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Source; Sent by an Internet Friend of mine......... SNGLR

Federal debt is soaring to dangerous levels. Debt held by the public now tops $26 trillion, or $200,000 for every household in the nation. The debt relative to the size of the economy will soon hit an all-time high. Inflation due to biden has raised prices 17.5% while wages are up only 12.9%. The supply chain issues occurred early in 2020 when governments unnecessarily shut down the global economy, but inflation was still below 2% when biden took office, and the economy was already roaring back. Energy prices started soaring as soon as biden was inaugurated, because he’s been openly carrying out his stated goal to destroy industries that produce coal, oil, and natural gas—the war in Ukraine restarted a year later in 2022. Remember Milton Friedman’s famous “inflation is made in Washington because only Washington can create money” line

But, as usual, the left-wing along with their media outlets obviously, have begun to blame corporations for the high prices, but that is a lie. Profit levels in the spring of 2023 were at the lowest level since 2020, according to Factset, because companies’ prices are not going up as fast as their costs. That is the opposite of what the public is being told.

And , surging levels of migration caused by wars, political unrest and extreme weather is one of the biggest lies of all. These problems existed during Trump’s term but he largely enforced immigration laws; biden chose not to, and that is why millions of illegals have “surged” in since he took office. And what a joke to blame “extreme weather” or climate change—America is an ocean away from China and Africa, but for some reason, they wind up here.

The left-wing media, like the democrat Party, seem to believe their job is to push their extremely destructive policies to destroy America.

Related news:

https://nypost.com/2023/12/17/opinion/this-holiday-season-is-hitting-hispanic-americans-at-their-pocketbooks/

https://thefederalist.com/2023/12/19/report-government-covid-handouts-screwed-over-low-income-households-by-spiking-inflation/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=report-government-covid-handouts-screwed-over-low-income-households-by-spiking-inflation&utm_term=2023-12-19

https://www.theamericanconservative.com/the-u-s-debt-is-getting-uglier-and-thats-the-plan/

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Instead of understanding criminals, Giuliani thought we should lock them up. And guess what? It worked! In his first three years as mayor, the drop in crime in New York City alone was responsible for 35% of the reduction in crime nationally. When the murder rate in New York plummeted an amazing 20% his first year in office, The left-wing ny times lied again with an article titled: New York City Crime Falls but Just Why Is a Mystery.

Over the course of his mayoralty, the number of murders in New York declined from about 2,000 a year to a few hundred a year –- and kept falling as Mayor Michael Bloomberg continued Giuliani’s crime policies. The results weren’t so great in cities that refused to implement Giuliani-style policing. While New York became a wonderland, some cities continued their decline into dystopian nightmares. Detroit didn’t turn around. Baltimore didn’t turn around. Philadelphia and St Louis didn’t turn around. But then, that's what liberals/democrats support and want more of.

Related news:

https://www.breitbart.com/crime/2023/12/16/soaring-crime-pushes-wizards-capitals-out-dc-potential-revenue-loss-25m/

https://www.theamericanconservative.com/michigan-democrats-woo-the-felon-vote/

148m?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3JeXxoZWnY

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When the New York Times lost its way...The Times’s problem has metastasized from liberal bias to illiberal bias, from an inclination to favor one side of the national debate to an impulse to shut debate down altogether... I was not going to apologize for denying my colleagues’ humanity or endangering lives...I’d lost track of this truth myself..."”--James Bennet, the former editorial page editor of The ny times, criticizing it for a shift away from journalistic principles.

The growing more extreme left-wing censorship motto is: there is nothing to see in it, but you shouldn’t be allowed look at it

True to this liberal tactic is the intensity of the attacks on a Republican is always in proportion to the degree to which he is impeding one of liberals’ desires.

What should outrage all Americans is that our left-wing in government most certainly did meddle in an election — ours. In desperate denial mode, liberals will talk about everything but the fact that our government was spying on one campaign by using make believe from the another government, all while hoodwinking our FISA court judges and leaking to the liberal-biased press about its phony, politicized investigation.

Looking back at the start of the this phase of the left-wing’s marxist revolution, as its put under the microscope, is more outrageous it appears, with left-wing lemmings/Trump haters figuring into it at every crucial turn. In 2016 the fix was in for mrs b.j. in Washington, D.C. john brennan, auditioning to be her CIA director, laid the groundwork for the Trump-Russia probe by hyping bogus intelligence; Trump hater peter strzok formally opened the probe at the FBI just weeks after whitewashing hilly’s illegal mishandling of emails (much, much worse than Watergate)-- the lies of christopher steele, mrs hilly’s researcher, served as the basis for spying on all of Carter Page’s communications with the Trump campaign, while the spouse of a Justice Department official involved in the probe shoveled more of the lies to her husband.

Like what liberals point to this day as corruption—Watergate---the probe was not just amateurish, dirty and paranoid but also fruitless. The left-wing media, painting itself as the stalwart defender of civil liberties, adopted a comically, child-like cavalier view of Carter Page. Hey, the investigation into him was close enough for government work they say. And, besides, it serves him right for talking to Russians. Imagine the left-wing media adopting such a breezy view of police misconduct cases in which there side turns out to be innocent. And by the way, look the other way when their guys actually do something that is illegal—like with the d.n.c. & the podestas 

Yes, BObama’s FBI broke the rules and still didn’t get its “man.” But the politically weaponized FBI, not wanting anyone to see its foul and botched partisan play, supports the left-wing media to blame the ref. And so we have an endless trashing of Republicans as “partisan” —by liberals, the actual partisans. Remember when we saw denials of political espionage from  participants in it. Take CNN’s (clinton news network) breathless coverage of the looney RINO mcCain’s view of the propriety of the steele dossier without ever mentioning his role in hawking it. Or NBs's giving brennan a platform to play dumb about the dossier without asking him about his meetings with  another big-time lib lier--harry reid. And now we learn from Senator Grassley that steele obtained some of his dirt from  hillaryworld,  completing the picture of the FISA warrant as the product of a fiction from an insanely  partisan echo chamber in which “corroboration” consisted of steele quoting himself and his paymaster’s friends. Only a left-wing media biased enough to participate in such a farce would tell its viewers to avert their gaze from it. Only the uninformed or ideologically addicted would agree.

 

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What A Crock; Global Warming and 'Big Bad Oil'

Source; by Amir Taheri December 17, 2023 at 4:00 am

  • [H]istory shows that civilizations based on recycling and no growth end up disappearing, the most glaring example being ancient Sumer.

  • Nuclear energy may sound attractive.... But the fact is that we still know little about its impact in the long run, especially when it comes to disposing of the waste it produces.

  • Since the Paris Conference of 2015, those leading the "save the planet" crusade have opted for a piecemeal approach to a problem that, if it exists, cannot be solved by diplomatic gimmicks, fixing sectorial targets such as a maximum of 2 degrees increase in global warming by an arbitrary date...

mail?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.gatestoneinstitute.org%2Fpics%2F4779.jpg&t=1702936679&ymreqid=b16ac307-28b6-2bc8-1cc3-a8022f013100&sig=tbj93QFmFGkU1vPTbfe9Tw--~D (Image source: iStock)

Even before it started, it was evident that the COP28 jamboree to "save the planet" would not satisfy the high expectations, some of them contradictory, of the 198 nations and dozens of non-governmental organizations attending the event with different agendas, including some hidden ones.

It is, therefore no surprise that some participants pronounced the event "a big failure" even before the conference president, the UAE's Sheikh Sultan Ahmed al-Jaber, struck the final gavel.

The next move was to blame "the Arabs" and the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) as a whole.

The fact, however, is that OPEC as a whole accounts for just over a third of global oil production.

Of the top oil producers, only two Saudi Arabia and Iraq are Arab states. The United States, Russia and Canada claim first, third and fourth slots as largest producers. Of the top 20 consumers of crude, oil only two, Indonesia and Iran, are OPEC members.

If the "Big Bad Oil" octopus exists, its tentacles reach beyond Arabs and OPEC, from China and India to the European Union, the United States, Canada, Mexico and Brazil.

But why did "Big Bad Oil" come into being in the first place?

Oil became the indispensable element for building what was to become known as "the modern world" that promised a lifestyle of movement and speed in the service of free global trade based on the comparative advantage theory.

From the start, that is to say sometime in the 19th century, the oil business has been dominated by a handful of Western nations that, except the United States, all had state-owned oil companies and a military machine to protect and expand their oil interests.

The "modern world" meant rapid urbanization, growing distances between places of work and of abode that necessitated transport, including automobiles, hailed as the latest symbol of individual freedom.

The new lifestyle also meant building energy-devouring vertical mega-cities seen as the most effective symbols of wealth and power.

Even today, building skyscrapers is regarded as the entry ticket to the "modern world". Cheap oil also made unprecedented mobility of labor and immigration possible.

Ironically, many Western eco-warriors who blame the "Big Bad Oil" forget all that and a few more facts.

The first is that Western governments earn more money from taxes on oil and its byproducts than the average OPEC member.

At the same time, the bulk of investment in exploring and producing new oil reserves comes from Western and to a lesser extent Russian and Chinese companies.

While Western eco-warriors speak of the need to end oil, hardly a year passes without their own companies cutting the ribbons on new oilfields in the Mediterranean, the Gulf of Guinea, the Black Sea and even the Arctic Circle and Antarctica.

If global warming is a real threat to the planet it should not be treated as a technical problem to be solved by technocrats. It is a civilizational problem that can only be dealt with if we are prepared to contemplate and start working for an alternative lifestyle less dependent on speed, movement, mega-cities and consumer-led economic growth.

The alternatives offered so far lack credibility.

Keeping the present lifestyle, which incidentally is expanding into China, India and many more "emerging nations" while trying to replace oil with alternatives, involves a number of unknowns not to mention the unknown unknowns.

Nuclear energy may sound attractive. But the fact is that we still know little about its impact in the long run, especially when it comes to disposing of the waste it produces.

The reopening of long-abandoned coal mines in Australia, the US, Poland, Germany and the UK, among others, amounts to trying to use a bigger evil to deal with a lesser one.

Renewable energy sources such as solar, wind and others are still in their infancy and, provided current levels of investment and technological progress are maintained, could take decades to sustain the "modern world" as we know it.

Such radical ideas as "the end of obsession with economic growth" and a new culture of recycling are unlikely to secure the public support needed for a serious transition from one way of being to another.

In any case, history shows that civilizations based on recycling and no growth end up disappearing, the most glaring example being ancient Sumer.

Blaming the "big bad oil" may provide a ready excuse for the failure of political leadership, especially in the more powerful countries, to present the problem as one of building a different, hopefully more sustainable global lifestyle and not a collection of discrete issues such as the submersion of ocean islands and the spread of air pollution beyond the 300 or so mega-cities that are already poisoning their inhabitants.

Since the currently popular model took almost two centuries to take shape it would be naïve to expect an alternative to emerge with a few COP28-like gatherings and duplicitous pseudo-solutions such as the sale of "carbon offsets" by some nations to others.

Since the Paris Conference of 2015, those leading the "save the planet" crusade have opted for a piecemeal approach to a problem that, if it exists, cannot be solved by diplomatic gimmicks, fixing sectorial targets such as a maximum of 2 degrees increase in global warming by an arbitrary date, and the inevitable passing-of-the-buck game.

At the other end of the spectrum, eco-warriors are struck by short-termism by pretending that throwing paint at a Van Gogh in the National Gallery or blocking access to the metro in Paris are the best ways of inviting people to think of the transition that may have become inevitable.

Guess which industrial nation has had more success in reducing its carbon footprint, mainly by replacing classical cars with electric ones.

The answer is Norway. But it is also the world's fifth-largest exporter of oil and third-largest exporter of gas.

And, which country has the biggest solar-energy production? The answer is China, which is also the world's number one importer of oil.

Gauging the impact of "Big Bad Oil" isn't that simple.

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"Every man who loves peace, every man who loves his country, every man who loves liberty, ought to have it ever before his eyes, that he may cherish in his heart a due attachment to the Union of America, and be able to set a due value on the means of preserving it." —James Madison (1788) As Harry Truman said: "Show me a politician who got rich while in office, and I will show you a Crook."
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Sunday's Sermon

Source; Sent from a friend.... SNGLR

"[W]here is the security for property, for reputation, for life, if the sense of religious obligation deserts the oaths...Whatever may be conceded to the influence of refined education on minds of peculiar structure, reason and experience both forbid us to expect that National morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle." --George Washington

“When studied with any degree of thoroughness, the economic problem will be found to run into the political problem, the political problem in turn into the philosophical problem, and the philosophical problem itself to be almost indissolubly bound up at last with the religious problem…Religion and politics are inseparable, the decay of one most produce the decay of the other.”  

Dan Bell said: “Changes in moral temper and culture are not amendable to social engineering or political control. The ultimate sources are the religious conceptions which undergird a society.”  So, should our government be devoid of its traditional and historical religious influences. To do so would ignore that government consisting only of secular influences (or conversely also only religious ones) is not what the Establishment Clause in our founding documents wisely intended. Those documents recognized and understood that such an unequal mix is an aberration that leads to catastrophic results. The Clause intended only to “…make no law respecting an establishment of religion…” meaning only to prevent a particular denomination from achieving official sanction. It didn't preclude specific, proven and sound, religious principles, influences “…or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…” in government.  

Religion has been central to people’s lives for all of recorded history. This tangential relationship occasionally makes it appear that religion is the source of bad acts or results. It must be remembered that religion’s correlation to society is not proof of causations that occur in it. Rather, that correlation should point to the idea that the secular faith in democracy and material wealth is too weak, too vague, too societally enervating, to provide the post-Christian West with the spiritual steel it requires for survival. Democracy’s failures tend to prove that Enlightment ideals are not sufficient for the task.

Sound religion’s influence provides a primary safeguard for the commitment to the principles of freedom reached by reason. Without such a safeguard government too easily can alter, abrogate or destroy. Only such transcendent can insure our inalienable rights against the ever-changing tempest of human political will and fortune. Remove those religious influences and human nature fills the vacuum with a replacement religion of secularism, dangerous because it ultimate has no limits on the boundaries of its actions, other than the will and whim of those in power. Atheism’s unprecedented wars, both within and between nations, against religion during the 20th century alone stand as proof. Its predominant secular-based ideology resulted in 150 million killed, primarily by their own governments; billions enslaved, ecosystems polluted and whole nations plundered. Some alternative!

"Again and again, Americans find themselves at war with each other over public schooling. Yet furious conflict over religion in this country is almost unheard-of. ... So why does the endless variety of religious life in the United States lead to so little strife, while the strife over public schooling never seems to end? The answer is no mystery. America is a land of religious freedom, in which people decide for themselves what to believe and how to worship. No religion is funded by government. No church or synagogue has a state-supported monopoly. Elected officials have no say in the doctrines of any faith or the content of any religious service. Religion flourishes in America because church and state are separate. And it flourishes so peacefully because no one is forced to support anyone else's faith, or to attend a church he isn't happy with, or to bring up children according to the religious views of whichever faction has the most votes. Religion is peaceful because it is government-free. Liberate the schools, and they too would be at peace. Taxpayer-funded, one-curriculum-fits-all schooling makes conflict inevitable. There would be far less animosity if parents were as free to choose how and where their children learn as they are to choose how and where they worship. Separation of church and state has made America an exemplar of religious pluralism and tolerance. Imagine what separation of school and state could do for education." -- Jeff Jacoby

“Remember that the struggle against religion is a struggle for socialism”—Emilian Yaroslavsky (Pravada)

"Socialism, which cannot be established without a political police force, and not without stopping any form of dissent, is inseparably interwoven with totalitarianism and the abject worship of the state…Socialism is, in its essence, and attack upon the right of the ordinary man or woman to breathe freely without having a harsh, clumsy, tyrannical hand clapped across their mouths, nostrils, and throats."--Winston Churchill

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