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Sunday, December 3, 2023

Trump in Iowa accuses Biden of destroying democracy

 In front of an enthusiastic crowd, former President Donald Trump took jabs here Saturday at the man he considers his biggest rival in the race for the White House — President Joe Biden.

The former president, who faces felony charges for trying to overturn the 2020 election, called Biden "the destroyer of American democracy" in front of the hundreds of attendees who packed Kirkwood Community College's Johnson Hall gym Saturday afternoon.

A projector screen hovering above the makeshift stage where Trump stood flashed a campaign slogan that read: "Biden attacks democracy." Trump has pleaded not guilty to 91 criminal counts in four separate cases in federal and state court, including allegations of subverting America's democratic elections.

He told attendees that the American dream had "died" once the Biden administration took over — a dream, he says, that was alive and well while he was in office.

"We built the greatest economy in the history of the world," he said, referring to his administration as "incredible" and touting rising wages and low mortgage rates and gas prices.

Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird, who was among the event's guest speakers and has endorsed Trump, said she recalled a better economy, a more secure border and more job opportunities when Trump was in the White House.

"He's a patriot. He loves our country just as much as we do. We need him in there," she said. "But to do that, I need you to get out and caucus."

During the event, the audience’s cheers grew longer as state Rep. Bobby Kaufmann, one of Trump’s endorsers and guest speakers, yelled into the mic and asked: “Who else in this room thinks Trump is a rock star bad a--?”

Trump has remained the dominant front-runner in the 2024 Republican presidential race nationally and in Iowa. A compilation of national polls from the polling analysis site FiveThirtyEight shows Trump in the lead with 60%, with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in second at 13% and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley at 10%.

In Iowa, 43% of likely Republican caucusgoers named Trump as their first choice for president, an October Des Moines Register/NBC News/Mediacom Iowa Poll found. The poll also showed DeSantis and Haley behind Trump, tying in second at 16%.

At the event in Cedar Rapids, those in attendance told the Des Moines Register they want Trump back in the White House. And some such as Waterloo resident April Melton say they see Trump as the only plausible Republican nominee.

Just minutes before Trump set foot on stage, Melton, 54, told the Register she "can't even envision" anyone other than Trump as the nominee.

"Teens have rock stars that they follow like Taylor Swift. Grown-ups have Trump," said Melton, whose red hoodie carried a portrait of the former president, the word "legend" stamped underneath.

Melton, who voted for Trump in 2020, criticized Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds for endorsing DeSantis after Reynolds initially said she would stay neutral.

Melton believes the governor's endorsement is a "great disservice to Iowa residents and voters" — and "hurt" them.

Others, including Emma Aquino-Nemecek and Joe Mikecin, said they continue to stand by Trump because of his policies on national security and immigration.

For Aquino-Nemecek, the latter is personal. The 64-year-old Marion resident said she came to Iowa from the Philippines in 1992 and went through the process legally, filing the proper paperwork and paying all the expenses.

"I don't want an open border. I came here legally," she said. "I want everybody to fall in line and do the process instead of just letting everybody (come) in."

Mikecin, 61, shared a similar sentiment.

"We want immigration, but we don't want illegal immigration," said Mikecin, who traveled from St. Louis to see Trump at the community college in Cedar Rapids. "We are a melting pot — and we should be. That's what America is. But you can't butt in front of the line. That's just not right."

Like Melton, Mikecin believes Trump is the only option for president.

A supporter of Republican presidential candidate and former President Donald Trump wears a Trump "Wanted" T-shirt during a caucus event, Saturday, Dec. 2, 2023, at Kirkwood Community College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. (Geoff Stellfox/The Gazette via AP)
A supporter of Republican presidential candidate and former President Donald Trump wears a Trump "Wanted" T-shirt during a caucus event, Saturday, Dec. 2, 2023, at Kirkwood Community College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. (Geoff Stellfox/The Gazette via AP)© Geoff Stellfox, AP

"It's Trump or not," said Mikecin, who was among dozens who stood in line hours before the doors to the event opened.

Mikecin believes the other presidential contenders can't match Trump's "conviction." He says Trump's absences in the Republican primary debates speak to that trait.

"He doesn't need to because we know who he is," Mikecin said. "We know where he stands, and that's where the conviction comes in. We know his policies are going to help all of us who are standing here."

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/donald-trump-in-iowa-accuses-biden-of-destroying-democracy-as-fan-likens-him-to-taylor-swift/ar-AA1kU3zg

Blinken only emboldens Hamas terrorists

 Joe Biden must stop trying to appease Hamas sympathizers inside the White House and Democratic Party and reiterate America’s steadfast commitment to Israel. Particularly in the wake of his secretary of state’s dumbfounding and ill-timed remarks last week regarding the Jewish state.

On Friday, the Times of Israel reported that, when one high-ranking Israeli official told U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken that Israeli citizens overwhelmingly support the military campaign to eliminate Hamas “even if it takes months,” he responded, “I don’t think you have the credit for that.”

According to the report, Mr. Blinken then went on to scold Israel about potential civilian casualties in southern Gaza.

“You need to evacuate fewer people from their homes, be more accurate in the attacks, not hit U.N. facilities and ensure that there are enough protected areas,” he said. “And if not? Then not to attack where there is a civilian population.”

These comments embolden Hamas terrorists as they regroup after the brief cease-fire, encouraging them to continue to embed themselves among the civilian population and to drag out this conflict. They create doubt about America’s continued support for an ally whose enemies have loudly and publicly declared their desire to wipe Israel from the map. They attempt to draw an equivalency between unfortunate yet inevitable civilian deaths during wartime and the calculated murder of innocents.

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What Mr. Biden “won’t acknowledge,” Jonathan S. Tobin wrote last week for Jewish World Review, “is that the push for a cease-fire is not motivated by a desire for peace but implicit support for Hamas’ right to ‘resist’ Israel and thereby pursue its destruction.”

Indeed, Mr. Biden is facing such pressure from within his own White House, which is home to many young Democratic activists fluent in leftist blather about Israel and “settler colonialism.” It’s no coincidence that Mr. Blinken’s lecture for Israel came as The New York Times reports that Mr. Biden “is facing deep anger” over his support for Israel among many Democrats “and even from some staff members who have said they feel disenchanted with the president.”

As the temporary truce evaporated last week, Israeli officials pledged to allow more humanitarian aid into Gaza, including food, water, fuel and medicine. They again dropped leaflets in populated areas, urging Palestinian civilians to evacuate. They presented Mr. Blinken, CNN reported, with maps designated safe zones for innocents.

Hamas terrorists, meanwhile, reiterate their intention to murder and attack innocent Israelis at every opportunity.

The contrast couldn’t be more clear.

Israel doesn’t need any “credit” from the United States to defend itself in the wake of barbaric terror attacks that left 1,400 of its citizens dead. “There is no way we are not going back to fighting until the end,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said last week. “This is my policy, the entire Cabinet stands behind it, the entire government stands behind it, the soldiers stand behind it, the people stand behind it.”

The proper message for Mr. Biden and Mr. Blinken to convey is that the United States stands behind it, too.

https://www.reviewjournal.com/opinion/editorials/editorial-blinken-only-emboldens-hamas-terrorists-2958362/

Geert Wilders aims to stop the invasion of Europe

 Our myna-bird media refer to Dutch politician Geet Wilders, who could be the next prime minister of the Netherlands, as “far right,” hard right,” an “anti-Islam firebrand” and a “Donald Trump clone.”

They missed MAGA Republican.

Mr. Wilders won a huge victory in last week’s parliamentary elections. His Party for Freedom went from 17 seats to 37 seats in the lower house — a plurality that puts Mr. Wilders in line to form the next government.

While he ran on a broad range of issues, the Dutch Donald is best known for promising to stem the tide of Muslim immigration.

He’s also pledged to move the Dutch Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem. Strange how so many “far right” leaders — including the newly elected president of Argentina — want to express their solidarity with the Jewish state. Someone forgot to tell them that they’re supposed to be antisemites.

Mr. Wilders joins a hardy band of immigration skeptics, including Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who cheered Mr. Wilders’ victory. (“The winds of change are here!”) The Alternative for Germany party, also opposed to open borders, is now in second place in polling, with 20% support. In France, Marine Le Pen waits her turn.

The Netherlands has taken in an average of 200,000 immigrants a year since 2016, most unassimilable.

The Netherlands, whose population is only 16 million, is now home to 1 million Muslims. Since the 2004 murder of filmmaker Theo van Gogh for exposing the treatment of women under Islam, a growing number of Dutch have concluded that the immigrants will not end up wearing wooden shoes and planting tulips.

The Dutch aren’t the only Europeans who are nervous. In France, a new mosque is opened every two weeks, and a Catholic institution is closed during the same period. In a gesture of goodwill, the grand imam of Paris has suggested that decommissioned churches be turned into mosques.

How thoughtful.

Since 2003, the number of mosques in the land of Charles Martel has grown from 1,500 to 2,400. Muslims now make up 9% of the French population. How well they’ve assimilated can be seen in the designation “no-go zones” for majority-immigrant areas around Paris where the gendarmes dare not venture.

Malmo, Sweden’s third-largest city, is home to 50,000 Muslims, 600 Jews and raging antisemitism. If present trends continue, it’s estimated that 30% of Sweden will be Muslim by 2050. Once a nation known for its hospitality, Sweden is now the rape capital of Europe, with three times the European Union average of registered sexual assaults.

Some think you can replace one population with another and end up with the same results.

In London, 100,000 marched, calling for Israel’s extinction. Britain’s capital has a Muslim mayor, and on Remembrance Day, police had to be deployed to protect war memorials from those who say they wish Hitler had won the Second World War.

Islam is the dominant religion of Brussels. In Spain, the number of mosques is growing by 20% a year. It’s estimated that by 2046, 1 in 3 Viennese will profess faith in Islam.

There’s more at work here than open borders.

Europeans are at the center of a demographic storm. For the EU as a whole, the fertility rate (the number of children the average woman will have in her lifetime) is only 1.4, well below the replacement level of 2.1. European Muslims have a fertility rate of 2.6.

At the root of Europe’s demographic crisis is a loss of faith. In Germany, the number of baptisms — Catholic and Protestant — went from 800 a day in 2012 to 390 a day 10 years later. It’s believed that there are more practicing Muslims than practicing Catholics in France.

The continent that once was known as Christendom has lost its religion. On Sunday morning, churches are empty except for a few old women. Empty pews lead to empty cradles.

The fall of the Roman Empire became inevitable when citizens stopped having children and fertile barbarians were allowed to settle on Roman land. Soon, the army was dominated by those dedicated to Rome’s destruction.

In 2006, the Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi proclaimed: “There are signs that Allah will grant Islam victory in Europe — without swords, without guns, without conquest.”

In 1683, the Ottoman siege of Vienna was lifted by Polish King Jan Sobieski, halting the last Muslim advance in Europe. Today, Mr. Wilders, Mr. Orban and their allies are standing at the gates of Vienna.

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/dec/2/dutch-politician-geert-wilders-aims-to-stop-invasi/

The Colonialism Slander in the State Department and Beyond

 Left-wing intellectuals have transformed the complex history of “colonialism” into an all-encompassing slander against the West. A practice dating back to the ancient world, colonialism involves a nation’s transferring a portion of its population into a foreign land and assuming responsibility for administering it. In the United Kingdom and the United States, professors of literature, history, political theory, and international relations routinely teach that the subjugation of non-Western peoples belongs to the essence of the West – they primarily mean the British Empire, America, and Israel. The anti-colonialists further contend that the perpetration of heinous crimes – including genocide, the systematic effort to wipe out a people – belongs to the essence of the West’s colonialism.

So successful have the professors been in promulgating the belief that the West has engaged in centuries of relentlessly brutal conquest and malevolent domination that the colonialism slander has found its way into the U.S. State Department bureaucracy. In a Nov. 3 scoop, Axios reporters Hans Nichols and Barak Ravid revealed that “A junior State Department employee who is organizing a dissent cable on the White House’s policy on Israel has used social media to publicly accuse President Biden of being ‘complicit in genocide’ toward the people of Gaza.” The dissent cable, which involves classified communications to the secretary of state, has been leaked.

An organizer of the dissent cable and author of the accusation that the president whom she serves is complicit in genocide, Sylvia Yacoub is “a foreign affairs officer in the Bureau of Middle East Affairs for more than two years.” The obscene abuse of the term “genocide” to characterize Israel’s exercise of its right of self-defense is a tell-tale sign that Yacoub subscribes to the colonialism slander. Had she described the jubilantly executed atrocities and proudly proclaimed goal of the Hamas jihadists as genocide, she would have employed the term correctly.

The colonialism slander blinds its adherents to basic facts and crucial distinctions. On Oct. 7, in grotesque violation of the laws of war, the terrorists massacred some 1,200, mostly civilians, and abducted 240, mostly civilians, in furtherance of their oft-repeated aim to destroy the Jewish state. In contrast, and in compliance with the laws of war, Israel has targeted Hamas combatants and their military infrastructure. Before attacking Hamas strongholds, which the terrorists illegally built inside and under Gaza’s cities, Israel has warned Palestinian civilians to leave and has directed them to safe areas. The tragic loss of civilian life in Gaza has resulted from Hamas’ callous conversion of civilian areas into war zones.

It turns out, according to Eitan Fischberger, that Yacoub, a 2023 graduate of Georgetown University’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service (SFS), “wrote her thesis paper about colonialism and its role in international relations.” In “The Georgetown Effect,” Fischberger explained that Yacoub’s thesis reflected her school’s priorities: “SFS’s curriculum, faculty viewpoints, and campus activities” revolve around colonialism and “decolonization.” Josh Paul, the only State Department official to resign in opposition to the Biden administration’s support for Israel’s war against Hamas, graduated from SFS in 2002.

In the 2023 British Sunday Times bestseller “Colonialism: A Moral Reckoning,” Nigel Biggar provides a meticulous accounting of colonialism and the West. A professor emeritus of moral and pastoral theology at the University of Oxford, Biggar writes that in late 2017, he was “plunged into the ‘culture war’ over colonialism.” Shortly after publishing an exploration in The Times of London of colonialism’s contributions as well as its costs, “all hell broke loose.” Critics targeted for termination his scholarly project “Ethics and Empire,” his distinguished partner resigned from the enterprise, and nearly 200 scholars from around the world denounced him in one online statement, as did 58 Oxford colleagues in another. Biggar responded in exemplary fashion by producing an incisive scholarly study – some 300 pages of closely argued text and 130 pages of learned endnotes – examining “the complicated, morally ambiguous truth” about the British Empire’s colonialism.

Biggar emphasizes that the “unscrupulous indifference to truth” displayed by the anti-colonialists – for whom the late Edward Said, a Columbia University professor of literature, is a quasi-prophet and his “Orientalism” a quasi-bible – reveals that their slanders serve a political function: the diminution of the West. “One important way of corroding faith in the West is to denigrate its record, a major part of which is the history of European empires,” observes Biggar. “And of all those empires, the primary target is the British one, which was by far the largest and gave birth to the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.”

Biggar’s “moral assessment” of the British Empire’s colonialism – which stretches from before 1600 and the creation of the East India Company to the empire’s post-World War II dissolution – is informed by a species of Christian realism. He believes that basic moral principles are real and knowable; human beings are equal in dignity because they are “accountable for the spending of their lives to a God who looks with compassion upon their limitations and burdens”; cultures may be unequal in many respects; government, which is indispensable, rightly pursues the national interest despite its inevitable unjust acts; war can be necessary and just; and, “History contains an ocean of injustice, most of it unremedied and now lying beyond correction in this world.”

In one long sentence, Biggar summarizes the evils – these encompass “not only culpable wrongdoing or injustice, but also unintended harms,” but do not include genocide – perpetrated by British colonialism. The debit side of the ledger comprises “brutal slavery; the epidemic spread of devastating disease; economic and social disruption; the unjust displacement of natives by settlers; failures of colonial government to prevent settler abuse and famine; elements of racial alienation and racist contempt; policies of needlessly wholesale cultural suppression; miscarriages of justice; instances of unjustifiable military aggression and the indiscriminate and disproportionate use of force; and the failure to admit native talent to the higher echelons of colonial government on terms of equality quickly enough to forestall the build-up of nationalist resentment.”

In two sentences – one comparatively short and one extraordinarily long – Biggar distills the steps Britain undertook to mitigate colonialism’s shameful dimensions and the contributions of which it can be proud. “If the empire initially presided over the slave trade and slavery, it renounced both in the name of basic human equality and then led endeavors to suppress them worldwide for 150 years,” he maintains on the ledger’s positive side.

The empire also: moderated the disruptive impact of Western modernity upon very unmodern societies; promoted a worldwide free market that gave native producers and entrepreneurs new economic opportunities; created regional peace by imposing an overarching imperial authority on multiple, warring peoples; perforce involved representatives of native peoples in the lower levels of government; sought to relieve the plight of the rural poor and protect them against rapacious landlords; provided a civil service and judiciary that was generally and extraordinarily incorrupt; developed public infrastructure, albeit usually through private investment; made foreign investment attractive by reducing the risks through establishing political stability and the rule of law; disseminated modern agricultural methods and medicine; stood against German aggression – first militarist, then Nazi – and for international law and order in the two world wars, helping to save both the Western and the non-Western world for liberal democracy; brought up three of the most prosperous and liberal states now on earth – Canada, Australia and New Zealand; gave birth to two more – the United States and Israel; evolved into a loose, consensual, multi-racial, international organization, the (British) Commonwealth of Nations, which some states that never belonged to the British Empire have opted to join – Mozambique (1995) and Rwanda (2009); inspired by the ideal of the Commonwealth, helped to plan and realize first the League of Nations and then the United Nations; through the Commonwealth applied moral pressure to South Africa to abandon its policy of apartheid; through the wartime anti-fascist alliance of 1939–45, evolved into an important part of the post-war Western alliance against Soviet and Chinese communism; and still has a significant afterlife in the Western military alliance of NATO, the intelligence alliance of the “Five Eyes,” and influential economic development agencies such as the UK’s British International Investment and Department for International Development.

An admirable scholarly achievement, Biggar’s rigorous assessment invites critical engagement. However, the very idea of carefully considering colonialism’s contributions as well as its costs is anathema to the anti-colonialists. Their postmodern progressivism leaves little room for dissent from the dogma that colonialism was implacably racist and rapacious. For the anti-colonialists, the appeal to historical evidence and reasoned argument amounts to one more noxious feature of the colonial mindset. As Biggar observes in his epilogue, anti-colonialists embrace “the ideas that ‘truth’ is whatever the anti-colonialist revolution requires and that revolutionary vitality should be preferred to bourgeois reason.”

The widespread colonialism slander undercuts U.S. diplomacy and enfeebles democracy in America. A crucial part of the remedy consists in cultivating professors who will engage in reasoned scholarship rather than partisan posturing and will reorient classrooms around education in, rather than indoctrination against, the West.

Peter Berkowitz is the Tad and Dianne Taube senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. From 2019 to 2021, he served as director of the Policy Planning Staff at the U.S. State Department. 

https://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2023/12/03/the_colonialism_slander_in_the_state_department_and_beyond_150142.html