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PERRIN LOVETT

~ Deo Vindice

PERRIN LOVETT

Monthly Archives: November 2016

Fortunately, There’s Gab

16 Wednesday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

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First Amendment, free-speech, Gab, Second Amendment, Twitter

I was on and off Twitter pretty quick. There was just something about it I never got. The blog I totally control. Facebook … uh … I just knew a bunch of people. Twitter never made sense. Years later and I still get traffic here from there. Thank you to whoever Tweets my rambling madness. I am grateful.

My choice to leave Twitter was voluntary. Others, lately, haven’t had the option. Twitter has waged a war against members of the Alt-Right. They’ve been kicked off the platform in droves, victims of an SJW witch-hunt.

The useless Southern Poverty Communism Center is gloating.

The mass bans arrived in tandem with a new Twitter policy that prevents “hate against a race, religion, gender, or orientation”. In the world of permanently offended social justice warriors, “hate” is having a different opinion to them, while “harassment” is replying to their idiocy on Twitter.

The SPLC [SPCC], which is currently embroiled in an effort to force Trump to ditch Breitbart’s Stephen Bannon as his White House strategist, celebrated the news, tweeting “good riddance” in response to a user who tweeted, “Alt-right Twitter says Twitter has mounted a coordinated effort to wipe it out.”

I’m not on Twitter so I’m not sure what they could have said to get banned. I suspect it was nothing. Nothing except good, old-fashioned, Soviet thought policing. I’m not Alt-Right although I agree with a lot of what they say. The label applies to a wide-ranging group of groups so it’s a little hard to know what they stand for. Whatever it is, I support the free expression. It’s a shame others do not.

These stories got me thinking about my liberal friend’s Facebook wish: “I wish Republicans had the same unwavering, unconditional support for the First Amendment that they do for the Second.” Again, I’m 100% with that statement. I also wish that liberals had the same unwavering, unconditional support for free speech that they do for say … abortion.

They only see some speech as free, good, and acceptable. Speech like this:

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The Red & Black.

And this:

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ABC Tampa.

Good, healthy, progressive free speech. I actually support those who spout hate against my kind, at least as to the right to spout it (minus the vandalism of my highway). It makes me keep some spare mags handy but I support it.

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See, I can support the First and the Second at once. Then again, I’m not a Republican.

Anyway, all of this is moot now thanks to Gab. Gab is like Twitter but with free speech and no trolls. Come on over. Sooner than later I would suggest; Twitter is probably on life support. Banning your customers can do that. Once you get there you’ll love it. And you’ll soon out Gab me. I’m the social media version of a turtle with a laptop. And an AR. And a cigar.

And that’s what I’m Gabbin ’bout.

1,102 Reasons To Live Fit

16 Wednesday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

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exercise, fat, fitness, health, obesity

Crawling is taking off (slowly) as the new fitness craze. I can see this being big with trend-conscious soccer moms, tired of yoga. It seems a bit regressive and un-intense – literally crawling the floor like a toddler or an animal – for me. But, hey, if it works and you like it, do it.

I’m likely to stick with weights, boxing, and cigars. Others will surely run or walk on. For those looking for something new, crawl away. Whatever it is, do something. Anything. With 70% of the population overweight, obese, grossly obese, or about to expire obese, any little helps.

The 1,102 reasons? Where’d I get that number? That’s the weight of the world’s fattest man – 1,102 pounds. He’s Juan Pedro, a 32 year-old man from Mexico (which is almost as obese as America). Fortunately for him, he’s about to undergo some serious, life-saving treatment:

“He is probably only still alive due to his youth,” added the doctor who estimates that Mr Pedro will need at least six months of treatment to stabilise his body before gastric bypass surgery can be undertaken.

“It’s impossible for the human body to cope with the pathologies Juan Pedro suffers from over a prolonged period, but I think we are just in time,” Dr Castañeda said.

“This is no life; the worst sentence you can give a human being is to make a prison of his own body,” said Mr Pedro.

I say, good for Juan. I wish him nothing but the best. From the story it sounds like he suffers from serious medical issues. I really hope they are just in time to help him regain his life.

Most people, even the American obesity brigade, are not in that kind of bad shape. There is, however, room and need for improvement. If that means crawling, then so be it. Get yer crawl on!

Next Mirage 5 Miles

Cartoon Stock.

Fed Up With The Fed

16 Wednesday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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banksters, Donald Trump, economy, Federal Reserve

Rumors circulate that Janet Yellen’s days as chairman of the Federal Reserve cartel are numbered. Bloomberg and Narayana Kocherlakota ran an article yesterday about central bank uncertainty under the Trump administration. It’s worth noting that the author is an insider, being a former Fed branch president.

Research has documented that central banks around the world have been better able to control inflation if they enjoy independence from elected officials. The election of Donald Trump seems like a good time to remind ourselves that, historically, the executive branch has presented the greatest threat to the independence of the U.S. Federal Reserve.

Since its founding in 1913, the Fed has experienced two big failures of independence…

Failures of independence. Since 1913 the Fed has been a colossal and constant failure for us though a smashing success for itself and its owners. We’d be much better off without it.

One hopes Trump will dramatically shake things up. Short of abolishing the syndicate and driving its stakeholders into the sea, that might be the best that could happen. The worst case is another bout of interference with independence. Yes, that might mean some bad things. Different bad things, rather – different from the usual badness.

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Zero Hedge.

With all the potential for “bad” one wonders how on Earth we made it to 1913 without this system. That’s what I’m yellen ’bout.

Burn it down!

Protesting The Protesters

15 Tuesday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

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Chad Prather, college, snowflakes, students

Snowflakes continue to melt nationwide. A reconciliatory Thomas Jefferson quote at UVA has even caused outrage (among students and faculty). At UVA! Jefferson. Sadly, other snowflakes don’t even know what this means.

My old high school friend Chad Prather knows. Watch his video: Protesting the Protesters.

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Chad Prather / YouTube.

Chad is the host of It’s My Backyard on RideTV.

Classic.

snowflake-american

The Moderate Voice.

Breaking The Budget

15 Tuesday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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America, budget, Constitution, debt, Federal Reserve

Searching desperately for a post subject I stumbled across a great article by Gary North. The robots are coming for your jobs – maybe mine. There’s no stopping them short of a war. Several folks, Elon Musk included, have lately floated the idea that everyone may become unemployed and thus need welfare. North thinks that is implausible given the shape of the existing federal budget.

I’m going to leave the robots alone, minus the ones I come across all alone, somewhere remote, in the dead of the night. Instead I’m taking aim at the budget. I’ll use the same budget graph North used:

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Gary North / Wikipedia.

That’s $3,689,000,000 in federal spending. I’m not sure if that’s the current year; close enough by the numbers. And it’s not really a budget. Congress has yet to pass a real budget in nearly a decade. It’s just spending measure after spending measure. It works out to the same thing – tons of money wasted on any and everything.

Whatever else he may have been, president Obama is one hell of a tax collector. Last year the U.S. brought in a record $3,248,000,000 in tax revenues. One will note that even that impressive sum falls short of financing the spending. And that is why we have a debt problem. Previous years have seen much higher deficits. My plan would cure all of this.

Let’s examine the above graph staring around “6 o’clock” and working counter-clockwise. 24% or $882 Billion of the spending is for social security. Let’s go ahead and include “healthcare” in that too – Medicare and Medicaid. All of this equates to nearly $2 Trillion or roughly 50% of the “budget”. All of this is welfare and it is unconstitutional. Thus it may safely be abandoned. The budget is cut in half already.

Next there’s $223 Billion in debt interest payments. The debt will never be paid off and someday will be defaulted on. There’s no avoiding it. No reason to worry as the money never existed in the first place. Let’s go ahead and get through that now. Repudiate the debt and all the interest payments cease. While we’re at it, I’d abolish ALL debt – a jubilee of sorts – for everyone. I’d make new debt issuance a felony. I’d also run the central banksters and their friends out of town on a rail.

Next comes “other mandatory” spending. This is more welfare, most of it corporate and agricultural. None of it passes Constitutional muster and therefore is gone.

Next we have $583 Billion for “defense” spending. Almost all of this is for offense and graft. The Constitution provides for a navy and directing of the militias. That would hardly require a tenth of the current budget. We’ll say it’s cut down to $60 Billion. And that is until privateers and the States can fully take over. Of course, this means no more wars for profit but, remember, I’ve already run off the banksters.

Finally, there’s $585 Billion in discretionary spending. This is the stuff that can be cut by existing law, but isn’t. Likely three-quarters of this spending is for things not in the Constitution.

So it is that, if I had total budget powers, I could whittle the spending down to around $200 Billion per year. Such spending could easily be paid for with existing tariffs and excise taxes. Consequently, that’s how the government was supposed to be funded.

Originally, under the Articles, Congress had to beg the several States for funding. If a state objected, they just didn’t pay. Under the old Constitution, the tariffs covered the budget. Then along came the income tax and the Federal Reserve. Those, and the debt, I would kill. It would all work out wonderfully.You could keep all of your money and the money would be worth something.

Accordingly, this will not happen anytime soon. You can still thank me for the thought. I thank Gary North.

Finding Freedom: Two Causes, One Fight

14 Monday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Atlanta, cigars, corruption, Courts, due process, equal protection, Federalist Society, First Amendment, freedom, law, politics, Second Amendment

Still less than a week out from the general election I’m seeing a lot of ideological banter on social media. There’s a lot of comparing and contrasting. Much is in the form of memes though some is serious. For example, a left-leaning friend (a real, old friend) posted the following on Facebook:

“I wish Republicans had the same unwavering, unconditional support for the First Amendment that they do for the Second.”

I “liked” the post. I like the sentiment. I will not get into partisan politics as both sides and parties have a lot of catching up to do with liberty on those two and many other fronts. My wish is that everyone would get behind all of the freedoms set forth in the Bill of Rights, 100% and all the time. That would be half of making the Constitution worthwhile (again?). (The other half would be narrowly restricting the government to just those parameters delineated). Already I lose people, I know.

My buddy isn’t likely to get his wish anytime soon. I will likely never see mine come to fruition. I can handle it, being that I am after all a rebel to all ideology. But there is always hope. I am a staunch supporter of the First and Second Amendments (and all else recognizing rights of the free people). I don’t have a story to go with the proposition of the First and the Second together though. I do, however, have one directly related to the Second Amendment and application of Due Process and Equal Protection.

Journey back with me now …

The year was 2008. It was May, I think. Let’s say May of 2008. Yes. The Atlanta Chapter of the Federalist Society announced a lunch and learn seminar centered on the landmark 2A case, District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570 (2008)(the Supreme Court held the 2A protected individual rights to bear arms).

The case was, then, before the High Court, having just come out of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. The case, there, was known as Heller v. D.C. Litigants “hop the ‘V'” when they change courts to keep things interesting. The D.C. Circuit came to the same conclusion as the Supreme Court did later though, in my opinion, better, stronger, and less “qualified”. Judge Lawrence Silberman wrote the majority opinion.

Where was I? The Fed-Soc! This was the final Society function I attended (at least so far). And I only went because of the subject matter and the keynote speaker. Said speaker was none other than Judge Silberman.

I always hated legal seminars, even the ones about guns. I think Silberman said many nice and smart things. He’s a nice and smart man. The problem is that in those settings a haze descends over me. It’s all I can do to eat the lunch (not cheap in that case).

After the lunch there was a mix and mingle session. I remember looking out the windows. We were in the conference/gala room of some major law firm, on about the 50th floor of a mid-town high-rise. The view that day for terrific.

At some point I found myself in a small group with Silberman, a U.S. Attorney, some political hacks and a few bigwig attorneys. I thanked and praised the Judge for his work. There was a lot of nodding, smiles and those quips that only come from anti-government type conservatives who happen to make their living from the government. Then, as always happens, the Perrin came out. I said something like:

“I love my guns and I don’t support any gun controls at all, reasonable or not. But, whatcha gonna do? It’s the District of Corruption.”

Only Silberman (now a little nervous) broke the gawking silence, “Did you just say the District of Corruption?” I answered, “Yes. I did.”

I didn’t like even Antonin Scalia’s qualifications on the Second Amendment. And I wasn’t going to give any of my own about my statement. I excused myself so they could talk about me. I had other business downtown anyway.

About a mile south and a world away I had an appointment with the Southern Center For Human Rights. Whereas the Fed-Soc is arch-conservative and all that, the Southern Center is arch-liberal and all that. The scenery changes, I don’t. I was on a mission that day to fight for multiple rights. The venues were unimportant.

My business with the Center was this: various backwards Georgia counties allow(ed) for private probation companies to operate cases in State Courts. A very few did a good and reasonable job. The majority were as corrupt as the District. What one would expect from Georgia.

I had a lot of experience with two of those probation systems – one good, one bad. And I knew that the Center was investigating the bad one under cover. We had spoken on the phone but I wanted an in person meeting. It had nothing to do with the attractiveness of the young woman leading the investigation though that certainly did not hurt. (And I can’t remember her name…).

Our concerns were mutual. In addition to posing several Constitutional questions on the operation of government, these systems discriminated horribly against poor people. If you or I got a speeding ticket (well, if you did), you just paid the fine and went on your merry way. Poor folks facing the same predicament also faced a world of hurt. You might have paid $200 and moved on. They ended up paying $1,000+ over the course of one or more years. The abuses were too numerous to list. It was bad, bad enough to make me ride MARTA to fight it.

We talked for a good hour. No crazy Perrinisms, I just told her everything I knew and offered my help. She, they had a vague plan. Over the next few years, with a ton of help from private defense attorneys and many lawsuits and some legislation, the plan worked out. Kind of. Georgia still has a backwards system, greatly resembling the previous one, but it is now conducted under official guise. Progress, I suppose.

A little liberal progress. On the conservative front it was much the same. The Supreme Court gave us Heller and MacDonald and other courts gave yet more 2A friendliness. There’s still much to be done on all fronts. And I gave you this story, heartening testimony that one may support opposite ends of the freedom spectrum even in the same day in May in Hotlanta.

Now, I give you the following zany side stories! The price you pay for reading this far.

I spent the night (before or after I cannot remember – maybe both) at a hotel in Buckhead. Not wanting to drive downtown I took a MARTA train. I bought my token with a $20. The stupid machine spit out my token and 17 or 18 Sacagawea Dollars as change. Thus, as I eased around traffic, I clanged about with 4 pounds of scrap-metal in my pockets.

Upon leaving the Southern Center I encountered a beggar. Downtown Atlanta almost has as many beggars as D.C. has rats. I had walked past more than a few that day alone. This lady was different. She was well dressed. She seemed sweet and professional. And she seemed like she really needed a helping hand. She only asked me if I could help her with anything. No song and dance. No ridiculous story. No fake Rolex. I said, “Darling, you’re in luck!”

She was more than gracious to receive Sacagawea and the whole tribe. I was happy being able to walk upright again.

One good deed deserved another so I treated myself to a cigar. (You had to know cigars were coming). It was at the nice shop on Sidney Marcus that I don’t think is in business anymore. It was just down the street from my hotel.

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Corona Cigars. I’m a Corona Club VIP! How ’bout you?

At the time I was reviewing Cigars for the now-defunct Vegas Room. As an assignment I bought a Davidoff Winston Churchill. Later that evening I removed with my smoke and a beer to the hotel pool area. Immediately upon lighting up my chair broke. This, aggravating my Sacagawea injury, killed the experience and ended my review attempt. I took my beer back to the room with a curse and a limp.

The moral to all of this is: reach across the aisle sometime and help the “other side”. Freedom is freedom is freedom. Also, if you can help a poor person, do so – it might benefit you immediately. And, finally, when you go to do your review smoking, pick a good chair…

Political Punches

14 Monday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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Congress, politicians, violence

The great election of 2016 is barely past and tensions run high across America. All in all it seems to be going pretty well.

Today tensions also ran high in Ukraine. A “radical” party member caught it hot from a member of the opposition, being punched in the face. His detractors accuse him of working for or with Putin. We saw similar accusations a week or two ago in America without the fisticuffs.

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Zing! Pow! RT / YouTube.

Watching this exchange jarred my memory. There was a time when Congress was a little more interesting. We even had a cane fight once in 1856.

Charles Sumner of Mass. was lambasting something about Kansas. In doing so he insulted a House member from South Carolina. This offended another South Carolinian, Preston Brooks. Brooks then assaulted Sumner, breaking his cane over his opponent’s head. He then had to be restrained and drug off.

The House fined Sumner $300 for this offense. Sumner returned a week or so later, okay if a little quieter.

Uncivilized? Yes. But it is all more than a little manly. And it’s a bit refreshing to see men still willing to fight for what they believe in. If we’re going to pay these clowns, we might as well get a little entertainment out of them. CSPAN could run a pay-per-view MMA show in the evenings.

I wouldn’t necessarily watch it but I’d support it. Heck, I already pay the taxes.

Mr. Ross Goes To Washington

13 Sunday Nov 2016

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America, England, fire, government, history, Robert Ross, War of 1812, Washington

The 2016 election is over and January will see a new host of politicians headed to Washington. Some suggest real and needed change is coming. I will believe that when I see it. However I would like to share some happy memories about a more honest approach to D.C.

Most do not remember the name of Robert Ross. He was not a terribly popular figure in his time, especially in America. And his time has long since faded into the history books.  Maj. Gen. Ross was for a short time the commander of the British army during the War of 1812. That fratricidal nonsense gave us two things: a catchy tune by Johnny Horton* and a lesson on handling the American Capital. The latter was courtesy of Ross.

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Ross. U.S. Capitol Historical Society.

Ross was born in Ireland ten years before the American Revolution. He led a distinguished military career which culminated in his command of British forces on the east coast of America. He was killed just prior to the Battle of Baltimore in September 1814. This was just after his greatest success: The Burning of Washington, D.C.

 

On August 24, 1814 Ross and his men entered into Washington with the most noble of intentions, to level the place. The British torched the White House, the Capitol and numerous other government buildings. Interestingly, and greatly reflecting on Ross’s high character, he largely left private property alone. He was also persuaded to preserve benign public structures (most notably the Patent Office).

Negotiations also saved nearby non-government towns. They went something like this: Americans: “Please don’t burn our town.” British: “Okay”.

The very next day a hurricane came in from the Atlantic. The “storm that saved Washington” really didn’t. While it extinguished the flames, it caused equally substantial damage. For example, it took out the Patent building spared the day before by Ross. Admiral Sir George Cockburn regarded the storm as God’s assistance in cleansing the filth on the Potomac. Perhaps he foresaw what would eventually take shape there over the next two centuries.

And the growth came, just as nature springs back to life following a forest fire with greater vigor. From the ashes and water leapt one of the most insane conclaves of democratic tyranny ever known on Earth. From the ruins came a rebuilt government with laws, legions, and regulations enough to paper the globe.

Still, for his part in history, we may thank General Ross. For America’s official position, there are no hard feelings against the man. His portrait hangs in the Capitol building with honor. What happens in D.C. rarely ever makes sense. Yet for us, the freedom-minded, the lesson is simple: as a matter of last resort fire is the ultimate anti-septic.

*Horton’s famed The Battle of New Orleans is part of Americana. He made a lesser known version of the same name for the British, the lyrics essentially reversed. Ray Stevens updated the song following Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Good For The Goose, Good For The Slander

12 Saturday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

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Donald Trump, honesty, New York Times, taxes

All this week I’ve been waiting on someone to rehash the issue of Trump’s taxes. The left it seems is too busy hating white people, crying wolf, and just crying. So I’ll bring it up again.

On October 1st the New York Times ran a story about Trump’s 1995 tax-deferring loss of $916 Million.

The provision, known as net operating loss, or N.O.L., allows a dizzying array of deductions, business expenses, real estate depreciation, losses from the sale of business assets and even operating losses to flow from the balance sheets of those partnerships, limited liability companies and S corporations onto the personal tax returns of men like Mr. Trump. In turn, those losses can be used to cancel out an equivalent amount of taxable income from, say, book royalties or branding deals.

Disappointed no New York lawyers or accountants would tell them anything except Trump followed the law, the Times went so far as to track down Trump’s 80 year old former accountant in Florida.

Now, thanks to Mr. Trump’s 1995 tax records, the degree to which he spun all those years of red ink into tax write-off gold may finally be apparent.

Mr. Mitnick, the lawyer and accountant, was the person Mr. Trump leaned on most to do the spinning. Mr. Mitnick worked for a small Long Island accounting firm that specialized in handling tax issues for wealthy New York real estate families. He had long handled tax matters for Mr. Trump’s father, Fred C. Trump, and he said he began doing Donald Trump’s taxes after Mr. Trump turned 18.

…

Mr. Mitnick, though, said there were times when even he, for all his years helping wealthy New Yorkers navigate the tax code, found it difficult to face the incongruity of his work for Mr. Trump. He felt keenly aware that Mr. Trump was living a life of unimaginable luxury thanks in part to Mr. Mitnick’s ability to relieve him of the burden of paying taxes like everyone else.

“Here the guy was building incredible net worth and not paying tax on it,” he said.

The incongruity of it all. He spun red ink into write-off gold. Like Rumpelstiltskin. But unlike old Rumpel, Trump got to keep the baby – he got a life of luxury, building wealth without paying taxes.

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Rescue Post.

One suspects the Times crew would love to call this activity a felon if they could. Well, at least as far as Trump is concerned, they would. When the same provision might be used by anyone connected to the Clinton Machine, the Times is all for it. They even recommend it. Or they did, on May 10th, at the end of a story about Hillary’s son-in-law losing 90% of his investors’ money.

In letters to investors in 2014, Mr. Mezvinsky and his partners expressed confidence that Greece would soon be on the path to a “sustainable recovery.” But by the end of that year, Eaglevale’s leaders began to acknowledge that their perspective on the situation in Greece may have been wrong. The fund had earlier stopped taking in new money.

The one silver lining for the fund’s investors from all of this is that they will have a somewhat larger tax loss on investments to claim next year.

Unbelievable. No, wait, it’s the Times. Completely believable. What was a silver lining for the Clinton set in May became a mortal sin for Trump just five months later.

This sort of blind inconsistency is part of the reason why they never saw Trump coming. Arthur O. Sulzberger Jr. says the Old Grey Hag will now rededicate itself to reporting honestly. How? More importantly, who cares?

Why Trump Won

12 Saturday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

"Civil" War, America, Donald Trump, economy, election, politics

Facebook SJWs and campus protesters have spent the latter half of this week wringing their hands and wondering how half the country can be so racist, sexist, homophobic, and anti-everything that is anti-American as to elect Trump over the chosen Globalist Queen, Hillary Clinton. Karl Denninger masterfully answered the collective concern in an article today at Market Ticker. One, even one aware of the problems in the system, wonders how he was able to pack so much truth into one column:

Ever drive through small town America?

Hell, how about “not-so-small-town” America?

Many of these towns look like something out of a WWI or WWII European war movie. There was one factory or maybe two, but now it sits empty, weeds growing out of the parking lot as high as your head, all the windows are broken out and the roof has caved in. Over on the outskirts there’s a Walmart that pays $9/hour, but only offers 20 hours/week. The factory paid $30/hour, full-time, plus benefits and food, power, medicine and beer cost half of what it does now. 90% of what formerly were little diners and shops in the “center” of the town, which might have one actual traffic light, are gone — boarded up and often literally falling apart. There might be one bank left, a branch of a big national chain, and maybe an antique store. Maybe. All the factory jobs left for China and Mexico and everything else died when the middle-class incomes to support them disappeared. We did that as a nation with our “progressive” and “global” agenda driven by the 50%+1 that live in the closest big city 200 miles away.

The locals who used to work in the fields within 10 or 20 miles from that town are all unemployed too. Why? Because the illegal Mexicans came and we refused to throw them out. They work for a few bucks a day in cash, no taxes, no unemployment, no nothing. No American can live on that; the embedded cost of just trying to stay alive would leave you with zero. But the Mexicans work hard and then sleep 10 to a single-room apartment, which incidentally is a total ****hole as you’d expect given that density of occupation. They don’t care; it’s better than what they had in Mexico, you see, and they can Western Union home some of the money. This is the face of “immigration”, mostly illegal, that really exists in this country. They brought their third-world ****hole here and while it’s a little bit better than what they had in the process of doing it they dragged us into the gutter with them.

The people who lived in that town did and those who are still there do go to church every weekend, and some go again during the week, usually on Wednesday. There’s usually one, sometimes two churches. Every one of them has the word “God” or “Christ” in the name on the front. They mean it when it comes to their faith and in addition that’s where all the local people shake hands, exchange chit-chat on the last week and, for younger people, it’s where they meet one another. You know, girls and boys. Yeah. Faith is real there, you see, and it’s Christian. But from your point of view that’s deplorable and that “those people” don’t like the idea of making a wedding cake for a gay marriage is deserving of a federal lawsuit and loss of the bakery (which is, as a result, now closed — putting yet more people out of work.) The people who live in these towns don’t see it as a civil rights matter but rather as attacking God.

What was left after the factory was displaced isn’t enough to run a “service economy”, which is why it never showed up there and the old business buildings are all boarded up. Nobody can afford $8 lattes on a $9/hour wage for 20 hours a week and nobody would want them if they could. There’s probably a McDonalds on the outskirts, and a couple of self-serve gas stations with a convenience store. It sells cheap beer and lots of it to the locals who have nothing to do but drink and then go to church and pray for forgiveness for last night’s 12 pack. None of the jobs at any of these places, except maybe the store manager, makes more than $9/hour and Obamacare has forced all the regular workers down to 20 hours a week on top of it. Try living on $180/week gross sometime — before FICA and Medicare is taken out, never mind gas for the car and the rapidly-escalating car insurance bill — and you might understand. Yes, I know the car is 15 years old and runs like crap. What do you expect on under $1,000/month of income?

This is what 40 years of sending jobs overseas with “trade deals” did. It’s what Amazon did. It’s what Walmart and its Chinese supply line did. It’s what “progressive America” did, and then to add insult to injury the teachers in the public schools tell all the kids that Mommy and Daddy are bad people and hate both the planet and their own kids because they don’t drive a $30,000 Prius or a $60,000 Tesla.

This is everywhere in rural America. Get in your car and out of your comfort zone some time and you’ll see it. It’s not far from wherever you are. I’ve driven through dozens of these formerly-alive places in the last six months — every one of them dead today, but full of real people. I never met one such person that was a racist, xenophobic *******, but they’re not very happy, and the people they’re unhappy with are those very same folks you wanted to keep in office in Washington DC.

Karl also points out that the “red” folks out in real America still produce all of the food and power for their betters, the “blue” bed-wetters on the coasts and in the cities. Seeing as how nobody cares about them, what if they suddenly shut off the flow? Answer: the blueies would eat each other. Then, the survivors would try to come rampaging into the countryside to loot and pillage. But, and I love this, Karl points out: “Mr. Gang Banger against Mr. Deer Hunter isn’t a very fair fight, when you get down to it.”

4dfd714525ccd79c58b08f4bbef3a629.jpg

Wall St. and K St. have waged near-total war on Main St. Pinterest.

The snowflakes don’t want to consider any of this. The thugs either can’t consider it or they don’t care. Real Americans do care – even about the welfare of those who hate them – and they do not like the prospects. Funny.

It was that caring, that desire to avert civil war, coupled with self-preservation, that drove their electoral choice. And Trump must remember who elected him and why. Others might also want to figure this out. Fortunately if isn’t very hard.

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Perrin Lovett

From Green Altar Books, an imprint of Shotwell Publishing

From Green Altar Books, an imprint of Shotwell Publishing

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