Author Topic: Politics  (Read 545329 times)

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18477
    • View Profile
scaring the Latin vote along with buying the Latin vote
« Reply #1350 on: January 24, 2020, 03:04:53 PM »
"Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer will deliver the Democratic response to President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address on Feb. 4. Rep. Veronica Escobar of Texas will deliver the Spanish-language response."

ok a couple of women but a response in Spanish

 :-(

What ever happened to just plain "America"?  Everything has to be identity . 

Why don't they have response beamed to every South American Asian and African and Caribbean market and forget the speech here?
« Last Edit: January 24, 2020, 03:19:40 PM by ccp »


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile
The Clintonistas behind the Iowa vote app
« Reply #1352 on: February 08, 2020, 10:55:45 AM »
The Iowa App and the Clinton Cabal
There’s money to be made in “progressive” politics.

By James Freeman
Feb. 7, 2020 1:20 pm ET


Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former President Bill Clinton play the Beacon Theatre in New York in April, 2019.
PHOTO: STEPHEN YANG/REUTERS

What do you get when you combine Team Clinton’s business savvy with panicked Democrats eager to counter Donald Trump’s use of digital technology? Behold the Iowa Democratic Party’s caucus reporting app.

In competitive elections, you win some and you lose some. But if you can create recurring revenue streams from both the national and state offices of one of America’s two leading political parties, you can win every time! For Democratic tech vendors, the timing is perfect as party officials look to digital investments to counter a perceived Trump advantage.

People will continue to debate which Democrats deserve the most blame for their worst-in-the-nation caucus performance on Monday. The latest twist in the tale comes from Jason Clayworth, who reports in the Des Moines Register:

The reporting app that is getting a large share of the blame for the chaos surrounding Monday’s Democratic caucus results was working until the national party required the installation of a security patch less than 48 hours before the first-in-the-nation contest, a recent member of the Iowa Democratic Central Committee said Thursday.
As for the creators of the app, people outside of the political world may find it increasingly difficult to understand how they were ever hired. The company charged with building the essential technology has a short and unsuccessful history. But it does have valuable connections.


The little-known technology start-up under scrutiny after the meltdown of the Iowa Democratic caucuses on Monday was founded little more than a year ago by veterans of Hillary Clinton’s failed 2016 presidential campaign who had presented themselves as gurus of campaigning in the digital era.

Shadow Inc. was picked in secret by the Iowa Democratic Party after its leaders consulted with the Democratic National Committee...

Just who works at Shadow was not clear on the company’s webpage Tuesday. But resumes posted on the online business networking site LinkedIn show the company’s top executives all worked in the Clinton campaign’s digital operation in 2016.
Who would have thought Bernie Sanders fans wouldn’t be suspicious enough of people seeking profits? Since the app disaster some Sandernistas have been busy online venting suspicions of some kind of conspiracy to rig the caucus results. A more likely explanation is that the Clinton crowd was simply trying to suck revenue out of state Democratic organizations like Iowa’s.

The for-profit firm Shadow run by former Clinton hacks might not even exist without help from a firm called Acronym, which is organized as a non-profit under the tax laws.

At the intersection of money and Democratic politics, it turns out to be a very small world. James Hohmann reported in the Washington Post in 2018:

Tara McGowan, who runs Acronym, oversaw a $42 million digital program in 2016 for Priorities USA, the primary super PAC for Hillary Clinton.

A Tuesday New York Times report from Matthew Rosenberg, Nick Corasaniti, Sheera Frenkel and Nicole Perlroth revealed how crucial Acronym’s support was to the “success” of the tech venture:

Acronym... quietly invested millions of dollars in a nearly bankrupt company called Groundbase, a tech firm that renamed itself Shadow soon after... its main technology, a texting platform designed for campaigns, failed to catch on as users complained that it was slow and cumbersome.

The failure left the firm perilously underfunded, and it was close to shutting down when Acronym stepped in with an infusion of cash... The new money brought new projects...

There were also new clients. According to the most recent campaign filing reports, Shadow earned roughly $150,000 last year working for the Nevada and Wisconsin state Democratic parties and three presidential campaigns — those of former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., Pete Buttigieg, former mayor of South Bend, Ind., and Senator Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, who dropped out of the race in August.

As for the app at the heart of the Iowa debacle, the Times reports:

Shadow was put into a race that engineers at the most well-resourced tech giants, like Google, said could not be won. There was simply not enough time to build the app, test it widely to work out major bugs and then train its users.

Shadow was also handicapped by its own lack of coding know-how, according to people familiar with the company. Few of its employees had worked on major tech projects, and many of its engineers were relatively inexperienced.

How inexperienced was the Shadow workforce? Emily Glazer, Deepa Seetharaman and Alexa Corse report in the Journal:

One of its workers recently was a prep cook for Starbucks. Another was a teacher.

So how on earth did this firm get hired? It seems that the Shadow crew wasn’t going to impress anyone with its technology chops. The Journal reports:

... over the past year, Acronym and its founder Tara McGowan made introductions that allowed Shadow to secure some contracts with state Democratic parties and presidential campaigns, according to people familiar with the matter.
In a Nov. 21 private email to donors and friends, Ms. McGowan described Shadow as “a political technology company owned by Acronym.” She said Shadow had a “trial contract” with the Democratic National Committee and would make its flagship product, Lightrail, available to all the state parties and all the presidential candidates, according to the email that was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

But there was just one little recurring problem with this tech company—its tech. The Journal reports:

Over the past year, Shadow pitched products including a texting app and a data integration tool, but got a mixed reception. Several people who saw the presentations or were briefed on them said the technology wasn’t impressive and didn’t stand out among the crowd of vendors. Others were sharply critical.

Democrats may or may not succeed in defeating Donald Trump this November. But regardless of the election outcome, at least a few of them are sure to be winners.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18215
    • View Profile
Politics. Democrats and the CoronaVirus
« Reply #1355 on: March 02, 2020, 06:54:19 AM »
NYT columnist Gail Collins called it the Trump Virus.  Other pundits say it is the Democrats' big opportunity to get Trump.  But does a closer look at the timeline and what everyone was doing at the time favor the Democrats?

What were Democrats doing in early when China was covering up the outbreak of the virus?

It was on all the channels.  They were intentionally tying the hands of Washington and the Trump Administration with the impeachment hearings, vote and trial that everyone knew from the start was going nowhere.

Is that what we call governing competence?  While Trump organized a task force and quickly ordered travel bans and quarantines.  A closer look does not favor Democrats.  They think the office of President is meaningless if they don't hold it.

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: Politics. Democrats and the CoronaVirus
« Reply #1356 on: March 02, 2020, 08:41:55 AM »
Fight the coronavirus through open borders and free healthcare for all!



NYT columnist Gail Collins called it the Trump Virus.  Other pundits say it is the Democrats' big opportunity to get Trump.  But does a closer look at the timeline and what everyone was doing at the time favor the Democrats?

What were Democrats doing in early when China was covering up the outbreak of the virus?

It was on all the channels.  They were intentionally tying the hands of Washington and the Trump Administration with the impeachment hearings, vote and trial that everyone knew from the start was going nowhere.

Is that what we call governing competence?  While Trump organized a task force and quickly ordered travel bans and quarantines.  A closer look does not favor Democrats.  They think the office of President is meaningless if they don't hold it.

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18477
    • View Profile
female analogy of Carlos Danger?
« Reply #1357 on: March 03, 2020, 04:56:51 AM »

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile
Rahm Emanuel
« Reply #1358 on: March 13, 2020, 10:32:05 AM »
Democratic Voters Smash Media Myths
Journalists need to start explaining the world as it is—not as it appears to them on Twitter.
By Rahm Emanuel
March 12, 2020 12:48 pm ET

In Washington, few lines are as hackneyed as Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s aphorism that “everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts.” That’s true, but it’s also true that pundits can sometimes twist a few “facts” into a false narrative. Consider three widely accepted misconceptions about the Democratic Party—each of them debunked by the outcome of the primaries to date.

First, those who see the party as a collection of self-interested identity groups get it wrong. Many assume that female candidates had a distinct advantage with female voters, African-American candidates with African-American voters, Hispanic candidates with Hispanic voters, etc. But neither Cory Booker nor Kamala Harris had a line on African-American Democrats. Julián Castro failed to dominate within the Hispanic community. Maybe most remarkable, Elizabeth Warren didn’t win female voters even in Massachusetts.

Joe Biden Takes a Commanding Primary Lead


SUBSCRIBE
Let that be a lesson to everyone pontificating about who our nominee should pick as his running mate to “balance” the ticket. I know plenty of female voters who, while caring about day care and early childhood education, also worry about America’s forever wars and climate change. In the same way, Hispanic voters don’t necessarily believe new arrivals should immediately get free health care. And as the African-American community’s support for Joe Biden reveals, not all African-American voters rule out leaders who have a history of being “tough on crime.”

Among Democrats, demographics are not destiny—they are informative, not determinative. As Sen. John F. Kennedy said nearly 60 years ago, “I am not the Catholic candidate for president. I am the Democratic Party’s candidate for president, who happens also to be a Catholic.”

Second, it’s time to reset the media’s obsession with money in politics. I got my start as a fundraiser, so I’m well aware that candidates need a certain level of support to mount a successful campaign. Moreover, I’ve been horrified to see excessive sums of corporate money pour into the process since the Supreme Court wrongly decided Citizens United.

But the conventional wisdom about money’s role in American politics is overblown. The two billionaires in the race fell flat. Their ability to self-fund became a political liability. Maybe even more remarkable, the candidates whose campaigns were fueled by armies of small donors didn’t do much better. In Democratic politics, biography, ideas, character, message and organization all bear more heavily on a candidate’s fortunes.

Third, it’s time to retire the absurd notion that the Democratic Party is beating a path toward Scandinavian-style socialism. For reasons that escape me, the media has come to presume that one’s reach on Twitter correlates with one’s influence in the corridors of power and hold on the progressive electorate writ large. Gazing at social media is no way to gauge the opinions of Democrats. When it comes to politics, Twitter is a funhouse mirror.

That has broader implications. The results over the past two weeks prove that many reporters and pundits pay too much attention to a select few members of the Democratic Caucus and too little to the elected officials who actually established our House majority. For every journalistic inquiry to a young representative who ran against another Democrat, reporters should seek out a Democrat who flipped a Republican seat—members such as Lucy McBath of Georgia, Elissa Slotkin of Michigan and Lauren Underwood of Illinois. If you want to gauge how the party has evolved on the challenges of the day—health care, climate change, social justice—ask one of them.

That leads to the most important misconception. While the Republicans have abandoned the center right for the crazy angry populism epitomized by President Trump, the last two weeks have proven that the Democrats are still a center-left party, not a far-left party. That’s been true for cycle after cycle, but much of the media simply isn’t able to differentiate what matters from what doesn’t. Our Revolution, the group born out of Sen. Bernie Sanders’s failed 2016 campaign, didn’t flip a single seat in the fight to give Nancy Pelosi a House majority in 2018—not one. Why? Because only half of their political analysis is right.

Mr. Sanders’s general theory was that Democrats needed to turn out a lot of additional young voters. While he was right to note that our fate depended on turnout, we needed more than the young. To the far-left’s shock, the Democratic base isn’t on college campuses. While the surge of young voters the Sanders campaign predicted never materialized, we’ve seen an explosion in suburban turnout. The party’s core is in a coalition of urban and suburban areas we should call the Metropolitan Majority. Democrats’ long-term success hinges on our listening to these voters and turning them out year after year. Pundits whose job is to explain the political sphere need to shake preconceived ideas about the youth vote and what comprises the Democratic Party.

Here’s the problem. The media’s obsession with identity politics, the role of money, and the views of politicians who flourish on Twitter prevents citizens from getting a full picture of what’s going on at the heart of the campaign. If voters are going to regain trust in the world of journalism, journalists need to start explaining the world as it is—not as it appears on an app.

This year’s Democratic primaries remind us that beyond the fourth estate’s role explaining politics to ordinary citizens, pundits need to take a moment for self-reflection, and ask: What did I think I knew at the beginning of this campaign—and what have I learned?

Mr. Emanuel was a senior adviser to President Clinton and chief of staff to President Obama. He represented Illinois’s Fifth Congressional District, 2003-09, and served as mayor of Chicago, 2011-19. He is author of “The Nation City: Why Mayors Are Now Running the World,” published in February.


ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18477
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1360 on: March 14, 2020, 07:31:13 AM »
". https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8110423/Florida-Democrat-Andrew-Gillum-hotel-room-male-escort-overdosed.html "

so not only could he run and win for DC mayor in a heartbeat

he could win in San Francisco too.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile


ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18477
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1363 on: March 30, 2020, 02:09:01 PM »
cnn hashtag just now was FDA approves drug for use for corona

"despite little use of efficacy"

 A lot of Dems in the health care field   :wink:

yet same ones taking it themselves ........?

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile


DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18215
    • View Profile
Politics: Rose McGowan skewers Democrats for ignoring Tara Reade
« Reply #1367 on: May 01, 2020, 06:33:14 AM »
We have rarely needed a thread for when Democrats say or do something right.  President Obama authorized the Osama bin Laden kill.  Now one liberal celebrity puts principle ahead of party:
https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/rose-mcgowan-lashes-out-democrats-media

"This is about holding the media accountable,” McGowan tweeted. “You go after Trump & Kavanaugh saying Believe Victims, you are a lie. You have always been a lie. The corrupt DNC is in on the smear job of Tara Reade, so are you. SHAME."
----------------------
More of the shame is that it is Fox News who covers liberals who won't accept the double standard.  It took Fox News 3 weeks to get to it when no one else would.  If her message was, 'no problem Joe, we love you', the MSM would be all over it, like VP Amy falsely claiming the NYT cleared him.


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1369 on: May 19, 2020, 12:26:33 PM »

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18477
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1371 on: May 26, 2020, 03:55:04 PM »

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18477
    • View Profile
Crafty
« Reply #1372 on: June 03, 2020, 06:49:10 AM »
Just wondering

You posted you have poltiical discussions with liberals

Do you ever change their opinions?

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1373 on: June 03, 2020, 09:18:04 AM »
Yes.

Had a convo with my sister last night.  She lives in Chicago with her husband, and three boys (college and HS age).  Major PC liberal type.  They now prepare by being sure that their hose is ready to put out fire.  To that end they also bought a fire extinguisher. 

I went right there and reminded her of our previous conversations on guns and gun rights.  This time she was silent.

I then pointed out the spray from the fire extinguisher could be used to back up a pack of jackals.  She was grateful for the tip.


G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1374 on: June 03, 2020, 09:24:36 AM »
Yes.

Had a convo with my sister last night.  She lives in Chicago with her husband, and three boys (college and HS age).  Major PC liberal type.  They now prepare by being sure that their hose is ready to put out fire.  To that end they also bought a fire extinguisher. 

I went right there and reminded her of our previous conversations on guns and gun rights.  This time she was silent.

I then pointed out the spray from the fire extinguisher could be used to back up a pack of jackals.  She was grateful for the tip.

Enough to buy you a second to get to the guns you better have.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1375 on: June 03, 2020, 06:52:38 PM »
Love her dearly, but this is not likely-- at least however she acknowledges the merit of our POV.

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1376 on: June 03, 2020, 08:10:09 PM »
Love her dearly, but this is not likely-- at least however she acknowledges the merit of our POV.

In the upcoming collapse: When seconds count, the police are minutes hours days away Not fcuking coming.

Plan accordingly.

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18215
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1377 on: June 04, 2020, 03:58:44 AM »
Love her dearly, but this is not likely-- at least however she acknowledges the merit of our POV.

In the upcoming collapse: When seconds count, the police are minutes hours days away Not fcuking coming.

Plan accordingly.

Fire Dept not coming also. If they are coming for the police hq or the main P. O. they aren't coming for your place.

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18215
    • View Profile
Re: Politics of the current moment
« Reply #1378 on: June 15, 2020, 07:01:13 AM »
Karl Rove flashed these poll numbers on Fox News Sunday:

73% support the peaceful protests.

79% oppose the looting, arson, etc.

The candidate of Trump or Biden who threads that needle, wins, if this is the issue in November.
---------------------

On the first point, 100% should support peaceful protests, except for certain facts: a) most of the narrative the protests are protesting is false, and b) much of the peaceful protests are intrinsically intertwined with the rioting, looting and carnage.

On the second point, shouldn't it be nearly 100% opposed the looting?  21% means that roughly half of the Democrat-Left is so far pver the edge that they support the burning down of their own city and civilization in order to accomplish goals they cannot articulate.  I don't see anyone who is part of the sensible, persuadable center can find that message and those tactics appealing.
« Last Edit: June 15, 2020, 07:25:05 AM by DougMacG »

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18477
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1379 on: June 15, 2020, 07:22:45 AM »
"Trump or Biden who threads that needle"
neither can do it.



Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile
WSJ: The Berman affair-- yet another TDS fart
« Reply #1381 on: June 22, 2020, 02:59:05 AM »
The Berman Resistance
The grandstanding former U.S. Attorney is no political martyr.
By The Editorial Board
June 21, 2020 12:46 pm ET
SAVE
PRINT
TEXT
497

U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Geoffrey Berman in New York, Oct. 10, 2019
PHOTO: JUSTIN LANE/SHUTTERSTOCK
So here’s the plan. We need to remove a U.S. Attorney because he’s investigating associates of the President. Let’s wait until four months before the election, and let’s do it on a Friday night so it looks suspicious and the guy can refuse to step down and make himself a martyr to the Resistance. Yeah, that’ll fool everybody.

That’s what the media and Democrats want everyone to believe about President Trump’s weekend dismissal of U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman. It’s more accurate to say this looks like a fiasco of bungled execution by the Administration and self-indulgence by Mr. Berman that is being overplayed as an abuse of power. In other words, it’s your average Trump melodrama.

Trump, Dreamers And The Supreme Court


SUBSCRIBE
Mr. Berman has been U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York for more than two years under a judicial appointment but was never nominated or confirmed by the Senate. Mr. Trump has every right to fire Mr. Berman as an inferior officer in the executive branch. Attorney General Bill Barr was negotiating with Mr. Berman over a transfer to another senior job on Friday when the Justice Department issued a statement that Mr. Berman is “stepping down,” which is standard Justice Department language in these cases.

The White House said at about the same time that the President would nominate SEC Chairman Jay Clayton to replace Mr. Berman. The highly competent Mr. Clayton, a New Yorker, had planned to leave the Administration but said he’d stay for the U.S. Attorney job.

Mr. Berman then issued a grandstanding press release late Friday saying he wouldn’t go until a successor was nominated and confirmed by the Senate. Mr. Trump finally fired him on Saturday at Mr. Barr’s recommendation, and Mr. Barr said in a letter to Mr. Berman that his deputy, Audrey Strauss, will replace him until a successor is confirmed.

That should end this as a legal matter. Mr. Berman doesn’t have squatter’s rights to the job, and there is no violation of law or abuse of power here.

The political cost is a different story. The Washington Resistance to Mr. Trump is portraying this as an attempt to protect his political allies. Mr. Berman has prosecuted Mr. Trump’s former associates, including attorney Michael Cohen, and the hush-money payments to Stormy Daniels. He’s also said to be investigating Deutsche Bank’s business dealings with the Trump Organization before Mr. Trump was President.

But our Justice sources say Mr. Berman’s active investigations don’t involve Mr. Trump’s allies, except a minor one related to Trump adviser Rudy Giuliani. Replacing Mr. Berman with Mr. Clayton or anyone else won’t make investigations go away. The minute anyone moved to shut one of them down, the news would leak and career prosecutors would resign. Mr. Barr’s Saturday letter to Mr. Berman said he tasked Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz with examining any “improper interference” with current investigations. If this is a coverup, it’s the most inept in history.

The shame is that all of this wastes more of Mr. Barr’s political capital. The AG is trying to clean up the Justice Department after its 2016 campaign abuses, and U.S. Attorney John Durham is investigating what happened and why. But the media and the FBI and Justice officials who spied on Trump campaign officials, promoted the false Steele dossier, and lied to the FISA court are desperate to tarnish Mr. Barr before Mr. Durham reports. That’s what’s really behind all the outrage over what should be a routine replacement of a U.S. Attorney.

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18477
    • View Profile
in conjunction with the WSJ post above
« Reply #1382 on: June 22, 2020, 06:46:59 AM »
look at how the MSM twists all the facts and truth around to paint an anti trump picture:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/barr-standoff-prosecutor-adds-string-122550746.html

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18215
    • View Profile
Re: in conjunction with the WSJ post above
« Reply #1383 on: June 22, 2020, 07:35:27 AM »
look at how the MSM twists all the facts and truth around to paint an anti trump picture:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/barr-standoff-prosecutor-adds-string-122550746.html


This is why all other elected Republicans act so timidly.  Every action turns into a fiercely negative news story.  Even the basic fact that in these positions, like John Bolton, you serve at the pleasure of the President.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile
WSJ: Bolton & Venezuela
« Reply #1384 on: June 22, 2020, 04:10:56 PM »
Bolton’s Warmed-Over Venezuelan Dish
The elephant in ‘The Room Where It Happened’ is an intelligence failure.

By Mary Anastasia O’Grady
Updated June 21, 2020 10:42 pm ET
SAVE
PRINT
TEXT
149

National security adviser John Bolton speaks in Lima, Peru, Aug. 6, 2019.
PHOTO: HO/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
During John Bolton’s 17 months as White House national security adviser, he headed a U.S. policy aimed at removing Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro and restoring that country’s democracy. A chapter in his new memoir, “The Room Where It Happened,” is his version of what went wrong.

The book isn’t the “tell-all” it’s cracked up to be. The U.S. policy crackup in Venezuela is more than anything else a colossal intelligence failure. Either because he doesn’t understand that reality or, more likely, because writing about U.S. intel capabilities would have landed Mr. Bolton in legal trouble, he doesn’t go there.

Trump, Dreamers And The Supreme Court


SUBSCRIBE
Instead he trains his firepower on the lack of coordination of the interagency process and lays the blame on President Trump. The breakdown in intel is there—but you have to read between the lines to find it.

The president claims he fired Mr. Bolton in September 2019. Mr. Bolton says he quit. In either case they parted on bad terms and now Mr. Bolton is getting even. The 39 pages of his book devoted to Venezuela include juicy tidbits from private conversations and closed-door meetings that many argue he was honor-bound to withhold from the public at least until after Mr. Trump’s time in office.

Trump critics will delight in these vignettes, as they support charges that the president is an erratic decision maker with a short attention span and weird fixations. Mr. Maduro can be expected to make hay out of claims that Mr. Trump has been privately critical of interim Venezuelan President Juan Guaidó, at one point referring to him as “the Beto O’Rourke of Venezuela.”

The Venezuela mess predates the Trump presidency. President Obama was clueless about the threats that the military dictatorship in Caracas and its handlers in Havana pose to the region, and his policies weakened the democratic opposition by strengthening U.S. ties to the Castro regime. John Kerry, Mr. Obama’s secretary of state, even declared the end of the Monroe Doctrine. Mr. Bolton thinks his Venezuela policy failed because Mr. Trump wasn’t sufficiently committed to its success.

In January 2019 Venezuelans cheered when Mr. Guaidó, then-president of the National Assembly, made a constitutional claim on the presidency. “The revolution was on,” Mr. Bolton writes. He ordered his staff to issue a statement in support of the new government while Mr. Maduro refused to step aside.

The U.S. recognized Mr. Guaidó, and Mr. Bolton argued that Washington should move fast with biting sanctions on the Maduro regime. For that he needed leadership from Treasury and the State Department, and he says he got none.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin takes the sharpest criticism from Mr. Bolton, who says that Treasury resisted oil sanctions and financial sanctions every step of the way. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross explained to Mr. Bolton that Mr. Mnuchin was “more worried about secondary effects on U.S. companies than about the mission.”

The State Department wasn’t much help. In answer to Mr. Mnuchin’s objections to the oil sanctions, Secretary Mike Pompeo suggested that they be done “in slices,” a far cry from the shock and awe Mr. Bolton wanted.

Mr. Pompeo didn’t have a handle on the bureaucracy below him either. State’s Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs went into “open revolt against petroleum sanctions” on the grounds that they would “endanger embassy personnel.” Mr. Bolton writes that Mr. Pompeo one day called him, “uncertain about what to do about the bureaucracy’s resistance.”

Mr. Pompeo eventually went along with the oil sanctions, but Mr. Bolton worried that State personnel were simultaneously undermining coalition-building efforts in the region. Later, when Mr. Bolton announced in a meeting a plan to broaden and deepen the sanctions, Energy Secretary Rick Perry, National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow, Commerce’s Mr. Ross and Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen backed him. “Mnuchin was resistant” and “Pompeo was largely silent.”

“Disarray” at the State Department and “Treasury footdragging” were harmful to the sanctions cause, Mr. Bolton writes, insisting that “time lost in internal debate was equivalent to throwing Maduro a lifeline.”

Yet the elephant in the room—where it happened—is the glaring absence of human intelligence on the ground. Mr. Pompeo’s decision to close “Embassy Caracas and withdraw all U.S. personnel” because he feared “another Benghazi” was a devastating miscalculation. In particular, when Mr. Guaidó launched an effort to unseat Mr. Maduro on April 30, 2019, the U.S. was flying blind.

Mr. Bolton’s tactical maneuvers failed, but probably not for the reasons he gives. The U.S. is in a proxy war with Russia, Iran, China and Cuba in Venezuela, and Washington fails to assess adequately its enemies’ effectiveness in the areas of intelligence, propaganda and strategy. Mr. Bolton’s narrative takes revenge but does nothing to advance U.S. interests.

Write to O’Grady@wsj.com.


DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18215
    • View Profile
Politics, South Korea calls Bolton a Liar
« Reply #1385 on: June 23, 2020, 06:40:56 AM »
In Venezuela, "The book isn’t the “tell-all” it’s cracked up to be." - WSJ, previous post.
--------------------------
In South Korea:
"South Korea slams Bolton book as 'distorting the reality' of nuclear talks"

"inaccurate", "distorting the reality"

“It does not reflect accurate facts and substantially distorts facts,” South Korea’s national security adviser, said in a statement, according to Reuters.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-usa-southkorea/south-korea-says-boltons-memoir-on-trump-kim-summit-is-distorted-idUSKBN23T0F2

https://thehill.com/policy/international/asia-pacific/504016-south-korea-slams-bolton-book-as-distorting-the-reality-of

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/south-korea-says-boltons-claims-on-trump-kim-summit-distorted/2020/06/22/f074d1d2-b44b-11ea-9a1d-d3db1cbe07ce_story.html
---------------------------------------

Making Trump's case for him.  It seems this storm has passed before the book release even happens.

The only bombshell seems to be that a former darling of the hawk-right is willing to say to liberal media that Trump is unfit to be President.  That is opinion in the interest of selling a book rather than facts that the book is touting and the critics are craving.

Bolton's foreign policy clashed with Trump.  Bolton did not get his way with Korea or with Venezuela, or anywhere else.  But America prefers Trump foreign policy to Bolton's.  Trump liked the perception with enemies of being a loose cannon with hawks all around him ready to attack and invade, but Trump does NOT want to be a war President and America does not US war right now in Venezuela, North Korea, Syria, Iran, China or anywhere else.

Question remains for Bolton:  America can have Trump or continue its march to the Left.  Choose one.  It isn't 17 Republicans running anymore.  No one is saying Trump is a perfect man or perfect leader but his foreign policy has been largely a success. 

This is an election year and the choice is binary.  March on toward Antifa-ruled, escalating Democratic violent socialism with a guy who sent planeloads of US$ to enemy mullahs for weapons to kill Americans, or give the guy who kept us safe and grew the economy twice as fast as his predecessor four more years. 

The Atlantic wrote June 16, "Despise Bolton, but Read His Book Anyway"
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/06/despise-bolton-read-his-book-anyway/613075/
If they made the correction it might say, 'Despise Bolton, and know his account of events is not accurate or reliable'.

The last unabashed hawk to run, McCain, lost where Trump won in OH, FL, PA, WI, MI, IA, IN, NC and more.  Peace through strength does not mean invade. 
« Last Edit: June 23, 2020, 06:52:39 AM by DougMacG »

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18477
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1386 on: June 23, 2020, 08:40:17 AM »
I don't know what to make of a guy
who was making money at Fox

and was lobbying for a Trump admin. job
then gets one
and takes supposedly very detailed notes all day long

(obviously to be able to write. book)
and then when does not see eye to eye with the Pres. comes out and joins the chorus and the LEFT to fight the administration that gave him a job in the first place and influence and election

Truthfully there is not really much we don't already know about Trump anyway is there?

Bolton is saying Biden would be better  I guess.  I just don't see how that works.  Biden/obama  has to be even more of a dove against Bolton's historically hawkish views.



DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18215
    • View Profile
Re: Politics, Translating Leftist spin for women
« Reply #1387 on: June 26, 2020, 04:11:00 PM »
Women see political things differently than men and tend to be more liberal. 

Here's a tip on explaining the Leftist protests to women:  When you hear mainstream media describe "mostly peaceful protests", think of mostly faithful husbands.
« Last Edit: June 26, 2020, 05:00:26 PM by DougMacG »

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: Politics, Translating Leftist spin for women
« Reply #1388 on: June 26, 2020, 04:45:11 PM »
Women see political things differently than men and tend to be more liberal. 

Here's a tip on explaining the Leftist protests to women:  When you hear mainstream media describe "mostly peaceful protests", think of a mostly faithful husbands.

Heh! Well done.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1389 on: June 28, 2020, 06:51:20 PM »
I will be playing that forward!!!

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18215
    • View Profile
Re: Politics. Look who likes the Second Amendment now: Blacks
« Reply #1391 on: July 23, 2020, 08:54:58 AM »
https://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/jeff-reynolds/2020/07/22/gun-sales-spike-in-2020-driven-by-new-purchases-by-black-men-and-women-n671630

Doesn't pro-second-amendment also mean leaning Republican?

School choice and safe neighborhoods.  Who knew 'people of color' wanted that?

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18215
    • View Profile
Polls and political choices
« Reply #1392 on: July 24, 2020, 06:48:31 AM »
I get it as much as anyone, the polls are wrong in structure and mid July is pre-season.  That said:

Biden leads nationwide, including all swing states, including latest Fox polls in Mich, Penn, Minn.  He leads without coming out of his basement.  Democrats currently lead to flip the Senate, picking up all the so-called tossups.  Dems have a huge lead in money to defend their majority in the House.  That fact is not skewed by the pollsters.

Why shouldn't they be leading?  They control the message in nearly every venue.  Theyu wrote the political language.  They raised the children who grew up to be new voters.

What the polls say now is not what I predict will happen in Nov.  Rasmussen shows the double digit Biden lead shrunk to 3 points, still pre-game.

Democrats are closing the political gap in Texas, as they did in California, Colorado, Nevada, Arizona.  When they overtake Texas, what is left of the electoral college for conservatives?

For decades I have argued that our side needs to push the real issues throughout the 4 year cycle, before election time when the focus is all on flawed people, issues and policies.

Every school day and every news day and in every level of government down to the Library Board, every network and every social platform, Liberals and Leftists organize and march forward with their agenda, while conservatives and libertarians keep their mouths shut and quietly live their lives, accepting defeat.

Now here we go again, stuck hoping people will wake up to lies and mis-information without putting out a competing message, hoping people won't really vote the way they answered the poll takers.

In a Republican year, the 'mainstream' polls turn out to be wrong.  In a Democrat year, the polls turn out to be right.  This is apparently not a Republican year.  It will take more than a little luck for Republicans to eek out a win in the White House and/or in the Senate.  They can't take back the House if they can't put out a strong message nationally and in the individual districts.  What is the message?  I don't even know.  One idea below.

Best case: we get divided government.  Ugh.  Worst case: we go the way of Hugo Chavez and Venezuela except for the difference that elected Marxism in that small country did not bring down the rest of the world with it.  The demise of the US, if we let it happen, will take down the world.  No exaggeration.
-----------------------------

What is the message?  Economic freedom, not statism, is what lifts people out of poverty and into prosperity.  This country still needs to lift millions more out of poverty and needs to lift the entire center of the country into greater prosperity.  Per JFK, we need the rising tide.  We need economic growth and greater prosperity to pay for our escalating healthcare needs.  We need greater prosperity to make the transition to cleaner energy, better food, better transportation, better homes, better education, better retirements, better public health and pandemic readiness - for the next time around.  We aren't there yet.  We need economic growth and greater prosperity to balance our budget, service our debt and normalize our monetary policy.  Sitting still on what we have will not keep us where we are.  The end of growth and the killing of the growth engine, as was done in other places, will bring economic collapse like no one has ever seen.

Look at the Heritage Index of Economic Freedom and list of countries ranked where the United States has fallen to a humble 17th place:
https://www.heritage.org/index/ranking

The more economic freedom a country has, the cleaner and healthier and more peaceful it is.  It's hard to find exceptions to that rule.  There are no poor countries at the top of the economic freedom list and no rich countries at the bottom.  Economic freedom brings prosperity and prosperity is what a clean earth and healthy people require.  No one, not even the Left, argue that poor people have it better.  Yet they want you to be poorer.

Prosperous countries can afford better safety nets for those truly in need. But 'redistribution' cannot become the main industry.  Redistribution alone produces nothing.

Look at which policies favor economic growth and which candidates and parties favor those policies.  Choose growth and prosperity over decline and collapse. Why is that so hard?

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18477
    • View Profile
for this for decades - since Reagan . 

"every school day and every news day and in every level of government down to the Library Board, every network and every social platform, Liberals and Leftists organize and march forward with their agenda"

we only have influence in  a small fraction of the media
we can scream as loud as we want on our few outlets
the Democrats are in bed with the teachers unions (and the majority of teachers - who like most government workers are Democrats)
the universities are loading up on foreign born minorities and the gays and other woke tribes who are all brainwashed , not with freedom for all, but identity politics

"What is the message?  Economic freedom, not statism, is what lifts people out of poverty and into prosperity. "

unfortunately , Trump , even if he speaks the speak talks the talk , he has along with the Leftists made this all about hiim.
because in his mind it is all about his personal scorecard

frankly I am a total pessimist
   these  people will have to learn the hard way - one day they will really wake up and we will be Venezuela and at least some of them
   will think - what have I wrought.  others like AOC will simply vie to be the inside people who will control the rest of us.
   I just don't see anyway out.

Republicans tried to unify around Trump but he is not the spokes person we thought he might become ( or at least me)
   because every time he speaks half the country only seethes with anger at anything he says.  They don't listen to his words they see HIM.

Addendum :

of course it is not Trumps fault - as there was no one else really

can anyone imagine if we had Romney or McCain or Jeb
they don't fight at all - just play nice and pretend to be gentlemen while we keep getting smashed

Trump as far as I can tell was our best shot.
But his personality got in the way with the people who can vote either way who decide the elections etc.
as for the Left ALL Republicans are Nazis.

praying for miracle in NJ

Could someone like Hawley become our spokesperson - ?
   
   

« Last Edit: July 24, 2020, 08:05:19 AM by ccp »

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18215
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1394 on: July 24, 2020, 09:13:48 AM »
"Trump , even if he speaks the speak talks the talk , he has along with the Leftists made this all about hiim.
because in his mind it is all about his personal scorecard"



But his personal scorecard requires him to win reelection.  Winning reelection requires him to have a winning message.  The winning message necessarily includes something along the lines I wrote, growth and prosperity for those who need it which is everyone except the very richest already.  He MUST define winning as nationalizing the whole ballot and sweeping the House and Senate too.

His impeachment came from the Democrat House.  His second impeachment will come from a Democrat House.  All that BS with Nancy Pelosi came from the Democrat majority House.  All of what he needs to do but hasn't yet done comes through the House, which means none of it happens in a Democrat House.  Lose the Senate and he is done with judges, perhaps his biggest legacy to date. 

Seeing it as all about him means making it about all of this.  Anything short of full political victory this year will make the legacy of Trump - what ended under him, not the world peace and economic revival that he started.

He has one more at bat and this is it.
« Last Edit: July 24, 2020, 09:55:17 AM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69338
    • View Profile

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18215
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1396 on: August 13, 2020, 08:29:52 AM »
One more point from the 2020 MN primary this Tuesday.  It would seem that far more Democrats than Republicans voted.  Understandable in Minneapolis where the divisive Omar turned out the vote for and against.  But this also happened in my formerly conservative state representative race.  The one term, unopposed Dem state rep got many more votes than the combined vote of the republican challengers contested race.   Ugh.

I don't have a plan for being governed by the Marxist anarchists.  We seem to have no plan, no focus, no message to counter them except to hope that people suddenly see light on their own. 

Our message seems limited to sharing the unencumbered Left in their own words:
https://twitter.com/ForAmerica/status/1293247869793771521
« Last Edit: August 13, 2020, 08:51:32 AM by DougMacG »

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18477
    • View Profile
Re: Politics
« Reply #1397 on: August 13, 2020, 09:15:29 AM »
" It would seem that far more Democrats than Republicans voted "

I have a close relative
who is Republican
worked in local politics a bit
as volunteer

but she absolutely detests Trump and so far has refused to vote for him
she agrees Biden is worse but when I explain forget Trump the man and go with what is best for our country she will not vote for him
she did not vote in 2016 and will do same this time.

she. is not so crazy as to help democrats like the bush never trumpers etc
but she will just sit it out ;  "they [Trump and Biden] are both unqualified"

Trump did great damage to himself with his impulsiveness and off the charts narcissm

as we all know ad nauseum

i don't see him winning

the idea my relative would waste a good vote while the likes of Biden and harris would take control of the country makes no sense to me.
but this election is very much an emotional one for many

I need to ask her if she will at least vote for every other Republican up for election this November

 :-o

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18477
    • View Profile
The Left always declare the "center "
« Reply #1398 on: August 13, 2020, 02:36:37 PM »
Simply well stated:

"Why isn’t his agenda ever framed that way? Well, because the “center” of American politics will always be wherever the Democratic Party’s nominees happen to stand."

https://www.nationalreview.com/2020/08/kamala-harris-imaginary-centrist/


DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18215
    • View Profile
Caroline Glick: Omar, Harris pick and Dem party March Leftward
« Reply #1399 on: August 16, 2020, 10:40:48 AM »
https://www.israelhayom.com/2020/08/14/harris-omar-and-the-partys-great-march-leftward/

Harris, Omar and the party’s great march leftward
Joe Biden’s decision to name Sen. Kamala Harris as his running mate has to do with only one thing: Identity politics.
 
(August 16, 2020 / JNS) Last Tuesday, two notable events occurred in the Democratic Party. Joe Biden announced that he had selected California Senator Kamala Harris to serve as his running mate in November; and Rep. Ilhan Omar won her primary, all but guaranteeing her return to Congress for a second term.

On the face of things, Harris’s selection seems like the more significant of the two events. But actually, Omar’s primary victory was far more momentous.

 
Traditionally, presidential candidates have selected their running mates based on electoral considerations. For instance, in 2016, then-Indiana governor Mike Pence was an easy choice for Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump for two reasons that had everything to do with electoral calculations.

Indiana, like neighboring Wisconsin and Michigan, is a swing state. As a vice-presidential candidate, Pence was well positioned to sell swing voters in those states on the Trump-Pence ticket. Moreover, as a devout evangelical Christian, Pence was able to assist Trump in securing the support of that critical Republican demographic.

Subscribe to The JNS Daily Syndicate by email and never miss our top stories
Your email
Unlike Pence, Harris hails from California, a progressive, deep-blue state. As a progressive, wealthy native of northern California, Harris has little ability to mobilize supporters in places like Detroit or Pittsburgh. Moreover, Harris has not distinguished herself as a great vote-getter. Last year, when Harris entered the Democratic presidential primaries, she enjoyed enthusiastic support from the media and deep-pocketed progressive donors. But despite these advantages, she failed to win over significant support for her campaign even in her native state. Her campaign fizzled out very quickly.

While the progressive media refers to Harris as a “moderate,” since her election to the Senate in 2016 Harris has racked up one of the most radical voting records in the upper house. She supports revoking all limitations on abortions. She supports harsh limitations on the right to bear arms. She supports banning oil fracking and ending energy exploration on federal lands.

While popular with the Democrat base in California and other deep-blue states, Harris’ extreme positions render her incapable of winning votes in places like Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan. Indeed, she is likely to be more of a drain than an asset to Biden’s bid to win over these critical states.

So why did Biden choose her for his running mate?

In two words: Identity politics.

While progressives are more likely to be atheists than conservatives, they are religiously political. And one of the things they sanctify is identity politics. Recognizing this, Biden chose Harris not because of the votes she can bring, but for the support she can garner from the Democratic base. In other words, Biden chose her because she is a woman rather than a man and because as the daughter of a father who immigrated to America from Jamaica and a mother who immigrated from India, Harris is not white.

Biden himself doesn’t sanctify identity politics. On the contrary—some of Biden’s statements on the campaign trail have been arguably racist. In the past week alone, Biden committed two racial gaffes. He asked a black journalist if he was a junkie and he said that “with notable exceptions” all black people think the same way.

Biden is probably not a racist and he certainly isn’t an ideologue. The only thing that Biden is most assuredly is a weather vane. For more than 40 years Biden has consistently adapted his “convictions” to the prevailing winds in his party. When the party was opposed to abortion, Biden was an anti-abortion Catholic. Now that his party supports unlimited abortion on demand, Biden does too.

Back in the day, Biden opposed illegal immigration. Now that the Democrat Party has embraced open borders, Biden supports giving illegal immigrants free healthcare and schooling.

Harris is cut from the same cloth. Her “evolving” views on Israel demonstrate this clearly. Harris was considered the most “pro-Israel” candidate among the women Biden was considering selecting as his running mate. Her pro-Israel credentials derived mainly from the fact that she did not speak at the anti-Israel lobby J Street’s annual conference and that she agreed to address AIPAC’s policy conference in 2017.

But as the Democrat Party openly adopted an increasingly anti-Israel position over the intervening years, Harris reduced her support. In 2018, as the midterm election raised the profiles of radical Israel-hating candidates, Harris only agreed to speak at the AIPAC conference on the condition that her remarks not be made public.

Along with all the other Democrat presidential hopefuls last year save for Mike Bloomberg, Harris refused to speak at the AIPAC conference on any terms.

Not only has Harris refused to condemn Reps. Omar and Tlaib for their repeated anti-Semitic statements. Harris warned the Jewish community against protesting Omar’s anti-Semitism, saying that “the spotlight being put on Congresswoman Omar may put her at risk.”

The fact that Omar’s unbridled anti-Semitism was putting American Jews at risk apparently made no impression on Harris.

Like Biden and the rest of her party, Harris supports renewing Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran, which will put nuclear weapons and billions of dollars in the hands of Iran’s genocidal ayatollahs. Harris doesn’t support the BDS movement but she opposed a senate bill that would have harmed the campaign to boycott the Jewish state and discriminate against American Jews.

As California’s attorney general from 2011-2017, Harris received numerous requests to take action against California’s public universities for having allowed their campuses to become hostile environments for Jewish students. Harris ignored their entreaties.

On the other hand, her husband is Jewish.

The slavish devotion that both Biden and Harris have demonstrated to their party’s grassroots is a dangerous omen for Jewish Americans because the organizations that comprise a large part of those grassroots are openly anti-Semitic.

For instance, on Tuesday more than a hundred progressive groups signed a letter calling on the “progressive community” to boycott the Anti-Defamation League. Among the various reasons they gave for their boycott call was the ADL’s criticism of Black Lives Matter for its anti-Semitic charter. The BLM charter accuses Israel of committing “genocide” against the Palestinians and refers to the Middle East’s only liberal democracy as an “apartheid” state.

The charter endorses the anti-Semitic BDS movement and firmly places the self-declared black civil rights movement in the camp of the virulent anti-Semites who reject the Jewish state’s very right to exist.

Other crimes the progressive groups accused the ADL of committing included criticizing Omar for her anti-Semitism and opposing the BDS campaign against Israel and American Jews.

The progressive groups’ sudden denouncement of the ADL is as ironic as it is foreboding. In recent years the American Jewish community’s best-funded organization dedicated to fighting anti-Semitism received significant criticism for its unwillingness to seriously confront anti-Semitism emanating from the political left and its exaggeration of the threat that far-right anti-Semitism poses to Jewish life in America.

Under the leadership of Obama White House alumni Jonathan Greenblatt, in recent years the ADL has tried to reinvent itself as a progressive group that focuses mainly on criticizing the other side of the political divide.

The ADL’s fervent efforts to ingratiate itself among progressives places in stark relief the “Open Letter to the Progressive Community” signed by more than a hundred groups calling to ostracize it. It shows that today’s Democrat party is unwilling to accept Jews or politicians who are both progressive and pro-Jewish.

This brings us to Omar’s primary victory. It wasn’t particularly surprising that Omar won the poll. Her national profile has made her a lightning rod in national politics. While as a bigot she is justifiably hated by many, leftist donors and activists adore her and back her as an anti-Semite.

While predictable, three aspects of her win are particularly significant. First, the main difference between Omar and the progressive black opponent she defeated is that unlike Omar, Antone Melton-Meaux isn’t an anti-Semite. Rather than drawing praise from progressives for his lack of bigotry, Melton-Meaux was decried by progressive activists who accused him of being controlled by Jews.

The second significant aspect of Omar’s win is that despite her open anti-Semitism, her reelection bid—and that of her anti-Semitic comrade Rashida Tlaib—was endorsed by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Pelosi even donated $14,000 to Omar’s campaign from her political PAC. Pelosi was long viewed as a friend to both American Jews and to Israel. The fact that she monetarily supported an out-and-out anti-Semite speaks volumes about the direction of the party.

The final significant aspect of Omar’s win is that it was a testament to the rapidly growing power of the radical left in the Democrat Party. Two years ago, four female radicals with harshly anti-Israel positions were elected as first-time lawmakers. The joined together, called themselves “The Squad” and proceeded to drain all the air out of the policy discourse in their party.

As the squad’s members rose in power and prestige, moderate Democrats insisted their voice was out of sync with their actual power. To be sure, the moderates argued, the likes of Omar and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have the loudest microphones, but they represent but a fraction of the party’s congressional delegation.

So far, Tlaib and Omar handily won their primaries and three new candidates with their same brand of radical, anti-Israel positions just won their primaries, replacing moderate lawmakers who either retired or were defeated. These victories point to two things. First, the squad has already nearly doubled its numbers in one congressional term, and two, they have become, without a doubt, the rising force—and with Pelosi’s backing, the dominant force in the Democrat Party.

In light of all of this, it is self-evident that Omar’s primary victory was far more significant than Biden’s selection of Harris as his running mate. Biden and Harris, weather vanes both, will not lead their party. They will follow their party’s grassroots and donors as they lead the Democrats every further along on their great march into the anti-Semitic leftist abyss.

Caroline Glick is an award-winning columnist and author of “The Israeli Solution: A One-State Plan for Peace in the Middle East.”