#284151
Purchases included:Inflatable games ($42,500), model rockets ($34,000), china tableware ($53,004), alcohol ($308,994), musical instruments ($1.7 million), workout equipment ($9.8 million) and lobster tail and crab ($4.6 million).
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#284152
One could make a living fact-checking Paul Krugman. It’s hard to say whether he is extremely forgetful, or just a terrible liar. Krugman, anticipating a Biden inauguration in January, laments wh...
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#284153
Sky News host James Morrow says the Let’s Go Brandon chant is a “complete indictment” of the American media and not just a criticism of the Biden administration. The phrase has become popular at crowded events like football games after a video went viral a few weeks ago of race car driver Brandon Brown. He […]
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#284154
The development of smart cities and the widespread product adoption as a contributor to the broader renovation of aging infrastructures are primarily driving the LED street light market. Apart from this, the shifting consumer preferences from traditional lighting systems towards advanced integrated lighting solutions are also bolstering the market growth.
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#284155

General Washington’s Standard

Submitted 7 years ago by ActRight Community

‘Does not, then, the Almighty clearly impress an awe of the persons and authority of Kings upon the minds of their subjects, hereby proving Government of Divine origin?” So asked the Reverend J. R. Walsh in a pamphlet printed in 1829. “For, otherwise, by what principle could any one mortal command subjection from so many millions of fellow creatures”? #ad#That was a question very much upon the mind of King George IV, whose coronation provided the inspiration for the Reverend Walsh’s essay: That king’s father, George III, had been treated with a notable lack of awe by his American subjects, who gave him the shoe and set up their own republic, without any king at all. This experiment in awelessness, all the smart people of the late 18th century assured one another, was doomed to failure: Awelessness was next to lawlessness, they believed, and a people without a king to tell them how to behave or a king’s church to tell them why to behave were doomed to anarchy. Here’s to 240 years of glorious anarchy. Awe was very much on the minds of those early republicans. George Washington, whose name appears frequently in sentences containing the word “awe,” wrote that one of the purposes of our northern fortifications was to “awe the Indians.” Thomas Paine, who had no great awe of the state, wrote of the constitutional right to keep and bear arms: “Arms discourage and keep the invader and plunderer in awe, and preserve order in the world as well as property.” You’ll find a man’s heart where you find his awe: Walter Bagehot, founder of (that other) National Review and later editor of The Economist, lived to learn: “A schoolmaster should have an atmosphere of awe,” he wrote, “and walk wonderingly, as if he was amazed at being himself.” Edmund Burke believed that even when addressing the defects of the state, we should treat it “with pious awe and trembling solicitude,” hence his hesitancy about the American Revolution and his detestation of the French one. The libertarian theorist Murray Rothbard would later argue the opposite, that failed revolutions are valuable to the extent that they “decrease the awe in which the constituted authority is held by the populace, and in that way will increase the chance of a later revolt against tyranny.” George Washington famously rejected an offer to make him king and thought that calling the president “Your Excellency” might be a bit much, too. When the Reverend Walsh connected awe with divinity in government, he had in mind Paul’s letter to the Romans: “Let every soul be subject unto the higher powers. For there is no power but of God: the powers that be are ordained of God. Whosoever therefore resisteth the power, resisteth the ordinance of God: and they that resist shall receive to themselves damnation.” Burke had in mind a kind of holy terror, too, though one that less closely resembled the apostle’s fear of the Almighty than it did Thomas Hobbes’s fear of bellum omnium contra omnes. But in many ways those come down to the same thing: Without someone to keep them in line — to keep them in awe — what’s to keep the people from running amok? The American Founders did not contemplate a world without awe of government, but they did intuit that a free, self-governing, democratic republic could get by with a good deal less of it. George Washington famously rejected an offer to make him king and thought that calling the president “Your Excellency” might be a bit much, too. We hear a great deal now about the “dignity of the office” and the need to have “respect for the presidency,” if not for the president himself, but nobody ever really says why. Why should we be awed at the chief bureaucrat of the federal administrative apparatus? Why should we hold in awe our employee? “Only I can fix” is Donald Trump’s illiterate shorthand for the idea that presidents are, like kings, products of divine election. George Washington never said anything like that; he didn’t need to convince anybody that he was the man for the job, and he knew that the job was governing, not ruling. #share#There is something in us, something ugly and atavistic, that loves a king. Some unhappy people — and they are legion — long for a strong man before whom they can abase themselves, and thereby be relieved of the stress and terror of being responsible for their own lives. Unhappy with the state of your personal finances? Let the Great Father take care of it for you. Burke would have recognized what was going on right now in American politics. He argued that the American colonists had legitimate grievances but that those were married to a “dangerous spirit of disquisition, not in the coolness of philosophic inquiry, but inflamed with all the passions of a haughty, resentful people, who thought themselves deeply injured, and that they were contending for everything that was valuable in the world.” And they didn’t even have cable news. It is pleasing and strange that on this Independence Day weekend we Americans are thinking in a special way about our British cousins, who, all these years after their damned stupid tea taxes and quartering troops in our houses, have gotten around to declaring their own independence, not from the Crown (which is now only a kind of Easter bonnet) but from the European Union, which began as a trading bloc and metastasized into another version of the cracked dream of a unitary European state, this one headquartered in Brussels rather than in Paris or Berlin. The European Union has all the usual trappings of awe: a banner, an anthem (from Beethoven’s Ninth), titles, etc. The great political genius of Nigel Farage and his hectoring, insulting EU speeches was his simple refusal to be awed by the European authorities. Perhaps the French, who were on the right side of the American Revolution, will join in next year, and remember who it was they sent us a statue of. We’ve done pretty well without an overabundance of awe: saved the world from awe-addled Germans — twice — and then went to the moon just to show that we could. Some Rotarians a few years back got together for lunch and decided that what they should do with their spare time is wipe out polio: They’re pretty close. We still have too much awe of the state for my taste, but nobody’s perfect. When he was named president of the Constitutional Convention, George Washington didn’t set his sights on inspiring awe or on any exercise in political and philosophical grandiosity intended to “command subjection,” in the Reverend Walsh’s words, but instead suggested a much more modest target: “Let us raise a standard to which the wise and honest can repair.” Good advice then. Good advice now. — Kevin D. Williamson is the roving correspondent at National Review.
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#284156
The Reddit team is cooperating with law enforcement and taking steps to further secure the site.
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#284157
Joe Biden used his gun control time at the NH Democrat debate to call for Americans to be able to sue firearm makers over gun crime.
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#284158
Thousands of undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children are immediately eligible to apply for the Barack Obama-era program that grants them work permits, according to a federal judge in New York. On Friday, The Washington Post reported, U.S....
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#284159
The new rule targets “secondary violations” that include things such as expired registration, a single broken piece tail light or missing inspection and emissions testing certificates.
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#284160
An acute nursing shortage is clogging or even closing hospital emergency rooms across Canada, pushing an already stressed national health system to the brink with potentially severe consequences for…
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#284161

Ben Sasse: Public Trust Matters

Submitted 7 years ago by ActRight Community

The public trust, the rule of law, and the security of our nation have been injured by Secretary Clinton's actions.
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#284162
A Las Vegas police report on gunman Stephen Paddock, who killed 58 people in the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history last year, turns up new details about his life, but no firm motive for the crime.
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#284163
Watch AOC makes embarrassing live-streaming gaffe,Oh boy, well AOC has finally settled the debate of whether she’s just pretending to be stupid or actually
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#284164
A U.S. voter rights group informed the Department of Justice on Dec. 3 of a link between the ...
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#284165
DeSantis: "The Brandon Administration"Subscribe to WPBF on YouTube now for more: http://bit.ly/1qfxvbXGet more West Palm Beach news: http://www.wpbf.comLike ...
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#284166
Call me crazy, call me "ableist," call me whatever you want, but John Fetterman is not fit for office.
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#284167

Black Lives Matter

Submitted 7 years ago by ActRight Community

The tragedies that have taken place this past week in Baton Rouge, Minnesota, and Dallas have been heartbreaking, and infuriating. Painfully, they are not events isolated to this moment. Racial inequality is systemic, racial prejudice is perv…
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#284168
Former Vice President Joe Biden delivered a gaffe-ridden but defiant message shortly after suffering a blowout in the New Hampshire primary.
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#284169
President Donald Trump will sign an executive order Tuesday to ensure that Americans have access to the coronavirus vaccine first.
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#284170

Climate change is no catastrophe

Submitted 2 years ago by ActRight Community

Attempts to stop warming will backfire dangerously
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#284171
A group of Venezuelan migrants who had just crossed the border into Eagle Pass, Texas, were surprised to learn that they would be returned to Mexico.
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#284172
Police raided the homes of 60 people suspected of writing 'hate' speech on social media in Germany, to combat "verbal radicalisation".
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#284173
Tech companies funded by communist China engaged in REAL election meddling
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#284174
Independent voters were far more likely than Democrats to view Hunter Biden’s business dealings as inappropriate.
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#284175
Two genetic techniques show good results to treat blood diseases
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