Jeff Sessions Goes All Common Law, All County Guardian

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Says the AG:

“I want to thank every sheriff in America. Since our founding, the independently elected sheriff has been the people’s protector, who keeps law enforcement close to and accountable to people through the elected process,” Sessions said in remarks at the National Sheriffs Association winter meeting, adding, “The office of sheriff is a critical part of the Anglo-American heritage of law enforcement.”

Interesting that he’s not going after the weed or re-explaining something to Congress.

Very interesting that such an innocuous phrase might generate fear of “nefarious meaning.”

Most interesting that a 1970’s television show theme had it right:

He has no fear,
he’s always here,
his morale stands alone.
A man of dreams,
who guards our things as if they were his own.
He walks the streets from early dawn,
he stands behind our laws.
Both big and small,
he bends them all,
who dares to fight his cause.

-Sheriff Lobo, Frankie Lane.

That was the way it was, the way it was supposed to be…

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Lobo.

Free Speech Isn’t Free. Is It Wanted?

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Not by many Americans it seems. Not today. The truth, despite what some will tell you, has never been in vogue. There’s a war over speech.

The free speech wars are getting worse, but it seems that none of the warring factions quite grasp the character of the dispute — or precisely what’s at stake.

At the figurative center of the clash is the norm of near-absolute freedom of speech and expression, which its defenders like to treat as the American default. A number of ideological challenges have arisen in recent years to overturn this norm.

On many college campuses, groups of left-leaning students insist that free speech should be conditional on speakers adhering to explicit standards of diversity and avoiding the infliction of emotional harm on the members of marginalized groups through the spreading of “hate.”

The war may be hottest in America’s colleges.

Richard Walker, a University of Central Florida sophomore and member of Knights for Socialism, believes his school should be limiting the voices of those who spew hateful rhetoric on campus.

“The university’s first responsibility is ensuring the safety and well-being of their students,” said Walker, 19. “It might be just words now, but if you let that sort of thing come into the public discourse and become widely accepted, it doesn’t stay words.”

In America’s politically polarized environment, students such as Walker increasingly think colleges should ban speech that may be racist or defamatory, a trend that worries advocates of the First Amendment.

More than 40 percent of students believe the First Amendment does not protect hate speech, according to a Brookings Institute poll taken of 1,500 students nationwide last year. Almost 20 percent believe using violence is an acceptable means to stop such speech, the poll found. In all, 53 percent of students — 61 percent Democrat and 47 percent Republican — believe colleges and universities should prohibit offensive speech, according to the survey.

Time was when everyone assumed the colleges’ first role was to promote knowledge and learning. Learning, to a large degree, requires communication of ideas, speech – even that which may be unpopular or uncomfortable.

That 20% find violence an acceptable alternative to debate or turning away is astounding. The legal concept of “fighting words,” speech unprotected because it could give rise to imminent physical danger, is predicated on what was known as the “reasonable man” doctrine.

We seem to have a shortage of reason today. And that should be the idea that offends.

Crimes that Ring a Bell

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An enterprising student-employee at my alma mater faces the state’s wrath. His crime? Dissatisfied with his grade, he merely hacked the professor’s computer and changed it. Forced out of UGA, he now faces EIGHTY! charges – of computer trespass and computer forgery.

These are actual crimes and, if the victim is the government or its agents, then they will be prosecuted.

As with that young Brit who hacked the CIA, there has to be a better “punishment” for this man. How about making him head of the University IT department. Obviously knows what he’s doing.

A far worse pattern of crime is committed daily, hourly by some who have little to no idea what they’re doing. That, or they just don’t give a rat’s behind.

Alarm Bells are Ringing on the Federal Debt

You don’t say? Heck, I’ve tried to ring that one myself a time or two. It’s a little hard since they removed the hammer. Anyway, at least The Hill noticed:

Well, it’s true. Congress is bankrupting the country and robbing future generations of Americans to pay for it. It’s dangerous. A debt crisis, and all the terrible economic effects of that, are looming. Both parties are guilty. Every single congressional leader is to blame.

Okay, so it’s true. But how did it happen, and how are they getting away with it? The events of this week perfectly illustrate how the one-way spending ratchet works, why Congress votes to pass it, and how they’re getting away with it.

The Bipartisan Budget Act is 652 pages long. The bill increases spending by $386 billion over two years and nearly $1.5 trillion over 10 years. It also suspends the debt ceiling until after the next election.

Ah! That cool bipartisanship everyone loves. “Gettin’ the people’s business done!”

My (on books) debt projection of $40 Trillion by 2024 may be a little low.

How did this happen? Well, someone elected these cretins. How do they get away with it? Well, I predict most will be re-elected. It’s kind of like the frozen snake: invite a robber into your home and odds are you’ll be robbed. The people’s business must have something to do with naivete and stupidity. Go ring that bell.

So it goes in America: the grade fixer will go to jail; the monsters who deep-sixed the country will escape with perks and pensions.

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Horme.com.

It’s That Time Again

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Lovely ladies, ice, and big, round rocks with handles. While Pence and Kim Yo Jong do the diplomatic tango, you check out the wild, laser-intense, no-I-don’t-understand-but-who-care’s-what-the-game’s-about-it’s-addictive world of women’s curling! Makes waiting every four years worth it.

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Rachel Homan, Team Canada. The best thing since Cheryl Bernard?

And, yes, this is one time, one sport (that I really do not understand), when I pull against the USA. It’s the Canadian Ladies or no one (because Cheryl Bernard). Well, Sweden maybe. Or the US. Japan…

I’ve heard that men curl too. #MenCurlToo! Who cares?

Anyway, give it a shot. Toss. Slide.

Sweep! Sweep! Sweep!

New YouTube Thumbs

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Yep. Big exciting stuff from small pictures. Really.

Check out today’s Prepper News Weekly:

See what I mean? Catchy and professional. Perrin Lovett/FPTV/YouTube.

Now, go back and SUBSCRIBE on YT!

Here’s another look:

1 - Edited (3)

Today’s episode was originally my longest video ever, about 24 min. Then a multi-part tragedy unfolded … all. damned. day… The first attempt, maybe my best work yet, was lost in cyberland forever. Many “thanks” to: Motorola, Acer, YouTube (love y’all), Google, Verizon, and MEO 054-EX.

The final broadcast is shorter, worse (honestly), and features a beat down and irritated Perrin. But you do get that cool pic: the main background pic will change weekly. And you’ll know its an FP video when you see the logo, top-left.

Blah, blah, blah… Oh, I forgot the quote I read from Rand Paul early this morning, related to his great General’s stand yesterday:

“When the Democrats are in power, Republicans appear to be the conservative party. But when Republicans are in power, it seems there is no conservative party. The hypocrisy hangs in the air and chokes anyone with a sense of decency or intellectual honesty.”

There. And he knew he was talking to 99 idiots totally devoid of decency, intellect, and honesty.

Night folks.

-P

The Longest Six Hours in Human History

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Did you make it? I assume that, if you’re reading this, you survived the horrid, Earth-shattering, 6-freaking-hour government shutdown.

I know, I know, my world was shaken too.

I found it hard to breath. The sun was a little off schedule this morning. Few birds chirped. I felt disconnected from the gentle, reassuring hand of omnipotent and benevolent governance.

Thank God government that is over!

It’s all Rand Paul’s fault:

“When the Democrats are in power, Republicans appear to be the conservative party. But when Republicans are in power, it seems there is no conservative party. The hypocrisy hangs in the air and chokes anyone with a sense of decency or intellectual honesty.”

-Rand Paul, Senate Floor, February 8, 2018.

The man is crazy, out of control. If only some kind neighbor would step in and sucker punch the doctor for the sake of the people. Another doctor maybe.

Anyway, life will now go on as God government intended. All praise and glory be to the government, from wince all freedom, happiness, prosperity, gravity, energy, and matter flows. I suggest you immediately fall to your knees and send up a prayer (type “Amen!”) to God government for the gifts and glory of government. Repent of your selfish, wicked ways. If not for the government, you wouldn’t even exist.

Next time we might not be so lucky. Next time life could be suspended for … what? … seven hours?! The thought crushes the very (government provided) soul and tortures the (government enriched) mind.

* I occurred to me, as I wrestled with the technology related to a forth-coming video this morning, that I might make another on this subject: something about the Gospel of Government Prosperity. Eh? It could be like an inspirational sermon/documentary wherever the state is worshipped. For the other 3%, it could be a standup routine.

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NBC15, Madison, WI.

The General Stands Again

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Sen. Rand Paul, the only sane man left on Capitol Hill, is derisively dubbed “General*Paul” by Lindsey Grahamnesty. Lindsey was himself described recently in Taki’s Mag as “suspiciously swishy.”

Today Dr. Paul, the General (I like that, let’s take it away from them), took a hard stand against the bizarre, if predictable, new budget proposal.

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul is preventing a two-year budget deal from passing, as the White House advised federal agencies to prepare for the government to start shutting down at midnight.

Congressional negotiators were scrambling earlier Thursday to lock in enough votes in the House, and that was before Paul, a Republican, made public his dissatisfaction with the deal, which would raise government spending, avert a government shutdown and lift the debt ceiling.

A senior administrative official said the White House is instructing agencies to begin shutdown preparations in the event that Congress fails to pass a budget before the midnight deadline.

Paul is pushing for an amendment to maintain budget caps, but Senate sources say leaders have no plan to give Paul such a concession, meaning that he can continue to prevent a vote until after midnight, when government funding runs out.

The colossal bill, which lawmakers have been negotiating for months, would be a game-changing piece of legislation, clearing the decks for Congress in dealing with major spending issues as well as doling out disaster relief money.

The overall deal also does not address the high-profile issue of immigration, a key sticking point for many Democrats; but it does increase spending caps by $300 billion for the Pentagon and domestic priorities, a crucial incentive for getting enough votes from both parties.

The Convertible of State is aimed at the edge of a cliff. The Elephant at the wheel floors the gas pedal. The Donkey passenger shouts, “Go, Man, Go!” This is the bipartisanship the people claim to be all crazy about – “gettin’ the people’s business done!” Most don’t realize they’re in the backseat behind the two dumb animals, headed for the edge at high speed.

I guess Rand is more like a traffic cop than a general. Hey, still a man in uniform, right? Maybe that’s what Grahmnesty meant by the remark; you know, what he digs…

The uniparty hasn’t been able to pass a whole and complete annual budget for about a decade. Stopgap after appropriation after special package after… Now! Now, they’ve got us a twofer in store, doubling down (up) to make up for lost responsibility. Deficits and the debt be damned.

Go ahead. Shut her down. Leave her down.

American history repeats itself: There stands Paul like a stone wall!

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CNN (sightly modified).

*Lindsey ridiculed Dr. Paul for wanting to bring our standing armies home and end the oldest war in US history. (I’ve never used the term “cuck” here, you know). Neocons like Grahamnesty should favor the idea, giving the troops a breather before the next war with Iran and/or North Korea and/or Russia and/or China and/or Whomever it is. You know, the war just after the depression and before the civil…

The FISA Memo, the Surveillance State, the Tin Horn

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Both “sides” of the uniparty world do well to consider Judge Andrew Napolitano’s assessment of the greater tragedy of the situation (beyond Trump, FBI loyalty, or “Russia”). The players, knowing and not caring, will not. The supporters, largely neither knowing nor caring, wouldn’t even know how to consider. But they should. It has happened.

The journey that domestic spying has taken in 40 years has been one long steady march of massive increase in size and scope. The federal government now employs more than 60,000 people to spy on all Americans, including the White House, the Pentagon, the federal courts and one another. As well, the National Security Agency and the intelligence arm of the FBI have 24/7 access to the computers of all telecoms and computer service providers in the U.S. And certain politicians have access to whatever the NSA and the FBI possess.

The surveillance state is now here.

The Supreme Court has ruled that electronic surveillance constitutes a search under the Fourth Amendment. That amendment prohibits warrantless searches and requires probable cause of crime as the sole trigger for judges to sign search warrants. FISA only requires probable cause relating to a foreign agent on one end of a phone call — a far lower standard — to trigger a warrant. The government has convinced the FISC that it should grant warrants based on probable cause of talking to someone who has ever spoken to a foreign person, whether an agent of a foreign government or an innocent foreign bookseller.

That judicially created standard is so far afield from the Fourth Amendment as to render it legally erroneous and profoundly unconstitutional. Yet the FISA expansion that the president signed into law last month — after the debate during which House Intelligence Committee Republicans intentionally remained mute about their allegations of FISA abuses — purports to make this Stasi-like level of surveillance lawful.

Predictable misuse of a terrible standard attached to an unlawful act which replaced a similar illegal procedure. Banana. Republic.

And this incident involves the targeting of the President, both as a candidate and as actual, elected office holder. Take away all political affiliations (apologies to the binary thinkers) and the magnitude, the implication is staggering. If the President isn’t safe from baseless investigative abuse, then who is? No one.

Modern technology aside, this is how lesser nations have traditionally operated, everywhere and throughout history – the rule of men rather than the rule of law. Lights out in the shining city.

And where might all of this go next? Since we’re playing loose with the law, and what constitutes the law has changed so much so recently, just how extreme could the response to these particular FISA violations become?

To use Napolitano’s example: if you, an average nobody citizen, talks to a foreign book seller, are surveilled as a result, and find yourself afoul of the “authorities,” then you just take whatever treatment they see fit to dole out. End of story. You have no (respected) rights and no power. Not so for the subject of the Steele dossier.

Donald J. Trump has extreme power. I noted in a recent video that Trump could, if he wanted, “legally” – as defined by two previous Presidents (several more really), Congress, and the Supreme Court – simply declare all of his enemies and detractors enemy combatants. Indefinite detention. GITMO. Drone strikes.

So far it appears the Donald, for all his pomp and Tweeting, has a remarkably cool head. For that we should be grateful. But will it last? What about the next Chief Executive? Or the next one?

The FISA-FBI-Russiagate episode illustrates the utter failure of the federal government. At this point it’s safe to dispense with the pretense of the old Constitutional Republic.

That’s about all that’s safe.

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Eric Peters.

“Let the Damned Thing Die”

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He’s (She’s?, Xir’s??, They’s???) not talking about the Federal Reserve.

Another good reason to be very wary of the college-debt-idiocy complex:

Following a row about a professor-produced play about immigration a new and exciting student group has sprung up at Kenyon College in Ohio: The Whiteness Group seeks to silence whites on campus.

The Good Samaritan’s retraction comes serendipitously at the same moment as the creation of a new student group at Kenyon: “the whiteness group.”

The group was founded by a student, Juniper Cruz, and is notable not just for its name, but for its rules, which state that “no white person can ask a person of color questions; white people must try to answer their questions for themselves. And no spreading rumors about what people say during the meetings.”

If you were going to set out to create a more illiberal student group possible at a college, you would be hard-pressed to do so.

Were I a student at Kenyon, this wouldn’t be much of a problem for me. “STFU” isn’t exactly a question. And censorship and crybaby-ism isn’t much of an academic tradition. At least one (probably older) professor gets it: “’Today is the end of [liberal education at Kenyon College],’ Fred Baumann, a professor of political science at Kenyon, proclaimed last week to a panel and its audience.”

He’s alone:

And as for Baumann’s suggestion that liberal education was finished at Kenyon, he’s certainly on to something. Following the panel where Baumann made his stand, one student took to Facebook, saying that if liberal education “necessitates the silencing of marginalized communities, the protection of racism, and our complicity with both, then let the damned thing die.”

A loaded, fallacious “if, then.” Let it already; there are better and cheaper alternatives. Is this garbage worth $65,840 per year? No.

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No questions asked, okay?! WFDD.