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Saturday, February 25, 2023

Biden Nationalizes the DEI Bureaucracy

 Last week, President Joseph Biden quietly signed an executive order that promises to create a national DEI bureaucracy and embed the principles of left-wing racialism throughout the federal government.

The order, titled “Further Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government,” relies on three key strategies: creating internal cadres and power centers through the deployment of “Agency Equity Teams”; funding third-party political activism through grants to “community[-based] organizations”; and weaponizing civil rights law by requiring federal agencies to use artificial intelligence “in a manner that advances equity.”

In this video, I explain how Biden’s executive order manipulates language and statistics in order to nationalize the DEI movement, suppress dissent from the new racial orthodoxy, and subvert the Constitution’s promise of equal treatment under the law.


Transcript

President Joe Biden is overhauling the entire federal government along the principles of diversity, equity, and inclusion, and it seems like nobody has noticed. Last week, he signed another executive order promoting DEI called “Further Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government.” There was very little news coverage about this, but I think that it is an extremely important development. It has ramifications for almost everything that we’ve been talking about the last few years, and I’d like to go into this in detail to really understand how this DEI ideology works, how it embeds itself in the bureaucracy, and what it means for our country, what it means for our constitution, and what it means for our government.

If you look at this document, there are really three key strategies that it pursues. First, he’s creating internal cadres of DEI officers. This is really important for shaping the culture, the personnel, and the budgeting process in the federal government, which controls trillions of dollars of public resources. Second, he’s using this initiative to justify funding third party political activists under the guise of so-called underserved communities or faith and community organizations. And third, he’s doubling down on the weaponization of civil rights law, this time with some very interesting and very modern twists. He’s pushing left wing ideology, even regulating things like the use of artificial intelligence, and this entire package is justified through this really intricate but unfortunately widespread statistical and linguistic manipulation, which I’ll get into at the end.

Creating Internal Cadres

So let’s begin. First and foremost—this is what I think is really the heart of DEI—is creating internal cadres.

In previous times, for example, in the Soviet Union, you’d have political commissars. These were political officers that were attached to everything from army units to bureaucracies to units of the higher administration, and they would work to maintain ideological conformity. They would push the political or ideological orthodoxy within the institution, and then monitor all of their colleagues for compliance, and then if you disagreed, straight to the gulag. This, of course, is different. It’s done in an American context. It’s not so dramatic, but it’s really the same kind of idea. If you want to have administrative power in the government, you need to have people that are loyal to your ideology that will advance it through the apparatus.

And so, in this executive order, signed on February 16, 2023, the Biden Administration is requiring all federal departments to do an annual “Equity Action Plan” and build “Agency Equity Teams” to push training, programming, reports, data, statistical evidence with the goal of “embedding equity into government-wide processes.” So this sounds very nice, right? Everyone likes “equity,” everyone likes “equality.” But when you actually dig into what’s happening—and I’ve done a lot of reporting on this previously during the Trump administration—this is pure left wing racialist ideology, using the linguistic frame of “equity,” which is a near-homonym to the principle of “equality.”

And when you actually dig into the specifics, you understand that the Agency Equity Teams, the Equity Action Plans are not anything that is sanctioned or mandated by Congress, but is an internal executive mandate to say: We want to push this ideology through every facet of the federal government. We want to have all of our policies, and programs, and funding filtered through the ideology of DEI and enforced by DEI bureaucrats.

These are hidden expenditures. If you ask the White House today, “How much money does the federal government now spend on DEI programs?,” they would not have an idea, because the idea is to decentralize it, the idea is to have it embedded everywhere in a patchwork manner that can’t be then accountable to the Congress, that can’t be accountable to the people.

And the goal of this, as I’ve seen in my reporting and talking to federal employees, is to shift the culture, so that there is a left-wing orthodoxy in culture that pushes the ideology of critical race theory, that pushes the principles of gender ideology, and then to systematically disincentivize or cast out any conservative ideas and even conservative personnel. In my conversations with people over the last few years that work in the federal government, they say, all of these trainings are designed to make me shut up, to make me back away, to kind of force me out. And I think that’s essentially what we get. If you have a conservative belief system, a conservative opinion, you want to pursue conservative priorities under a bureaucratic system of DEI, that’s going to be phased out, disincentivized, and then filtered out, for example, through the hiring process.

So when you have DEI statements required, like they are at public universities, really what that is, it’s a political loyalty test that filters out people who are dissenters from the orthodoxy of DEI, and when you actually start looking at how these things manifest in the bureaucracy in real life, you see a kind of circular process. You see a cycle of intensification of ideological purity, and so you have what amount to the fact that DEI jobs are fake jobs. Everyone knows this. They’re not adding anything to the productivity. They’re not helping people. They’re not innovating. They’re not creating new products and services.

These are fake ideological and political jobs that are rewards for people who gain them, and then they have power within the company in private sector or power within the agency in the public sector to enforce ideology through training, through programming, through kind of a bombardment of daily emails, which result in a kind of ideological conditioning. You’re setting the culture by bombarding employees with a constant stream of ideological materials, programming, training, et cetera.

And so what you see is that they’re tasked with finding racism, and of course, as that is their task, they always find it, but what we see in many, many cases is that they’re not finding the kind of overt racism, intentional discrimination, or policies that are redlining, which is a form of overt kind of state sanctioned discrimination. They’re not finding any of that. What they’re finding is a couple things. First, they’re finding ephemeral discrimination, stuff like unconscious bias or microaggressions that’s filtered through a scientific language. But even the people who have come up with these theories, like the guy who was the principal inventor of the unconscious or implicit association test says no, no, no. This is an invalid measurement and shouldn’t be used in the context of diversity training.

Now you see that everywhere throughout the federal government, tens of thousands of employees in every department pushing these pseudoscientific concepts, and then you have through the form of statistical manipulation. So they’re saying any disparate outcome, if you measure two groups, you categorize people by race, you measure the outcomes, if there’s any difference between those two outcomes, it is by definition evidence of racial discrimination, which is, of course, a kind of absurd idea we’ll talk about, but you have then these two things—you have ephemeral racism, and you have statistical racism, both of which, if you submit it to a rigorous kind of analytical or logical test, fail under scrutiny. But they serve as justification to promote the ideology, and then, therefore, “embedding equity into all government-wide processes.”

Funding Third-Party Political Activism

The second priority that you find in Biden’s new DEI executive order is a mechanism for funding third party political activism.

Look, there are limits on the government, right? I can file FOIA requests. There are civil rights laws. There are other procedures. There’s the prohibition against doing partisan political activism because of our civil service laws, but those things are not applicable in the same way with the same intensity to third party nonprofit organizations, and so what you see in this executive order, and what you see really as a pattern since the 1960s, since Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society programs—Reagan tried to take a hack at this, Nixon tried to take a hack at this, George W. Bush tried to appropriate it and redirect it towards more conservative organizations—but you see this longstanding policy being really brought to the forefront with this Biden executive order, and the concept behind it is to, “identify funding opportunities for community- and faith-based organizations working in and with underserved communities.”

Again, all of this language is benign. It’s soft. It’s compassionate. If you read it at face value, you’d say, yes, I agree with that. We should be helping people. We should be working with civil society in order to solve social problems. But what this means in practice, it means that they’re playing an inside-outside game. The insiders, the bureaucrats, the DEI officers, the commissars, they know that they can achieve their political goals at arm’s length through aligned and much more political and partisan non-profit organizations, and what they do is they take professional DEI activists. These are people like diversity contractors. These are people that run identity-based nonprofit advocacy organizations that, again, use this veneer of identity in order to push a very strict partisan line with which maybe even most of the people within that identity group disagree, but they use that as a justification.

And then what you get, at the end of the day, is you have political operators that can enforce external norms, just like the political commissars can enforce the same norms internally within the government. And so you are routing billions of dollars to organizations that are not subject to the same kind of scrutiny, not subject to the same civil service laws, not subject to the same FOIA or information requests. And these guys can take it, and they can run with it, and they can use federal dollars—that are taxpayer dollars—not because Congress specifically mandated them, but because they are now being used within the DEI bureaucracy. And look, most congressmen are very busy people. They don’t have this kind of line-item oversight capacity, and then what you get is this kind of explosion of publicly subsidized activist organizations on the outside that then legitimize narratives and the policy recommendations on the inside.

And so again it is an inside-outside game that is self-reinforcing, that creates the external and internal sense of norms, and that they can then reward their friends on the outside. And so, if you look at this very specifically and empirically, I did a story on a former kind of Soviet Union fellow traveler, an editor of a journal called Rethinking Marxism, someone who was a close collaborator with the kind of left wing and even left-wing militant organizations of the 1960s, getting now into the federal government, very chummy with all of the DEI officers and saying we’re all on the same team here. In the past, that was maybe—not this person, but others—would a Black Panther Party, would be a Black Liberation Army, would be pledging Marxist-Leninist guerrilla warfare against the central government of the United States.

In some cases, those exact same people are now brought in as outside diversity consultants to teach NASA engineers about their white fragility, or what have you. And then they’re saying, now we are on the inside. We’ve been brought in out of the cold, out of the ghetto of the kind of Marxist academic journals, and now we’re here. We are with the DEI officers. Now we are legitimized as outside activists, and we’re brought in on these kind of plum government contracts to tell—in this case with Johnnetta Cole—the Treasury Department employees that they’re all racist, that the country is irredeemable, and that they have to become left wing anti-racist activists in order to redeem the country, in order to redeem the policies at the Treasury Department. That was a story that I did a number of years ago.

Weaponizing Civil Rights Law

And now the third key strategy or key principle in the DEI executive order is the extension of the weaponization of civil rights law.

Civil rights law, which promised, I think, a great promise to treat everyone equally under the law, to treat everyone as an individual, to not discriminate in our policies on the basis of race or identity really has been taken, and then in the implementation stage, used to advance a left-wing vision to the point where now you have universities, for example, explicitly violating civil rights law, racially segregating scholarships, saying: these racial groups can apply for the scholarship, these racial groups cannot apply for the scholarship, all in the name of civil rights, when in fact, these are explicit violations of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act. But what you see is that it becomes a lever, and it becomes a justification to advance an ideological line that is actually in some cases in contradiction with civil rights law, but is not enforced because the actual bureaucracy of the civil rights apparatus is in the wholesale control of left-wing activists that share these political priorities.

The Biden administration is saying: How far can we push it? How can we anticipate the next political battleground? And how can we use the rationalization of civil rights law in order to gain political territory? And—this one is really amazing—they’re saying we have to affirmatively advance civil rights. Again, not providing a neutral single standard, but actually using it in the terms of “affirmative action,” which the critical race theorists, for example, interpret as the justification of a suspension of private property rights, the large-scale seizure and redistribution of wealth, land, etc. You’re taking civil rights law, which promised equal protection, but by juicing it with the word “affirmatively,” that adverb, you’re saying no, no, no. This is actually something that is going much further and actually contradicting the spirit of the law itself.

The Biden administration, though, is saying one of the battlegrounds that we want to play on is the battleground of information warfare. And they identify information control as what they call an “emerging civil rights risk,” and they task the federal government—this is actually amazing—with “protecting the public from algorithmic discrimination,” and, instruct the federal agencies to, “when designing, developing, acquiring, and using artificial intelligence and automated systems in the federal government, agencies shall do so, consistent with applicable law, in a manner that advances equity.” And so this, if you want to summarize it colloquially, is saying if the federal government is going to wage into AI, it has to be woke AI. It has to be ChatGPT that never says the naughty things, that would never praise the orange dictator Donald Trump, but would praise the great DEI advocate Joe Biden.

So it’s saying that we have to then use the power of the federal government to obliterate the entire conservative side of the discourse that is automated, that is presented through artificial intelligence, that provides policy recommendations. So they want to say we want to have a lopsided debate on the terrain of artificial intelligence by putting our thumb on the scales, not for the free flow of information, but for only for information that “advances equity.” I mean, this is basically saying, if you understand the terms, if you say that “algorithmic discrimination” is something that is a kind of Orwellian phrase, they’re saying that we want to incentivize not just public artificial intelligence use, but by nature of our contracts of private companies, edging into that private sphere, we want to have a system in which artificial intelligence artificially stacks the deck on behalf of our political ideas.

Linguistic and Statistical Manipulation

So if you take these three strategic priorities, really our strategic imperatives, creating internal cadres, funding third party political activism, weaponizing civil rights law, you have to ask: Well, what is their rational justification for all of this? How do they make the argument in favor of this? And I think that there are only two ways that they do this. As I kind of alluded to earlier, it’s a linguistic manipulation, and it’s a statistical manipulation.

So let’s actually read the language that they use and then break it down and parse it to try to understand not what they’re saying, but what they’re meaning, what their actual kind of latent content of these ideas might be. The executive order says, the mission is for “advancing equity for all, including communities that have long been underserved and addressing systemic racism in our nation’s policies and priorities.” Furthermore, they say that agencies “shall be responsible for delivering equitable outcomes.” Again, this is poll-tested, this is marketing language, this is political language filtered through the DEI bureaucracy that’s then also been filtered through corporate Madison Avenue language. You can imagine it on a splashy billboard with a Nike swoosh: Delivering equitable outcomes for all. Sounds very, very nice.

But let’s break down the phrases and let’s break down the argument that’s underneath these ideas. First of all, “systemic racism.” Look, the United States is not a systemically racist country in 2023, when this executive order was passed. But what they’re doing is that they’re setting an anchor that is the presupposition. They’re treating it axiomatically. They’re not proving that it is. They can’t say that these policies actively discriminated on anyone on the basis of race. They’re using it as a self-evident basis for all of the arguments that come. It’s a weak presupposition. We can discuss that and why it’s wrong at another time, but we have to understand that that is the kind of fulcrum of this. That is the grounds that they’re laying.

Second, they want to advance “equity for all,” while at the same time they’re saying they want to advance equity to “underserved” and” underrepresented” communities. This is incompatible. So what they’re doing is they’re saying, “equity for all” is a very nice slogan. It polls well. It seems consonant with our principles from the Declaration, the Fourteenth Amendment, the Civil Rights Act, that everyone has equal protection under the law as an individual, but then they say at the same time—which again is total contradiction of the terms,—but we’re going to go for underserved and underrepresented communities and deliver them equity, meaning in practice, and you see this in corporations, in universities, in government programs, that they’re actually not serving everyone equally as individuals, but they’re categorizing groups on the basis of race, sexual identity, et cetera, and then tilting the playing field or treating people separately to two separate or actually multiple separate standards, based on the theory of intersectionality, where they’re saying we categorize people by groups, and we treat them differently through policies, through hiring, through promotions, through government contracting, through grant funding, through the distribution of assets, through, for example, BIPOC-only basic income programs that some cities have deployed recently.

And then so you have what Ibram Kendi says more honestly is “anti-racist discrimination.” So yes, we want to discriminate on the basis of race. That’s really what it means to do this. He’s at least honest about it, and we’re justifying it on the basis of systemic racism. Okay, so you have the justification. You have the argument or the actual policy. And then what is the desired outcome? What is the kind of telos of this system? It’s “equitable outcomes.”

“Equitable outcomes” means, if you want to make the language more plain, equal outcomes. The goal, the stated goal and the stated definition, even axiomatically, is that we will not be systemically racist in the United States until we have equitable or equal outcomes on the basis of racial categories. And so when everyone has the same income, when everyone has the same number of college degrees, when everyone has the same achievement along a whole series of metrics, then we will have a society that has been redeemed from systemic racism, then we will have equitable outcomes, and we will have served “underserved” communities or “underrepresented” communities to the sufficient point that our objective is met.

The DEI Bureaucracy Can Only Lead to Tyranny

But ultimately, the problem with the theory of equitable outcomes is that you can only achieve this through bureaucratic tyranny. The Founders knew this. The Founders when they talked about diversity, they said so in this beautiful phrase, the “diversity of faculties.” They knew that human beings, as individuals, some were gifted in some things, some were gifted in other things, some lacked gifts in the same categories, and they said that if we tried to level or to equalize outcomes along all of those various faculties, all of those various achievements, you could only do so through crushing excellence, through having a kind of unequal process, and then by having a government that was so strong that it could enforce it only through tyranny.

This is not to say, to be clear, that it is not our moral duty to eliminate all forms of racism and racist policies from our government, from our society, from our laws. I think that is a noble goal. I think it’s consistent with the founding vision, and I think, for the most part, we have moved our society over the last 250 years much closer to that vision. But now the question is this: do we want to fulfill that promise of the Declaration, the Fourteenth Amendment, the promise of civil rights, or do we want to diverge from that promise with this theory of kind of critical race ideology, with this theory of anti-racist discrimination, with this theory of equitable outcomes, which throughout human history has always ended in bloodshed, tyranny, and misery, and misfortune?

The political left says: Let’s give it a try once again. We’re going to put a statistical dashboard. We’re going to call it equity now. We’re going to equalize outcomes, but because we are sophisticates of the twenty-first century, we’re going to avoid all of the errors and misfortunes of the past.

I’m not so sure. But more importantly, what I am sure about is that this can only be achieved by actually abandoning the principles of our country, the principles of equality and liberty, which are really those two sides of the same coin, and the guiding light of the last 250 years. That’s not to say that we always had it in practice. That’s not to say that we’ve always lived up to it, but I think we’ve always moved towards it. And some might say, Oh, Chris, you’re a kind of naive Whiggish mind, who says that we’re moving towards it. But look, Lincoln thought this, the great leaders of our country have thought this, so I feel like I’m in good company.

But if we go along the lines of Biden’s kind of racialist bureaucracy or government not by the will of the people, but government by the will of the DEI ideologues that are embedded through the federal agencies, we’re going to be subverting our Constitution, not by passing constitutional amendments, not through the process that has been handed down through us, but subverting the constitutional order with a death by a thousand cuts, by ceding, or delegating, or really abdicating, our authority to these DEI bureaucrats that go then, cut by cut, piece by piece, dismantling the principles of liberty and equality, demolishing the foundation and moral and philosophical underpinning of our Constitution, and then doing it by changing the meaning of language and misleading the public.

And so with this video, with the work that I’m doing looking at the DEI bureaucracies, right now in universities, I hope that I can give you the tools to parse the language, the tools to understand the concepts, and then hopefully the tools to start fighting back, because we can only solve this problem through the political process, through the legislative process, and through courageous political leadership. And we have to wholly reject the ideology of DEI. We have to abolish the DEI departments in every facet of our government. And we have to make the case for those great principles of liberty and equality rightly understood, and this is the fight of our time.

This is the great constitutional battle, sand I think that we are not only right on the politics, but we are right morally, we’re right philosophically, and we are right by the highest meaning of our Constitution. Let’s get to work.

https://rufo.substack.com/p/biden-creates-a-national-dei-bureaucracy

Congressional Inaction on Healthcare Harms Patients

 Healthcare is one of the most important areas of public policy. It impacts matters of life and death, comfort and well-being. For decades, politicians have promised healthcare reform that would expand access to doctors and lower costs for patients; however, this has not materialized.

A recent Pew survey found that 60% of voters believe that healthcare is very important to their vote in November. Despite numerous opportunities for action this legislative term, Congress has failed to address any of the important issues within healthcare.

Telehealth access has been crucial for elderly patients getting the care they need during the pandemic. In 2020 alone, Medicare telehealth visits increased 63-fold from 840,000 in 2019 to 52.7 million. An analysis of telehealth usage lead the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to conclude that “use of telehealth during the pandemic also demonstrates the long-term potential of telehealth to increase access to health care for beneficiaries.”

Despite the technology’s proven benefits, Medicare patient access to telehealth services is set to expire soon after the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency declaration officially ends. As the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) noted back in March 2020, without temporary waivers provided by the Public Health Emergency declaration, “Medicare could only pay for telehealth on a limited basis: when the person receiving the service is in a designated rural area and when they leave their home and go to a clinic, hospital, or certain other types of medical facilities for the service.”

To anyone who has used telehealth, these regulations would seem absurd. Requiring individuals (not in a handful of rural areas across the U.S.) to go in-person to receive telehealth services would negate many of the benefits of telehealth. A 2017 study highlighted that telehealth visits saved patients and their caregivers “an average of $50 in travel costs and 51 minutes in waiting and visit time…” for an urban Chicago children’s health system. Elderly people are much more likely to have mobility issues. Waiving these regulations allowed tens of millions of them to have easier access their doctors and these changes during the pandemic were a massive success. Moving back to prohibitive regulations would harm these patients. These barriers will be reimposed unless Congress acts.

Bipartisan legislation to fix this problem has been proposed for these reasons. The Telehealth Modernization Act, for instance, would have allowed patients to receive any telehealth services from their home and expanded the types of providers allowed to offer telehealth visits. Despite its support, the bill was never a high enough priority to make it to the floor of either house of Congress.

The bipartisan Advancing Telehealth Beyond COVID–19 Act would have extended Medicare flexibility to 2024, at least pushing the can down the road for permanent changes. In July, it overwhelmingly passed in the House 416 to 12; however, the Senate never took it up nor considered it.

Another bill, the TREATS Act, would expand telehealth access to substance-use disorder Medicare patients. A recent study found substantial benefits to patients using telehealth to treat their substance-use disorder with the study’s authors noting that the results lend “support for permanent adoption [of telehealth].” Nonetheless, Congress has failed to pass legislation to keep this access available to patients beyond the COVID-19 pandemic.

Beyond Medicare telehealth reform, Congress has the opportunity to enact key changes that would increase healthcare options for millions of Americans. The RESULT Act would expand patient access to pharmaceuticals. If there is an unmet need in the U.S. for treatments for a condition with no FDA approved options, the bill would allow companies to provide medications and other medical products in the U.S. if the drug is approved in another developed country. It would allow the FDA to expedite approval by giving reciprocity to pharmaceuticals that have already undergone testing and approval abroad. This would be groundbreaking for consumers with no existing treatment options. Despite this, Congress has failed to even discuss the legislation.

There have been proposals to expand access to Health Savings Accounts (HSAs), increase the amount of pre-tax dollars individuals can put in those accounts for healthcare expenditures, and it would expand the types of expenses for which these funds could be used. The Personalized Care Act would do all of this, yet Congress has ignored it.

Congressional inaction on these life-or-death issues is a shame. Due to a lack of international reciprocity, patients have gone without treatments that could be available otherwise. The lack of HSA expansion has meant those plan options are available to fewer Americans. If Congress does not act on telehealth at the beginning of the next term, Medicare patients are likely to lose their easier access to their doctors and treatments.

The 117th Congress has done nothing that I can see has improved healthcare. Let’s work to make sure the 118th is not the same. We can  demand our elected officials address the policy areas that matter the most to us and affect all of our lives. Without committee hearings and floor votes, there will be no improvement. This Congress has failed to deliver needed change.

Dr. Kendrick Johnson D.O. is a family physician and founder of Ark Family Health Direct Primary Care in Phoenix.

https://www.realclearpolicy.com/articles/2023/02/23/congressional_inaction_on_healthcare_harms_patients_883693.html

Modernize Medicare using lessons from the '90s

 Medicare can financially survive using strategies that cut costs in 1997, two prominent Republicans wrote in an op-ed published Feb. 23 in the Wall Street Journal. 

Newt Gingrich, speaker of the house from 1995 to 1999, and Bobby Jindal, former governor of Louisiana and assistant HHS Secretary from 2001 to 2003, propose four strategies to reduce Medicare spending without raising taxes or cutting benefits. 

The Balanced Budget Act of 1997 reduced Medicare spending through several mechanisms, including shifting home care to a prospective payment system, according to the Commonwealth Fund. The act also eliminated some requirements for states to pay deductibles and coinsurance for low-income Medicare beneficiaries and required more oversight of fraud. 

Mr. Gingrich and Mr. Jindal wrote that some of these same principles could be employed to reduce long-term Medicare spending today, to avoid the Medicare hospital trust fund running out in 2028. 

To reduce costs without cutting benefits, Mr. Gingrich and Mr. Jindal propose: 

  1. Establishing site-neutral payment policies
  2. Ending bad-debt compensation for hospitals
  3. Investing in data infrastructure to prevent fraud 
  4. Accounting for savings from preventive care more accurately 

Read the op-ed here. 

https://www.beckerspayer.com/payer/viewpoint-modernize-medicare-using-lessons-from-the-90s.html

The Time to Find Your Spouse Is Now

 “I’ve got time! I’m still young. I still need to travel the world, earn my graduate degree, get a dog, save half a million dollars…”

Such is the refrain of the typical young adult nearing the graduation of high school or college when he or she is confronted with the question of whether they intend to be in a serious relationship. They have been told by popular media, teachers, and their parents that studies, career, and fun should take precedence over relationships, which they can worry about later.

By now, it’s no surprise how badly this approach has worked out for younger generations. According to a recent Pew Research Center study, almost half of adults under 30 report being single, with men taking on the lion’s share (63%) in that group. Moreover, a little less than half (47%) of all singles don’t care to pursue a romantic interest. Among the people in that group, single men are much less interested in a committed relationship (25%) than single women (41%). The whole study reveals that fewer people are pairing up and most simply stop bothering after a certain point.

In addition to these sobering statistics are more depressing numbers regarding online dating, increasingly seen as the workaround for adults who never had serious relationships in high school or college. Another Pew Research study shows that 88% of adults are disappointed by the offerings on dating apps, and only 42% felt like the apps made dating easier. Far from being an exciting catalog of eligible men and women eager to have a relationship, online dating apps are largely dumping grounds for frustrated singles with incompatible qualities, with many looking for meaningless hookups.

These studies should encourage today’s singles to form lasting ties before it’s too late. Even with online dating apps and expanding online social media that make meeting people easier than ever, it’s still undesirable to wait until one is 30 (the current average age for marrying) to find one’s soulmate. By then, so many good prospects will be unavailable, and finding even a decent partner will prove tedious and difficult.

So why does our culture downplay the importance of finding a lifetime mate early? Modern feminism and contemporary secular values see marriage as detrimental to one’s authentic self. It’s a drag to the individual who wants to experience different pleasures, take on different identities, and create his own meaning and values. The female protagonists in popular movies (like the Disney Princess movies, the new Star Wars trilogy, or any superhero movie) don’t even bother with finding love—or if they do, it’s incidental to their real quest. They seek adventure and achievement, and men just get in the way.

In the real world, this message ends in misery. Spouses, family, friends, and the fulfilling relationships that are possible in a moral and free society become impossible. All that’s left are fleeting joys, empty affirmation, and unbearable loneliness. Young adults are freed from all constraints, including romance, but what they’re free for is sitting at the screen browsing the profile pages of strangers, hoping to find love despite it all.

Many conservatives seem to understand that the path to a happy, fulfilling life is in healthy, committed relationships. However, the means to live such a life have all but disappeared in modern society. No longer can a person find a good man or woman at their local church, nor are people’s social circles close enough or big enough to introduce single young adults to prospective spouses or good friends. One will even struggle finding a suitable partner at the club or bar these days.

Gone are the days where dad met mom by chance at a social gathering and, through a combination of courtship, family encouragement, and Cupid’s arrow, eventually married her. Today, those social gatherings don’t really happen, courtship is a lost art, families seem indifferent, and Cupid’s arrow has been stolen by social media and porn addictions. Even in Christian conservative households, there is often an insurmountable generation gap between parents who benefited from a culture conducive to romance and the kids who suffer from a culture that comprehensively rejects it.

Fortunately, while restoring the values and practices that made lasting love possible will likely take decades, those hoping to meet their soulmate and marry can still do so before playing the lottery of online dating. They just need to be a little more deliberate.

The trick is to start thinking about relationships earlier in life when one is still in school. This is where people will come into direct contact with peers who share their values, interests, and talents. This is also the place where they have the most opportunities to talk to such people. There, they put in the important work of learning about others, learning about themselves, mastering crucial social skills (including courtship), and cultivating empathy. And in most cases, there are abundant occasions (dances, sports events, club meetings) for dating and gaining experience with the opposite sex.

When kids take this season of life for granted by withdrawing from their peers and declaring themselves helpless introverts, they put themselves at a serious disadvantage down the road. Even high achievers who over prioritize their studies and career will end up suffering. Though they will land their dream job or enjoy four years at their dream college, they will often end up pricing themselves out of the dating market and find themselves surrounded by their inferiors. Princeton mother Susan Patton outraged the women at her alma mater when she urged them to “Find a husband on campus before you graduate,” but she was completely right.

For this reason, it’s imperative for us to encourage young adults to make the most of their opportunities during this time of their life. I make this point regularly when I teach teenagers how to read different texts and put together an argument. I’m not just preparing them for a standardized test or helping them with some abstract thinking skills; I’m trying to give them the tools to make themselves appealing to others. I encourage them to talk with their classmates, make friends, and have clean and appropriate romantic relationships. And yes, I’ll gladly regale them with my own stories of being rejected by girls back in those days, making a fool of myself at prom and homecoming, and how I knew my wife was the one (she was smart, beautiful, and was willing to proofread my terrible essays).

Contemporary values of professional and personal realization are deeply flawed and are pushed by people who relish a society of lonely, immature adults. It’s not too much of a burden for adolescents to consider their relationships as they prepare for the worlds of higher education and work. They’re already thinking about it and want to learn about what it takes to have what their parents have. We can help them in this regard by encouraging them to date to the ends of finding a life partner early, or doom them with the false idea that they will always have more time.

 is an English teacher in the Dallas area. He holds an MA in Humanities and an MEd in Educational Leadership. He is the senior editor of the Everyman and has written essays for the Federalist, the American Thinker, and the American Conservative.

https://americanmind.org/salvo/the-time-to-find-your-spouse-is-now/

The "Whatever-It-Takes" War

 What a change in the global power balance a week can bring! Ten days ago, we described America's support for Ukraine - the "As long as it takes" strategy - terms President Biden repeated in Warsaw this week. But foreign policy often has a strange way of getting ahead of speechwriters.

Today, America's commitment to Ukraine is not constrained by time; it is for "as long as it takes." In a few days, the administration will grapple with geopolitical challenges it never anticipated before Biden's pompous visits to Kyiv and Warsaw.

President Putin announced that Russia would suspend its participation in the New START nuclear arms reduction treaty. This dangerous escalation will further deepen the abyss between America and Russia. American officials will no longer have the right to inspect Russia's weapons facilities. Russia, currently limited to 1,550 strategic nuclear weapons, can now expand its inventory without oversight. It also can begin testing its weapons, sending goosebumps to neighboring countries that don't have similar weapons of their own.

America also managed to irk another world power when things started going out of hand in Munich last week. Displaying the habitual hubris that Biden's top foreign policy officials take to their meetings with international counterparts, Secretary of State Antony Blinken lectured China's top foreign official, Wang Yi, regarding the disastrous flight of the surveillance balloon: "It must never happen again."

If the purpose of diplomacy is to use words carefully to achieve an objective, the State Department has failed. Blinken had already canceled a scheduled trip to Beijing because of the balloon incident, a far greater penalty meted out to China given that high-level diplomatic contacts have practically ceased since the Trump administration. So, besides playing to the friendly corporate media in the West, what was the need to needle Yi in public?

But Blinken was not done. Moving on to another topic, he also warned Yi of consequences should China provide material support to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The warning was poorly timed because Yi had been visiting European countries to play peacemaker, and the United States knew this.

The resulting fallout was immediate. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin responded that China "will never accept the U.S. pointing fingers at Sino-Russian relations or even coercing us. It is the United States and not China that is endlessly shipping weapons to the battlefield. We urge the United States to earnestly reflect on its own actions and do more to alleviate the situation, promote peace and dialogue, and stop shifting blame and spreading false information."

The art of diplomacy is not to humiliate a major power. But the Biden administration is adept at doing precisely this. In Rome a year ago, Jake Sullivan, the National Security Adviser, met with Chinese diplomat Yang Jiechi to discuss China's support for Russia. A senior administration official summarized the meeting: "We have deep concerns about China's alignment with Russia at this time, and the national security adviser was direct about those concerns and the potential implications and consequences of certain actions."

Major powers don't change policies when threatened, even if doing so would be in their interests. No country would want to appear as though it capitulated to a foreign rival - and history matters. China-Russia relations have been robust for years. Chinese President Xi Jinping's first foreign trip as China's leader was to Russia in 2013. He and President Putin have since met about three dozen times, the most that either leader has met with any other Head of State. A year ago, the two declared a friendship with "no limits," a relationship that strengthened further when Wang Yi received a warm welcome at the Kremlin this week. Both sides announced that Xi would visit Moscow soon.

Annual trade between Russia and China is expected to reach $200 billion. Moscow is already the largest holder of China's currency abroad. China is the largest importer of Russia's natural resources. The latter has become a substantial market for China's cars, consumer products, and dual-use electronics that can be used for civilian or military applications.

American policy in Ukraine has pushed two crucial United Nations Security Council members closer together. Both China and Russia view America as the aggressor. Even Ukrainian president Zelenskyy, the world's cleverest politician, conceded how dangerous things have become. "For us, it is important that China does not support the Russian Federation in this war," Zelenskyy told the German daily Die Welt. He continued, "Because if China allies itself with Russia, there will be a world war, and I do think that China is aware of that."

President Biden is nonchalantly moving to help Ukraine no matter what it takes: a worsening cold war with two nuclear powers teaming up to challenge American hegemony in world affairs; sending Global South countries to the Russia-China axis; being at the receiving end of the dangerous suspension of a nuclear arms treaty; and inadvertently inviting even World War III.

The "as long as it takes" war is slowly moving to the "whatever it takes" war. We long for the relatively peaceful days when President Trump was in office when all we had to contend with daily was a tweet.

https://tippinsights.com/the-whatever-it-takes-war/

DEA eyes rules to make telemedicine permanently flexible, safeguarded

 The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) announced on Friday that it is proposing rules to make many flexibilities for telemedicine that were established amid the COVID-19 pandemic permanent, with certain safeguards. 

The DEA said in a release that the rule will give patients access to virtual therapies beyond the end of the COVID-19 public health emergency, which is scheduled to conclude in May. 

“DEA is committed to ensuring that all Americans can access needed medications,” DEA Administrator Anne Milgram said. “The permanent expansion of telemedicine flexibilities would continue greater access to care for patients across the country, while ensuring the safety of patients. 

The rules would include certain safeguards for telemedicine consultations from a medical provider who has not conducted an in-person evaluation of a patient and that results in the provider prescribing the patient a controlled medicine. 

They would allow medical providers to prescribe a 30-day supply of Schedule III and Schedule IV non-narcotic controlled drugs, which are the least likely to result in drug abuse, or a 30-day supply of buprenorphine to treat opioid use disorder without an in-person evaluation or referral, according to the release. 

The DEA added that the rules would not affect telemedicine consultations that do not involve prescribing controlled medications or those where the provider has conducted an in-person examination of the patient. 

The updates would also not affect telemedicine consultations and prescriptions from a provider that a patient has been referred to as long as the referring provider has conducted an in-person examination. 

The release states the rules further the DEA’s goal of expanding access to medication for people struggling with opioid addictions. 

“Medication for opioid use disorder helps those who are fighting to overcome substance use disorder by helping people achieve and sustain recovery, and also prevent drug poisonings,” Milgram said. 

Members of the public will be able to submit comments for 30 days on the proposals.

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/3873639-dea-announces-proposed-rules-to-make-telemedicine-permanently-flexible-safeguarded/

Biden orders weekend door-to-door checks in Ohio after train derailment

 President Biden issued an order Friday directing federal agencies to check-in with residents of East Palestine, Ohio, after a train derailment earlier this month.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Environmental Protection Agency and Federal Emergency Management Agency will go door-to-door, visiting homes to see how families are doing and connect them any resources they may need.

After hurricanes and other natural disasters, similar “walk teams” perform the same duties. Biden didn’t specifically say how many homes need to be visited, but he said he told employees to visit as many homes as possible by Monday.

The announcement comes amid frustrations from Republicans toward the administration’s response to the disaster. House Republicans opened an investigation into the Feb. 3 derailment and have slammed Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg for what they have called a delayed response.

Democrats meanwhile have blamed former President Trump and his administration for rolling back rail and environmental regulations during his term.

Buttigieg also criticized the rollbacks when he visited the site of the derailment on Thursday, one day after Trump delivered a speech in East Palestine, slamming Buttigieg and Biden’s response.

https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/3873455-biden-orders-weekend-door-to-door-checks-in-ohio-after-train-derailment/