#332801
“There must be serious legislative efforts to…”
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#332802
The ABC host continued, "The Obama Administration did nothing that we know of publicly. Why did they do nothing about that huge hack done by China and...
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#332803
The Clinton campaign likely failed in part because of Christianophobia in the top ranks of her leadership.
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#332804
A STAGGERING 465 "child refugees” who were granted entry to Britain lied to officials to gain entry into the country, official figures have revealed.
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#332805
Both groups want to distort the Constitution to serve their own purposes.
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#332806

The Ferguson Effect Lives On

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

Violence in American cities rose again in 2016, as cops backed off proactive policing.
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#332807
Migrants have slammed Sweden for not providing them with jobs and private homes, accusing Swedes of "killing" them and making them miserable.
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#332808
An Afghan migrant attacked a woman at an asylum centre in Austria because she was reading a bible.
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#332809
Because Title IX is referenced as providing the interpretation of Obamacare sex discrimination ban, O’Connor found that Obama administration's expanded definition of sex discrimination exceeds the [Title IX] grounds” provided for in the ACA, making that provision contrary to law and a violation of the APA.
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#332810

Conservative vs. Liberal Beliefs

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

Liberals believe in government action...Conservatives believe in limited government.
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#332811
President-elect Trump has nominated as attorney general Jeff Sessions, who has championed the practice of civil asset forfeiture.
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#332812
The EPA is trying to restrict wood burning stoves in rural Alaska.
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#332813
Filmed at the Emmanuel Centre in London on 21st November 2016. What is going on in the Western democracies? From Britain’s vote for Brexit, to Donald Trump’s...
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#332814
An excerpt of Jonathan Haidt's appearance on the Waking Up with Sam Harris podcast. He discusses the alarming rise of a vindictive, authoritarian kind of pol...
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#332815
Jonathan Haidt is a social psychologist and Professor of Ethical Leadership at New York University's Stern School of Business. His academic specialization is...
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#332816
When he died in February, many thought his originalist constitutional approach died with him.
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#332817
Mainstream media works in the realm of extremes. Their current narrative is that there's no shortage of of emotions flaring up on the political front as we get rolling in 2017. They tell us that the vast majority of Democrats are still furious over the election results. Meanwhile, they say the vast majority of Republicans are riled up as well, seeing in Donald Trump the answer to all their prayers.
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#332818

Obama’s Last Report Card

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

Man, that did not go as planned at all. Remember 2008. President George W. Bush, who had planned to spend his presidency reforming education and overseeing a Texas-style economic renaissance on a national scale, had been for years mired in the unpopular and thankless project of trying to build liberal democracies for backward desert tribesmen who have neither the capacity nor the desire for them. Vast sums of money were spent, many fine soldiers gave their lives, and no obvious progress toward that larger end was made. The American people grew weary of it, and then grew frightened for their own immediate economic prospects as a financial crisis followed by a series of unusual government interventions into the economy gave them every reason to believe, and to resent the fact, that the politically connected were playing by a different set of rules. People in decaying Rust Belt towns and other communities that had failed to thrive in the early 21st-century economic order asked, not unreasonably, why it was that Wall Street firms were “too big to fail” but their former employers were not. And so they turned to Barack Obama. He was young, eloquent, and at times inspiring, apparently unflappable, and, in spite of his origins as a jumped-up Chicago ward-heeler — or perhaps because of them — he was, he assured us, above anything so petty as ideology. He was vague enough: “Hope and change” at the macro level, “do what works” at the operational level. To the extent that he had anything like a substantive vision, it was, roughly: Stop spending all that money over there, and start spending some of it over here. It was a message we had heard before and have heard since, not only from populists such as Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump but also, in some form, from more-traditional Democrats such as Hillary Rodham Clinton and from libertarian-leaning conservatives such as Rand Paul. That sentiment has long been a part of mainstream Republican rhetoric: It is what Dwight Eisenhower meant when he said that every dollar spent on bombs and bullets was stolen from the poor and the destitute. Obama’s mandate (here I use the ordinary sense of the word, not the special political sense) was clear enough: stabilize the economy and get it back to regular growth, bring our active military entanglements in the Middle East to some sort of orderly and honorable conclusion, and use the savings to fund some sort of national health-insurance benefit. It is a shame that Lyndon Johnson did not live long enough to see his 1964 election reprised. RELATED: Assessing the Obama Legacy — Against His Own Mileposts Johnson ran as the peace candidate in 1964, promising to get us out of Vietnam or at least to stop any escalation of American involvement there. The opposite happened. Johnson promised that Medicare would be efficiently run and financially self-sustaining. The opposite happened. Johnson said that his Great Society programs would usher in a new kind of America, one in which government-directed investments in anti-poverty campaigns and educational projects would not only lift up the poor but would, by helping them to maximize their own economic value, lift the entire country, too. The opposite, or something close to it, happened there, too. Johnson, who in Congress had opposed not only a great deal of civil-rights legislation but even anti-lynching bills, would in 1964 reinvent himself as a civil-rights champion. It is pleasant to think that, in whatever afterlife he finds himself in, he is both amused and pleased to see himself politically reincarnated as a black man. The key difference is that while Johnson may have been a rotten S.O.B., he knew what he was doing, more or less. He didn’t fumble into Vietnam in 1965 — he lied about his intentions in 1964. He was sufficiently intelligent, and sufficiently a man of the Senate, to understand that the particulars of legislative architecture were going to be the deciding factor in the success or the failure of his programs. He knew that they would have to be revisited over the years. He was a deeply weird man — and a monster — but he was also a resident of the real world. Barack Obama? Less so. #share#In the eight years of his presidency, we have both abandoned and re-invaded Iraq, launched new engagements in the Middle East and in Africa, and contributed mightily to the mess in Syria with President Obama’s empty talk of “red lines” and sundry ultimata, none of which was taken seriously in Damascus — or Moscow, or Tehran, or Beijing, or Washington, for that matter. The United States and Russia are at the moment engaged in an escalating tit-for-tat confrontation over Moscow’s minor-league meddling in the presidential election, which is, of course, what President Obama really cares about: Vladimir Putin can annex Crimea and test out new weapons on civilians in Syria, but release a bucket of embarrassing DNC e-mails (the veracity of which is, incidentally, not in dispute) and the Obama administration swings into action. RELATED: Obama’s Second Term Was a Complete Failure On foreign policy, the predictions of President Obama’s most trenchant conservative critics have come to pass: Neither our allies nor our enemies have confidence that we will say what we mean and do what we say. Beyond the squabble with Russia and the mess in Syria, our relations with Israel (speaking of meddling in elections overseas) are in tatters, our critical allies in the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand are both confused by our meandering indecision and alienated by the Obama administration’s pettiness and arrogance. The Europeans, who had hoped for so much from the Obama administration, have returned to their traditional view of the United States as the rich, powerful, oafish uncle kept at arm’s length until the moment of crisis, when he is irreplaceable. Democrats should be asking themselves what Barack Obama has accomplished, too: He has decimated their party. Obama’s record at home is no more impressive. He punted his health-care reform bill to his team in Congress, where the fine legislative minds of Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid oversaw the creation of what the president proudly called “Obamacare,” which has created absolute chaos in the health-insurance market. The artificial marketplaces it created are collapsing, insurers are abandoning the program, premiums and deductibles are skyrocketing, consumers have fewer choices rather than more numerous ones, Medicaid is swollen, and the American people, who elected Barack Obama in no small part because they thought he could apply that cool intelligence for which he was famous (at least in the pages of the New York Times) to the health-insurance mess, absolutely hate what he has done. The Affordable Care Act almost certainly will be undone in the coming months, and the people who supported Barack Obama will be happy to see it go. It is foolish (and superstitious) to credit the president with the overall performance of the economy. But, holding President Obama to his own standard, things do not look too good there, either. Growth has been anemic for most of his presidency, and the outlook for employment and wages has been mediocre. Obama likes to boast of being the green-energy president and has been a terrible adversary for the traditional fossil-fuels business, but the fact is that much of the recent improvement in GDP growth is related to the recovery of the oil-and-gas business. The American energy renaissance is to be celebrated, but, at the same time, we should be mindful of the dangers of relying too heavily on any one source of growth and wealth. American homeowners felt pretty good about their economic prospects when housing prices were skyrocketing in the run-up to the financial crisis, but prices move both ways, including the price of oil, “peak oil” nincompoopery notwithstanding. #related#Republicans know what Barack Obama has accomplished: The GOP practically has never been in a better position politically, with the state legislatures and governorships, the House and the Senate, and a newly minted Republican president. (A ritual acknowledgement of Hubris, who is also a jealous god, is here appropriate.) But Democrats should be asking themselves what Barack Obama has accomplished, too: He has decimated their party. The things they care the most about are, from the progressive point of view, mostly either in stasis or in regress: climate-change legislation, economic inequality, abortion, transnational governance, etc. The Left is strangely focused at the moment on exotica such as which dressing room transsexuals use at the gym and whether nonconformist bakers can be obliged at gunpoint to bake a cake for Bill and Ted’s excellent wedding. Their national leaders are elderly, intellectually narrow hacks of the kind who give hacks a bad name. Their great hope is an author of self-help books who smoothed her academic career by pretending to be a Cherokee. Barack Obama, bless his heart, still hasn’t figured out that the job of the president isn’t giving speeches. And when was the last time he gave a speech that was worth a damn, anyway? No, that did not go as planned, at all. — Kevin D. Williamson is National Review’s roving correspondent.
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#332819
Donald Trump's senior counselor told Dailymail.com that he wants 'Hobbits' and 'Deplorables' to hold his feet to the fire as he steers the president's strategic ship.
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#332820
Daily Mail: Trump Chief Strategist Stephen K. Bannon Says 'Deplorables' Need to Hold Administration Accountable
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#332821
Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowitz slammed President Obama for "stabbing Israel in the back" on Monday morning's edition of 'Fox & Friends.' "[History wil...
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#332822
While pondering the last days of Barack Obama as president of the United States - not something entered into lightly considering that wasting ones time pondering the intricacies of the digestive process of a clam is more rewarding - but nonetheless watching the Obama Administration in its death throes one is reminded of the old saying about doors slamming against posteriors.
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#332823
Rachel Dolezal has been disinvited from a speaking event at a Martin Luther King Jr. festival.
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#332824
WikiLeaks have suggested that murdered DNC staffer Seth Rich leaked the Clinton and Podesta emails, and not Russian hackers as is widely reported.
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#332825
Trump claims that his policies of trade restrictions, immigration restrictions, tax cuts, and higher federal government spending will create 25 million new jobs and will nearly double the current economic growth rate over the next decade. [...] several of Trump’s policies provide nothing more than a false sense of hope, particularly to those workers who are the least skilled, and who are the most vulnerable to economic dislocations arising from globalization and technological change. The United States benefits enormously from international trade, which provides not only a much wider range of goods for Americans to purchase, but also benefits the average American household by about $10,000 per year from lower prices. [...] U.S. trade restrictions would not make our industries more competitive. The Commerce Department estimates that three jobs are lost in the candy industry alone for every sugar job that is “saved” by protection. [...] hiking U.S. tariffs will raise the cost of the raw and intermediate imported goods that comprise our complex international supply chain. [...] Trump has not offered any proposal to deal with the looming imbalances of Social Security. Trump’s immigration plans make his goal of creating 25 million jobs virtually unattainable. Because of the accelerating retirement of workers from the Baby Boom generation, economists broadly agree that there is almost no chance the U.S. can create 25 million jobs in the next 10 years without considerable immigration.
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