Saturday, May 27, 2017

Lies and More Lies


            Interesting coincidence.  The day I received my June issue of National Geographic in the mail was the same day Hillary Clinton delivered her commencement address at Wellesley College, her alma mater.  Why interesting?  Because the cover story in National Geographic was “Why We Lie,” while the theme of Hillary’s speech, as summarized by the Boston Globe, was “Clinton urges graduates to fight for truth.”  What brazenness: a speech about truth by the greatest pathological liar of our time.

            Hillary couldn’t help herself.  She wanted to disparage President Trump so badly—describing his budget, for instance, as “an act of unimaginable cruelty on the most vulnerable among us”—that she drew a parallel between him and President Nixon.  But she got it wrong by describing Nixon as “a man whose presidency would eventually end in disgrace with his impeachment.”  Except that Nixon was never impeached; the only president impeached since Andrew Johnson was her own husband!

            I love National Geographic. It’s a great magazine. But its writers are far too susceptible to Leftist propaganda, especially on environmental issues.  In this same June issue, it offers that sea levels will rise by 22 to 30 inches by 2100 according to some projections, a totally irresponsible claim ignoring scientific evidence to the contrary.

            On the subject of lying, National Geographic lists some of history’s most notorious liars.  Among them are Lance Armstrong (“I have never doped.”), Rosie Ruiz (“I ran the race. I really did.”), and Charles Ponzi.  When it comes to presidential politics, however, it gives us only Richard Nixon, Donald Trump, and Bill Clinton (!), but not Barack Obama (“If you like your plan, you can keep your plan.”), and not Hillary, the most prolific liar of them all.  So much for the magazine’s balance and objectivity.

Saturday, May 20, 2017

Shape Up Or Get Out


            Republicans in Congress are starting to panic. And with good reason. President Trump is under siege by Democrats, Progressives, a legion of anonymous sources, and a media that a recent Harvard analysis shows is 93% anti-Trump. Worse, Trump’s base is wavering; his popularity polls among Republicans has fallen to around 70% and with the nation overall to the mid-30s. This is unprecedented for a president who should be enjoying a honeymoon, especially after an arguably superior start in delivering on the promises that got him elected.

            This means that even the President’s most ardent supporters are increasingly disillusioned. Congressmen facing re-election know that if the President’s base doesn’t show up at the polls in 2018, Democrats will take control of the House. They will blame Trump. And they will be right.

            What can the President do to halt this precipitous decline? Pulitzer Prize winner Peggy Noonan says in the Wall Street Journal that it would be a good idea if top Hill Republicans went en masse to the president and said: “Stop it. Clean up your act. Shut your mouth. Do your job. Stop tweeting. Stop seething. Stop wasting time. You lost the thread and don’t even know what you were elected to do anymore.” She goes on and ends with this: “Act like a president or leave the presidency.”

            Wow! It’s one thing for a rabid Maxine Waters to call for Trump’s impeachment. It’s quite another for a Republican advocate like Noonan to tell the President to shape up or get out. Or is she just putting into words what many his supporters are beginning to think?

Saturday, May 13, 2017

Fulminations


            President Trump’s heart is in the right place, but his mouth keeps getting him in trouble.  He has done many good things in his avowed commitment to “Make America Great Again,” but his intemperate tweets have his most loyal staff members running for cover.  The President’s threat to discontinue daily press briefings may be the only way to save Sean Spicer’s dignity if not his sanity.

            Trump haters in Congress and the media are giddy with the daily fodder he provides them for their daily cannonades.  The sad consequence is that unrelenting, one-sided criticism is ultimately destructive of our democratic institutions.

            The obstructionism of Chuck Schumer and congressional Democrats—their opposition to anything Trump—is devoid of any consideration of truth and civility.  A perfect example was their monumental hypocrisy in the wake of the President’s firing of FBI Director Comey, the man whose decapitation they had called for incessantly in retribution for Hillary’s defeat.

            Some argue that Democrats are feeding the frenzy in the mass media, especially the hysterical fulminations of cable TV stations like MSNBC.  Others argue that the media are legitimizing the hyper-partisanship in Congress.  Either way, this symbiotic relationship of the Left is proving very harmful to what should be a constructive national dialog.  Worse, it is infecting other aspects of society, particularly among the young.

            We have had many examples of institutions of higher learning like UC Berkeley denying First Amendment rights to Conservative speakers.  Now we have the graduating class of black Bethune-Cookman University hissing, booing, and turning their backs on commencement speaker Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos for no apparent reason other than her association with Donald Trump.  This rudeness was an undeserved and misguided insult to a woman who is dedicated to improving the education of inner-city black youths through her advocacy of school choice. 

            Will the madness ever end?

           

Friday, May 5, 2017

Shameful Jones


            In the White House Rose Garden on May 4th, Republicans and President Trump celebrated the House passage of the American Healthcare Act, the legislation to repeal and replace ObamaCare. In my view, it was not the best possible bill, but at least a step in the right direction that had earned the support of warring Republican factions that recognized the need to move on.

            As expected, not a single Democrat voted for the bill after refusing for months to work with Republicans to come up with a better plan. Instead they clung stubbornly to ObamaCare, a failed—and unrepairable—disaster resting on a fuming pile of lies: “If you like your plan, you can keep your plan…” 

            Even more disconcerting to me were the twenty No votes from Republicans who would not support the bill, unconcerned with the serious and possibly permanent damage their opposition might inflict on their party’s future ability to govern. One of these obdurate naysayers was our very own Congressman, Walter Jones.

            In a statement, Jones called the rushed process used by GOP leaders without a revised CBO score “shameful.” He argued, "As a result, no one has any idea how much those deals will cost the American taxpayers, or how they might affect the cost, quality and availability of health insurance coverage for American families."

            Jones’s argument is fatuous, a lame excuse for not having done his homework on the merits of the bill, while being oblivious to the history of the CBO’s notoriously inaccurate estimates. Or perhaps Jones is more interested in maintaining his reputation as a maverick, to hell with the consequences.

            Well, here’s what I think is “shameful”: Walter Jones. As I’ve argued before, it is way past time for Walter Jones to retire and save us, his constituents, from further embarrassment.