution within the United States. We were likely spared in large part because of the stabilizing effect of the Constitution. Moreover, we did experience a war. Fourth turnings are periods where the hostilities between competing factions build to a crescendo, and then resolve in such a way that the population has no more tolerance for discord (the transition into the first turning—the rebirth). Unfortunately, humans typically only reach this point after a hot conflict.

    Though we did not see violence on U.S. soil, we did experience a revolution in terms of the establishment of government institutions under FDR—which carried into the 1960s (Johnson’s “Great Society” welfare programs) and beyond. The defining characteristic of a fourth turning is the destruction or major reconfiguration of those institutions that no longer serve their intended purpose or for which there is no longer a need. And now again, with President Trump’s first few months in office, we are seeing radical changes to institutions with lightning speed.

    It’s no coincidence that these cultural revolutions coincide with long economic debt cycles. Revolutions typically coincide with debt burdens that exceed 100% of a nation’s gross domestic product. While the U.S. exceeded 100% debt to GDP for a short period during WWII, the debt fell back to manageable levels after the war (dropping to 31% by 1981). But now, as a result of our ineffective institutions, our debt burden has spiraled out of control (over $36 trillion and over $100,000 per person) and is consistently above 100% of GDP. Many now recognize that the United States will cease to exist unless we address this debt issue with urgency.

    A new populist majority has finally had enough, and its leaders are unafraid to exert political will to make radical changes. This populist majority appears to want to swing a wrecking ball into these dysfunctional institutions. The Democrat party, the only viable opposition, is desperately trying to defend these dysfunctional institutions—predominantly because it relies on these dysfunctional institutions for its very survival.

    This old guard seeks to defend what the majority sees as indefensible. The old guard argues for open borders and transgenderism, while arguing against government audits, efficiency, and accountability. However, the majority is clearly demanding change and losing patience with the old guard.

    A recent poll from Quinnipiac, a left leaning pollster, found that only 31% of Americans support the Democrat party, which has come to represent these failed institutions. This is the lowest support for the Democrat party since these polls began.

    USAID is a perfect example of the split between the old guard and the new majority. While Democrat politicians scream like stuck pigs over the attacks on USAID, those of us who formerly considered ourselves Democrats see the rot plainly and have disdain for it. And this disconnect is why the Democrat party continues to hemorrhage voters.

    It’s obscene to most of us that Democrat politicians would dare support USAID. Forget about the millions from USAID spent overseas on sex-change operations, transgender operas in Columbia, transgender comic books in Peru, studies to determine cocaine impacts on Chihuahuas—these are mere distractions. The real issue is that institutions like these have zero accountability and spend tens of billions of dollars to prop up a corrupt and unaccountable bureaucracy against the express will of the people who pay for them.

    USAID spent several millions of dollars to support propaganda media, both foreign and domestic. The propaganda is used to push wars on the American people and to cause regime changes abroad. There is zero transparency. Whether we want to believe it or not, humans have a herd mentality, and when we are told to believe something from a seemingly reputable media outlet, we believe it. But now the curtain has been pulled back and the deception will no longer be tolerated. The message is clear: the lying needs to stop.

    USAID has been exposed as a CIA slush fund. We’ve learned that our government spent billions of dollars without our knowledge to facilitate the invasion of our country by tens of millions of illegal aliens. It spent tens of billions in Ukraine to fund things that no American would support – like paying the salaries of wealthy Ukrainian bureaucrats and propping up their pensions.

    We are finally starting to understand why we are in a death spiral of debt. But more importantly, we are finally starting to understand that the problem can be addressed with practical solutions. And most importantly, we are finally exerting political will to address the obviously dysfunctional institutions that are at the root of the problem. And because of the overwhelming popular support, we should be able to do this without violent upheaval. Time will tell.

  • 900+ Former and Current Main Justice…

    900+ Former and Current Main Justice…

    900+ Former and Current Main Justice Lawfare Operatives, Self-Identify

    Moments ago, 900+ career DOJ lawyers signed an open letter in support of ongoing Lawfare operations against President Trump and the American judicial system.

    [SOURCE – w/ pages of signatories]

    Put another way, 900 career DOJ lawyers, who used Main Justice as their platform to participate in corrupting and weaponizing the American judicial system for their own financial benefit, have now publicly self-identified.

    These are the legal abusers within the system. The professional gaslighters, Lawfare activists and legally trained abusers of trust, who twist, distort and tear at the foundational fabric of our constitutional republic, while claiming moral superiority and cloaking their efforts under the guise of victimhood.

    They are self-identifying and self-deporting from the system.  America is winning again.

    Source: https://theconservativetreehouse.com/blog/2025/02/18/900-former-and-current-main-justice-lawfare-operatives-self-identify/
    February 18, 2025

  • Why Greenland and the broader Article have had the Pentagon’s growing attention for years

    Why Greenland and the broader Article have had the Pentagon’s growing attention for years


    Why Greenland and the broader Arctic have had the Pentagon’s growing attention for years

     Summary

    The article describes the Pentagon’s growing interest in Greenland and the Arctic region. The article highlights Greenland’s strategic importance as a gateway to the Arctic and its potential for mineral resources. The article also mentions the increasing competition from Russia and China in the Arctic region.

    John Vandiver for stripes.com

    Airmen conduct engine runs on an F-35A Lightning II aircraft on the ramp at Thule Air Base, Greenland, in 2023. President-elect Donald Trump has said that the U.S. must take possession of Greenland for national security reasons. (Benjamin Wiseman/U.S. Air

     Force)

    STUTTGART, Germany — President-elect Donald Trump’s assertion this week that the United States must take possession of Greenland cast a spotlight upon U.S. military operations on the landmass, as the Arctic ice thins and competition with Russia and China grows.

    Since the 1940s, the Pentagon has valued Greenland, which serves as a gateway to the Arctic. During the Cold War, the military had more than 10,000 troops in its territory, which hosts Pituffik Space Base, formerly known as Thule Air Base

    Today, the nuclear armed long-range bombers that were part of the original Cold War force are gone. But a ballistic missile early warning mission carries on. About 200 active-duty U.S. Air Force and Space Force personnel are part of that effort, which entails monitoring orbiting satellites for signs of attack. 

    Trump, during a news conference Tuesday, rattled some allies when he refused to rule out the possibility of seizing Greenland, an autonomous territory of NATO member Denmark, by force.

    “I’m not going to commit to that,” Trump said after being asked if he would reject the notion of using military or economic coercion to control Greenland.

    “We need Greenland for national security purposes,” he added.

    The traditional signpost on remote military bases, here at Thule, Greenland in 2014, shows the base is slightly closer to Moscow than Washington. President-elect Donald Trump has said that the United States must take possession of Greenland, an autonomous territory of Denmark, for national security reasons. (Stars and Stripes)

    How Trump’s public pressuring will play out isn’t clear, but his emphasis on Greenland’s value to the United States suggests that military activities in the Arctic will be getting more attention during his second term.

    The High North has taken on added importance in recent years given concerns about Russia’s growing military presence in the Arctic. China also has signaled an intent to play a larger role in the region, declaring itself in 2018 a “near-Arctic country” with vested interests.

    Trump alluded to both countries Tuesday, saying that Russian and Chinese vessels navigating waters near Greenland pose a danger. 

    “You have Chinese ships all over the place. You have Russian ships all over the place. We’re not letting that happen,” Trump said. 

    Military and civilian ships alike typically have the right to freedom of navigation under international law. There are some restrictions on the actions they may take, particularly for warships, in territorial waters.

    The Pentagon has sought to bring more attention to operations in the Arctic and updated its strategy for the region in 2024. But there haven’t been any major force posture adjustments there. 

    That could change given environmental factors. With melting sea ice, new commercial shipping lanes are opening up that will shorten travel routes between the Far East and northern Europe.

    Arctic shipping increased by 37% between 2013 and 2023, according to the Arctic Council, an intergovernmental forum.

    The circumstances bring potential access to valuable minerals and oil, which also could be of interest to Trump. 

    The ice-free part of Greenland also has the potential to be a major source for in-demand rare earth minerals that support a wide range of industries, the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland said in 2023.

    There are already indications of the Pentagon stepping up activities in Greenland.

    In 2022, the U.S. Air Force awarded a nearly $4 billion contract to ensure ongoing operations at Pituffik. And in 2023, four Air Force F-35s deployed for the first time at the base to show off the ability to operate in harsh terrain. 

    In August, the Washington-based Atlantic Council think tank published an analysis that said the United States should “double down” on the development of Greenland as a cornerstone of its security strategy in the Arctic. 

    Given China’s overtures to Greenland to develop its mineral resources, “much more needs to be done to realize Greenland’s full potential in supporting the United States’ economic and security interests,” the Atlantic Council paper said.

    Greenland was ruled directly by Denmark from the early 18th century until home rule began on the island in 1979. In 2009, Greenland approved a referendum granting it autonomy in all matters except defense, security and foreign policy. 

    Floating the idea of using coercion or force could be a negotiating tactic for Trump, who said Tuesday that he didn’t consider Denmark’s authority over Greenland legitimate. 

    But Trump has long had an eye on Greenland and his comments this week went further than past statements about wanting to acquire the territory.

    The situation is likely to become a point of diplomatic tension inside NATO and a source of unease for Denmark, which has signaled that it has no intention of parting with Greenland. 

    Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen sought to solidify the island’s autonomy following Trump’s remarks, saying Tuesday that “Greenland belongs to Greenland” and wasn’t for sale. 

  • SecDef Hegseth Gets a Rude and Disrespectful Welcome by US Military Command in Germany

    SecDef Hegseth Gets a Rude and Disrespectful Welcome by US Military Command in Germany

    SecDef Hegseth Gets a Rude and Disrespectful Welcome by US Military Command in Germany

    streiff12:13 PM on February 12, 2025

    The opinions expressed by contributors are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of RedState.com.

    AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

    Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth began a tour of Europe Tuesday, starting at the headquarters of US European Command at Patch Barracks in Stuttgart, Germany. The newly minted SecDef has a heavy schedule in front of him, inspecting US forces in Europe and dealing with his first meeting with NATO. He is obviously trying to move beyond the controversies associated with his confirmation. He is also trying to lead by example and reverse the cultural rot in the US military by force of will.

    He traveled to Europe by way of a C-17 cargo plane with a command pod rather than in a Gulfstream executive jet.

    C-17’s ‘Silver Bullet’ Airstream Trailer Pod Used By Secretary Of Defense Hegseth On First Overseas Trip

    The dated Silver Bullet Command and Control Modules are scheduled to be replaced later this year after more than three decades of service.

    Story: https://t.co/3yXYsTr6Aj— Tyler Rogoway (@Aviation_Intel) February 12, 2025

    He traveled with his wife and child. This has become something of a standard image of all Trump Cabinet secretaries. Trump has had his grandchild at his desk. Sean Duffy’s family is prominent in events. JD Vance’s wife and kids travel with him. Musk’s kid was at the press conference he held yesterday. The image of family as a central point in life rather than an adjunct to your job is striking when compared to previous administrations, including Trump 1.0. See my colleague Brandon Morse’s post on the subject: Elon Musk Is Demonstrating the Best Pro-Life Strategy Right Now and It’s Heartwarming to See – RedState.

    NEW: Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth & his wife just landed in Germany after opting to skip the Munich Security Conference to instead talk to American troops throughout Europe, including Poland & Belgium.

    “I would much rather talk to troops than go to cocktail parties.”… pic.twitter.com/8tsyUdVPJ8— George (@BehizyTweets) February 11, 2025

    Hegseth mixed with the troops.

    Pete Hegseth at the gym with U.S. soldiers in Europe this morning.

    Defense Secretary lifting weights with the troops, awesome.pic.twitter.com/aLU3vmhMGJ— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) February 11, 2025

    He ran PT with 1st Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group.

    BREAKING: Pete Hegseth is in Germany training with Green Berets and is skipping the Munich Security Conference to interact with American troops throughout Europe instead.

    “I would much rather talk to troops than go to cocktail parties.” pic.twitter.com/aPtxhNiRTN— Leading Report (@LeadingReport) February 11, 2025

    This is a close-up of the upper right image in the last group because the size of that guy has been commented on.

    Pete Hegseth is in Germany training with Green Berets and is skipping the Munich Security Conference to interact with American troops throughout Europe instead.

    “I would much rather talk to troops than go to cocktail parties.”

    Did you work out today?😜 https://t.co/SbAtcHoulh— NannaTracyM (@NannaTracyM) February 12, 2025

    While the informal side went well, the official visit was, in my view, a lot more problematic.

    These images are from the official reception.

    Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth visited US European Command (EUCOM) headquarters in Stuttgart, Germany yesterday. He is on his first trip to Europe since taking office. pic.twitter.com/JoIbjC8rcD— Brodie K. – Analyze & Educate (@AnalyzeEducate) February 12, 2025

    I’m old school on uniforms. I think the custom of wearing BDUs (utilities, fatigues, whatever you want to call the field uniform) all the time is horrendous. When I was a young officer, you weren’t allowed to wear BDUs off-post. Period. You couldn’t go to a fast food place or run an errand on the way home or at lunch wearing BDUs. In my view, if you can’t break out the Class A uniform to welcome the SecDef and note the color guard is in dress uniform, then there is no possible occasion that calls for them. But, if you do wear BDUs to greet the SecDef, show him the respect of wearing a fresh set. Meeting the head of the Department of Defense in wrinkled BDUs is a calculated insult because I really don’t believe this four-star or his aide are that stupid.

    More evidence to back up my contention that the greeting was intended to show Hegseth how little the commanding general thought of him, perhaps for the first time in the history of the Defense Department, the Secretary of Defense was heckled by military wives.

    A very small group of protesters shouting “DEI” greeted @SecDef@PeteHegseth at the EUCOM HQs. Not sure who they were, but they have base access. 😳

    Here’s the tail end of it: pic.twitter.com/2AoyeXd4R7— Kristina Wong 🇺🇸 (@kristina_wong) February 11, 2025

    At the same time, middle school, I say again, middle school students walked out to protest the end of DEI programs. This was absolutely organic to the middle school and had no helping hand from the command structure in Stuttgart because if there is one thing that really sets off 6th graders, it is losing their DEI classes.

    More than 50 students at Patch Middle School in Stuttgart, Germany, staged a walkout Tuesday to protest recent Pentagon moves that have targeted diversity initiatives at military schools.https://t.co/Sx3HDrdPXC— Stars and Stripes (@starsandstripes) February 12, 2025

    This is just the tip of the iceberg. If you’re willing to greet your boss in wrinkled clothes and allow him to be heckled by dependent wives, you can imagine what else is going on out of sight.

    Former infantry officer, CGSC grad and Army Operations Center alumnus. Also an amateur historian (Colonial America) and a dabbler in historical fiction.
    RedState member since 2004. “He would rather pinch off his own head than admit he’s wrong” — Daily Kos.  Follow me on Twitter

    I know nothing about military promotions; however, such disrespect should move the Command structure to the no promotion mode.

  • I can hear Cardinal Carlo already

    I can hear Cardinal Carlo already

    Well look who showed up

    firm handshake, hairy eyeball to hairy eyeball

    Carlo, as you know the forest is made of wood & stone

    That’s true Chance, what’s on your mind

    Stuff:

    come on in

    Have you seen the tracker, the DOGE tracker

    DOGE Tracker

    Having been excommunicated because you know it’s about money, Carlo, the President has the song Hail to the Chief, thinking Elon and boys need a song

    What song Chance

    some Joplin Carlo

    They getting after these young Men for doin their task assigned to them, Think in terms as this

    “You’ll take that kid from Detroit or Mississippi, and you’ll train him, in Marine Corps boot camp, and put him in a situation that is foreign to him and he will adapt and improvise and become that situation and deal with it.”

    Carlo, not everyone talks as gentle as you so bare me

    Chance, why you telling me all this

    I was thinkin Carlo, that 36Trillion dollar debt does not belong to the American people, it belongs to the admirative state, the Old Testament talks of Jubilee, how cool it would be if this 4th of July at Mount Rushmore President Trump let’s it be known Jubilee is here for the American people, credit card debt is like really bad, for lack of common sense or trying to pay Peter because of Paul.

    Carlo, you think Frankie Lane got the inspiration for his song RAWHIDE from when Jesus Took a whip to the money changers! Chance, you make a solid observation for being inside to long as he walks me to the door.

  • Counterrevolution Blueprint

    Counterrevolution Blueprint

    Counterrevolution Blueprint

    How to eliminate left-wing racialism from the federal government

    By: Christopher F. Rufo for City Journal 

    How to eliminate left-wing racialism from the federal government

    The second election of Donald Trump, along with Republican victories in both houses of Congress, sets the stage in the United States for a confrontation between democracy, which depends on representative institutions to form a government, and the rule of unelected elites, which relies on claims of expertise to control the state.

    Already, internal opposition to Trump is organizing within the federal agencies. CNN reports that Pentagon officials are discussingdisobeying official policy. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell has declared that he would refuse if Trump asked for his resignation. Some would like to see a reprise of the orchestrated counteractions against Trump, from the Russia collusion hoax to the Hunter Biden laptop censorship to the political prosecutions that led to his arrest and felony convictions.

    The coming political confrontation is unusual because the specific antagonist is hard to identify. Trump is not contending against Joe Biden or Kamala Harris, or even the Democratic minority in Congress. Instead, the president-elect’s post-electoral opposition comes from inside the executive branch itself, in defiance of Article II of the Constitution, which opens with the unqualified statement: “The executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America.”

    In recent years, phrases like “the deep state” have arisen in American political discourse to describe this phenomenon, in which administrators, bureaucrats, and unelected officials seem to wield a kind of power that we still lack appropriate language to describe. Part of the motivation is self-interest—bureaucrats want to protect their positions—but another is ideological: the federal government is steeped in left-wing race and gender ideology, and its adherents see Trump as an existential threat.

    By rights, he should be. The incoming president has, under the Constitution, every right to bend the administration to his vision, which is contrary to the tenets of left-wing racialism. But those ideologies, which the Biden administration has entrenched through its “whole-of-government” diversity agenda, have long ruled the agencies that control the details of federal policymaking. Hence, the conflict: the president, who has formal authority, versus the ideological bureaucracy, which has real power.

    At the end of his first term, Trump attempted to correct this problem through actions such as an executive order banning critical race theory in the federal government. The second Trump administration must go further and dedicate itself to a process that Vice President–elect J. D. Vance has described as “dewokeification.” This is the most urgent policy problem facing the administration, because without representative institutions and a restoration of constitutional authority, it is not possible to govern America.

    The Trump administration has a unique opportunity to take decisive action on Day One, through executive orders that can serve as the opening salvo in a counterrevolution. The basic premise: the U.S. should strip left-wing racialism from the federal government and recommit the country to the principle of color-blind equality. Through an aggressive campaign, Trump and his cabinet can put an end to forms of discrimination disguised under the name of “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (DEI) and make government work again.

    The process of ideological capture has taken decades. But the counterrevolution can, and must, quickly retake those institutions in the name of the people and reorient them toward the enduring principles of liberty and equality. Bureaucrats abusing the public trust to advance their own ideologies should be put on notice: they will be shut down, their departments abolished, and their employment terminated. The administration will work to rid America of this ideological corruption before it further rots our institutions, demoralizes our citizens, and renders the government totally incompetent.

    The counterrevolution begins now.

    First, a map of the territory. Left-wing thinking is pervasive in the federal bureaucracy, shaping the behavior of federal agencies and operating unaffected by electoral politics. Most employees of the administrative state, especially those concerned with justice, education, arts, and health, are overwhelmingly left-wing, and partisans of fashionable ideologies.

    The data are striking. During the 2020 presidential cycle, Department of Justice employees directed 86 percent of their political contributions to Democrats; at Labor, it was 88 percent; Health and Human Services, 92 percent; and Education, 97 percent. Overall, 84 percent of donations from nondefense federal employees went to presidential candidate Biden, according to Bloomberg. These numbers mirror trends in tech companies and universities, often seen as bastions of left-wing thought. When institutions skew so heavily toward one ideology, they become prone to ideological capture.     

    The federal government now underwrites progressive ideologies, such as critical race theory, through vast financial subsidies. Public universities, bolstered by federal funding and government-backed student loans, house numerous departments promoting these views. Additionally, federal grants and diversity training contracts, largely managed by bureaucrats without legislative oversight, channel taxpayer money toward ideological initiatives. Data from the General Services Administration reveal a consistent left-wing bias in such expenditures, persisting under both Democratic and Republican administrations.

    At the Treasury Department, for example, administrators under Presidents Obama, Trump, and Biden funded many critical theory–based programs, often under euphemisms related to “diversity.” Under Obama, the Treasury created the Office for Minority and Women Inclusion and other race- and identity-based initiatives. Under Trump, Treasury pushed critical race theory as an operating ideology, hiring consultants to conduct training programs teaching employees that America was a nation of “systemic racism” with a 400-year history of “racial terrorism” that continues “to this very day.” Their proposed solution: for federal employees—especially “white folk” with an obligation to do serious “inner work”—to become “activists” and advance the agenda of “racial equity.”

    These programs multiplied and intensified under Biden. As I recently reported, the Biden administration used executive authority to create a permanent racialist bureaucracy, including an Equity Hub, an Advisory Committee on Racial Equity, and a Counselor for Racial Equity. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, together with Vice President Kamala Harris, announced $8.7 billion in lending to “minority-owned businesses,” an openly discriminatory effort. The Treasury also compelled federal contractors to implement DEI. At the same time, Treasury policy concerning Earned Income Tax Credit audits changed to “examining audit fairness by other demographic categories”—a euphemism for racial favoritism.

    Such rhetoric has increasingly become the rule within federal agencies and federally funded academic, educational, and activist groups. Racial preferences and discrimination are becoming an ever more entrenched part of government policy. The administration changes, but the ideology remains: subsidized by taxpayers, administered by the “expert class,” and imposed on the American people.

    Richard Nixon proposed a “New American Revolution” that would decentralize power—returning it to states, localities, and citizens. (AP Photo)

    What can be done about the problem of ideological capture? Three American presidents—Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Donald Trump—tried to address the problem directly. None solved it, but all offer starting points for a solution.

    In his 1971 State of the Union address, Nixon proposed a “New American Revolution” that would decentralize power, returning it to states, localities, and citizens. Nixon argued that the federal government had become too domineering and threatened to supplant core social functions. He also saw that the permanent federal bureaucracy and its class of experts, bureaucrats, and intellectuals were hostile to his administration and his constituents. “The further away government is from people, the stronger government becomes and the weaker people become. And a nation with a strong government and a weak people is an empty shell,” he said. “The idea that a bureaucratic elite in Washington knows best what is best for people everywhere and that you cannot trust local governments is really a contention that you cannot trust people to govern themselves.”

    Nixon proposed a New Federalism that would reduce the number of cabinet departments, reorganize the executive branch, and send billions in funding to states and municipalities. “What this Congress can be remembered for is opening the way to a new American revolution—a peaceful revolution in which power was turned back to the people—in which government at all levels was refreshed and renewed and made truly responsive,” Nixon concluded in his State of the Union. “This can be a revolution as profound, as far-reaching, as exciting as that first revolution almost two-hundred years ago.” By the end of his first term, Nixon saw himself as a champion of the “general interest,” caught in a battle with an inimical bureaucratic system.

    The media noticed. After his landslide reelection, the New York Times published its “Nixon Counterrevolution” editorial, warning that the 37th president sought to “advance an ideological grand design” that would reverse the New Deal and the Great Society, abolishing federal programs that worked to impose elite views on local communities. “Mr. Nixon seeks to accomplish a retrogressive counterrevolution in the guise of an administrative reorganization,” the editorial cautioned.

    Nixon acted decisively, releasing budgets and plans to enact his counterrevolution. He reorganized the federal apparatus to make it more responsive to presidential authority, abolished programs promoting left-wing ideologies, suspended federal housing initiatives pending review, and narrowed the ideological scope of federally funded social services. Central to his approach was “revenue sharing,” a bold system channeling federal funds directly to states and localities. Nixon saw decentralization and White House control of the executive branch as vital to preventing bureaucratic tyranny and ensuring that government operated closer to the people.

    When Ronald Reagan became president in 1980, he, too, sought to curb left-wing ideological influence within the federal government. Reviving Nixon’s vision of a New Federalism, Reagan called his effort a “quiet revolution” to devolve power back to citizens. His primary strategy, described by some analysts as an effort to “defund the Left,” focused on reducing federal spending, cutting programs in areas like community development, education, social services, and employment training, and targeting ideological opponents within the government.

    In a more limited, but perhaps more pragmatic way, Donald Trump also sought to roll back left-wing ideological domination of federal agencies—this time, targeting critical race theory. Inspired by my reporting for City Journal and developed in part on my policy recommendations, in the closing months of 2020, Trump issued an “Executive Order on Combating Race and Sex Stereotyping,” intended to ban divisive, critical race theory–based training programs within the federal government.

    The executive order denounced critical ideologies “grounded in hierarchies based on collective social and political identities rather than in the inherent and equal dignity of every person as an individual” and “rooted in the pernicious and false belief that America is an irredeemably racist and sexist country; that some people, simply on account of their race or sex, are oppressors; and that racial and sexual identities are more important than our common status as human beings and Americans.” It prohibited all training programs that promoted the “divisive concepts” that:

    (1) one race or sex is inherently superior to another race or sex; (2) the United States is fundamentally racist or sexist; (3) an individual, by virtue of his or her race or sex, is inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously; (4) an individual should be discriminated against or receive adverse treatment solely or partly because of his or her race or sex; (5) members of one race or sex cannot and should not attempt to treat others without respect to race or sex; (6) an individual’s moral character is necessarily determined by his or her race or sex; (7) an individual, by virtue of his or her race or sex, bears responsibility for actions committed in the past by other members of the same race or sex; (8) any individual should feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress on account of his or her race or sex; or (9) meritocracy or traits such as a hard work ethic are racist or sexist, or were created by a particular race to oppress another race.

    None of these approaches was sufficient. Nixon was hemmed in by the bureaucracy and a Democratic Congress; then Watergate forced him out. Reagan scaled back some funding but did not fundamentally change the entrenched ideology or behavior of the federal bureaucracy. And Trump’s “critical race theory ban” was rescinded by Joe Biden’s order on the first day of his presidency in 2021.

    Though these policies failed to solve the critical problem, they illuminate its nature and provide a starting point for a solution. The task for policymakers now is to build on the efforts of Nixon, Reagan, and Trump, and to design policies that will tame the bureaucracy and thereby advance the public interest. Failing that, as Nixon warned, the American experiment will come to an end: bureaucratic rule will devour the constitutional order.

    As the second Trump administration takes shape, the president should remember a key lesson: though he must accept the current reality that Washington, D.C., is the greatest benefactor of critical theories and left-wing ideologies in America, he is far from powerless to change it. He has policy options that can begin the process of restoring presidential authority, realigning the bureaucracy toward the president’s vision, and reversing the process of ideological capture.          

    To catalyze this process, I propose an ambitious counterrevolution blueprint that can begin on Day One. Immediately on assuming office, the president should issue a suite of executive orders to “surround and smother” left-wing ideologies across six domains: bureaucracy, content, policy, funding, behavior, and personnel.

    The first objective is to shift the structures of the bureaucracy and align them more directly with the administration’s principles. The president should order the agencies to abolish all DEI departments, plans, and programs and terminate the employees associated with them. Many of these programs were created not at the direction of Congress but of previous presidents—most notably, President Obama’s Executive Order 13583, President Biden’s Executive Order 13985 and Executive Order 14035, and by agency leaders on their own initiative. Trump can end these programs under his executive authority and replace DEI with a policy of strict color-blind equality.

    This action would deliver an immediate shock to the bureaucracy. Critical ideologies took hold largely because conservative administrations have either overlooked the issue or hesitated to confront it. Lacking clear arguments and vocabulary on race and gender, many conservative leaders have avoided these topics, allowing agencies to build entrenched “diversity” infrastructures that operate beyond congressional oversight.

    An executive order dismantling these programs would destabilize internal partisans who have used them to advance left-wing ideologies. These employees would be tasked with dismantling their own systems and implementing a new framework based on color-blind equality. The order would disrupt the structures enabling ideological capture and reassert the president’s constitutional authority. While resistance from the most partisan employees is likely, strong directives would neutralize even the most committed ideologues.

    The second objective is to identify and eliminate all programs, policies, grants, proposals, trainings, and budget items that promote left-wing racialism. This requires a system to identify where such ideology appears in federal documents. The most effective approach is to develop an artificial intelligence program that can scan the flow of paperwork for keywords and flag relevant instances for review by the Office of Management and Budget, which operates under direct presidential oversight. This system would channel information from across the federal government to the White House, enabling politically appointed officials to monitor the ideological content of federal programs, defund them as necessary, and enforce the directives of this order effectively.

    This “locate-and-terminate” system could be deployed across the government and provide a ranked scale for prioritizing manual review. Though left-wing bureaucrats within the agencies might try to develop euphemisms and neologisms to evade enforcement, the key concepts and principles of critical theories have been relatively stable over the past half-century; the language is unlikely to change fast enough or significantly enough to evade restriction.

    The third objective of the executive order is to restrict federal agencies, federal contractors, and recipients of federal funds from promoting racial and sexual bigotry in all programs, policies, trainings, and management. Building on the framework of President Trump’s Executive Order on Combating Race and Sex Stereotyping, the order should add to it the text below, and mandate that the federal government not promote, advance, or inculcate the following “divisive concepts,” that: 

    (10) an individual, on the basis of his or her race or sex, is presumed to have traits such as white privilege, white fragility, internalized racism, implicit bias, or unconscious bias; (11) concepts and institutions such as meritocracy, individualism, rationality, equality, color blindness, hard work, and the nuclear family are racist or sexist, or were created by a particular race to oppress another race; (12) racial disparities in social and economic outcomes are solely or necessarily the result of racism or racist policies; (13) individuals should be encouraged or required to participate in separate spaces, facilities, accommodations, programs, or “affinity groups” on the basis of race or sexual orientation.

    The fourth objective: cut off funding for left-wing ideologies in federal grantmaking and contracting. The order should require that all existing, pending, proposed, and considered federal contracts that contain the flagged items pass through the OMB for manual review and approval. Existing contracts that violate the “divisive concepts” restrictions should be immediately terminated through the budget impoundment process and litigated as necessary; future grant applications, considerations, and nominations that advance the “divisive concepts” should be denied by OMB staff.

    This policy offers a twofold benefit: it would systematically “defund the Left” within the federal government and disrupt the broader ecosystem supporting left-wing ideologies. By banning “diversity and inclusion” contractors and extending “divisive concepts” restrictions to all federal grants and contractors—including major corporations and research universities—the order would curb the spread and influence of critical race and gender theories across the largest public and private bureaucracies. “Diversity and inclusion” has become a multibillion-dollar industry and a key mechanism for advancing left-wing ideologies in corporations, schools, and government agencies. The executive order would limit these initiatives’ scope and growth, while creating legal risks for firms engaging in discriminatory or extremist practices.

    The fifth objective is to reshape federal agencies’ culture and behavior. This effort should begin with an expansion of the principles of the Hatch Act, which prohibits civil service employees from engaging in partisan political activity, to include all social and political activism not directly related to an employee’s official duties. In principle, the restriction would apply equally to the political movements of the Left and the Right; in practice, it would almost exclusively restrict left-wing activism, given the composition of the federal workforce and the existing culture of the federal bureaucracy.

    The executive order would not directly change the biases and political orientation of federal employees, but it would keep them from acting them out. Over time, the result would be a reduction in left-wing activism and messaging within the federal government, which, in the longer term, could restore ideological balance and accountability to the executive.

    The sixth objective is to eliminate affirmative action and disparate-impact doctrine from federal policymaking—core frameworks of critical race theory and left-wing “equity” initiatives in areas like criminal justice, public health, and redistribution programs. The executive order would rescind Lyndon Johnson’s Executive Order 11246 and ban affirmative action and disparate-impact doctrine in hiring, policies, and decision-making across the federal government and federally funded entities. In their place, it would mandate strict color blindness and equal treatment under the law, replacing “equity” with “equality.”

    This policy would have an immediate impact on governance. Affirmative action, in particular, though widespread in public and private institutions—such as university admissions, corporate hiring, and federal contracting—is deeply unpopular. Even liberal states like California and Washington have rejected it through ballot initiatives. An executive order that prohibits race-based decision-making would gain broad support and create momentum for permanent legislative changes.

    The final objective of the counterrevolution blueprint is to reinstate Trump’s Executive Order 13957, “Creating Schedule F in the Excepted Service,” which removed certain civil service protections for federal employees involved in policymaking. This would give the president greater leverage over ideological factions in the government. The strength of the permanent bureaucracy lies in its leaders’ confidence that they will outlast any administration, enabling them to resist presidential agendas with minimal risk to their positions.

    Schedule F applies to all “Federal service employed in positions of a confidential, policy-determining, policy-making, or policy-advocating character,” granting the president greater authority to manage agencies and dismiss higher-level civil servants who fail to meet expectations or to implement presidential policies. This reform would give the White House tighter control over the bureaucracy and provide cabinet officials additional tools to ensure agency compliance.

    The second Trump administration should dedicate itself to a process that Vice President–elect J. D. Vance describes as “dewokeification.” (Ariana Drehsler/The New York Times/Redux)

    Taken together, this executive order’s provisions would seriously restrict left-wing ideologies in the federal government and reinstate political control over the bureaucracy. In the short term, the order would demoralize and constrain left-wing ideological culture; in the long term, it would realign the federal government with the vision of the president and reorient the state toward the principles of liberty and equality. 

    The Trump administration has been assembling a stellar reform team. Key positive developments include Trump’s selection of Vance, who proposed the Dismantle DEI Act as senator, as his running mate, and his appointment of Russell Vought as the director of Office of Management and Budget. Vought, in particular, is a brilliant administrator who understands the threat of critical race ideologies and, more importantly, knows how to operate the machinery of the state.

    Our historical moment contains, in certain ways, more possibilities than Nixon’s or Reagan’s—presenting, for the first time in two generations, a real opportunity to unify constitutional government against bureaucratic ideological capture. Digital technology can now expose the extent of left-wing malfeasance and misfeasance in government, while also helping elected officials prevent or punish such activity. It is now possible to restore the representative character of our governing institutions—and, in the process, rebuild trust in them—which, over the same period, has fallen to its lowest recorded levels. A president under attack from within his own executive branch can now reassert his authority by appealing directly to voters.

    What is the character of American democracy? Do the people want self-government, and are they capable of it? Or are they to be administered and dictated to by unelected, unaccountable bureaucrats, who claim a global and perhaps historical vision of “governance,” but no special allegiance to the American people? The major issues in the 2024 election—from immigration and the border, which bear on the constitutional question of citizenship, to crime and the economy, which bear on the Declaration of Independence’s rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness—point to the desire for a restoration of popular rule. The time is ripe for decisive action under the Constitution to ensure the liberties of the people—the end to which all just government is directed.

    Top Photo: Incoming president Donald Trump has, under the Constitution, every right to bend the administration to his vision. (Evan Vucci/AP Photo)

  • Pam Bondi Sworn in as Attorney General

    Pam Bondi Sworn in as Attorney General

    Former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi Has been sworn in as US Attorney General.

    She was confirmed by a  54-46 vote last night. Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman was the lone Democrat to cross the aisle and vote for Bondi,

    Bondi’s nomination earned praise both from Republicans and some Democrats in the chamber for her composure and her ability to deftly navigate thorny and politically tricky topics and lines of questioning from some would-be detractors. 

    You can watch the swearing in here:

  • Dastardly Deeds

    Dastardly Deeds

    Featured image via grok.

    That is the apparent cause of action Rep. Al Green (D-TX) cites in his articles of Impeachment. Green filed the articles against Trump this morning. He also gave a floor speech. Watch:

    This isn’t the first time Green has filed articles of impeachment against Trump. He did it several times during Trumps last term as President.

    While Green, who represents the southwestern portion of Houston, isn’t the dumbest rep on the Dem side, he’s damned close.

    Having read the US Constitution from the Preamble to the closing clause, I can assure you that dastardly deeds appear nowhere in that august text. And while I cannot be 100% sure, I am reasonably confident that those two words do not appear together in any part of the US criminal code.

    I have to wonder if dastardly deeds rise to the High Crimes and Misdemeanors requirement for impeachment. Not that this is going anywhere. At least not without a couple of Vichy Republicans helping out that is.

    The phrase does bring to mind a song. That song was the inspiration behind the prompt that generated the featured image for this post; Trump dressed like Angus Young playing a guitar.