Monday, May 26, 2025

Partisan Hacks Use School Bullying Study as Pretense to Bully Trump Supporters

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‘The assumption of these reports is that the election of Donald Trump stimulated an increase in bullying behavior…’

Tranny Advocates Push Agenda in Schools W/out Telling Parents
Photo by jglsongs (CC)

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) It’s a foregone conclusion that extreme liberal bias has not only infiltrated but taken over at many academic institutions.

Although college campuses have long been regarded as radical indoctrination centers, the effect is now trickling down to the nation’s primary and secondary schools. One source is the ludicrous education-school programs, typically required for teacher certification, that have given way almost entirely to promoting a progressive agenda and liberal pedagogical philosophy.

Case in point would be two educational “researchers” at the University of Virginia and University of Missouri who recently made it their mission to prove that the mean bully President Donald Trump, with his always one-sided—never reciprocated—rhetoric, was actively harming children while their deplorable parents were too busy reading the Daily Stormer to notice.

In a statistical study published this week in the American Educational Research Association‘s journal Educational Researcher, U.Va.’s Dewey G. Cornell and Missou’s Francis L. Huang analyzed school climate reports from 155,000 seventh- and eighth-grade students in Virginia over the years 2013, 2015 and 2017.

They wasted no time getting at their true purpose in looking at the data: “The assumption of these reports is that the election of Donald Trump stimulated an increase in bullying behavior.”

An Unjust Justification

Shockingly (or perhaps not), the researchers cited numerous other studies, including dispatches from notoriously partisan leftist groups like the National Education Association and the Southern Poverty Law Center, that also fixated on the same premise: Not only is Trump a bully, they aimed to prove, but his uncultured, uneducated supporters were aping his every move.

“[I]t seems likely that persons who share the president’s views and supported his election would be most likely to echo his statements and attitudes in their own behavior,” said the authors, without providing justification for this assumption.

They went on to mention Nazis and Russians—clearly the two most prevalent influences on Trumpist thought, because all their academic friends agree it’s so—and reached the conclusion that if the middle-schoolers in Trump-supporting districts were not themselves unrepentant racist bigots, gay-bashers and wife-beaters just yet, then certainly their parents must at least be. “It is plausible that some of these efforts affected adolescents or adults who had influence on adolescents, especially their parents.”

Manipulated Methodology

After the exercise in scholarly onanism that was their research justification, the pair finally got into the methodology. Their research was based on surveys of 100 questions on school climate that nearly all Virginia public school students (except for the ones in alternative programs) were compelled to complete—unless, at the discretion of the school, they decided they would rather select a sampling of students.

Their research went in two directions: first, could they use a district’s political leanings as a predictor for bullying; and second, could they observe any change in bullying levels in the data before and after the 2016 election.

They quickly concluded the obvious: that schools with whiter (i.e. more homogenized) and more rural populations—as well as those where parents had wisely avoided expensive university indoctrination centers and entered instead directly into the real world—tended to support Trump more.

There was a weaker correlation between affluence (measured by the number of students on the free-lunch program) and Republican support. However, the state’s (and also the country’s) wealthiest districts—including Loudoun, Fairfax, Arlington and Alexandria—happen to be in the exurbs of Washington, D.C., where they are able to profit immensely from a large, centralized federal government, one of the key tenets of a Democratic platform. Thus, wealth in Northern Virginia is directly linked, via taxing and spending, to the influence of the Left.

Throughout their analysis, the researchers made reference to their “adjusted” rates, having weighted certain demographic factors to distort the picture of bullying prevalence. The aim seemed to be finding ways to drive down the prevalence in blue districts—many of which had a larger and more diverse population—by disproportionately factoring “Republican” qualities into their correlation coefficient.

Faulty Findings

Naturally, in most of the manipulated data points they found moderate correlations and increases in affirmative responses over time to support their preordained conclusion that Trump was turning kids into bullies.

However, they surprisingly saw a major drop between 2015 and 2017 in teasing about sexual topics, despite the fact that many on the Left have attacked Trump as a misogynist.

Overall, the number of students in red districts who said bullying was a problem remained exactly the same before and after the election. The researchers dismissed this as a statistical anomaly. “Those results do not necessarily contradict our findings. If prevalence rates increased in some localities but decreased in others, there might be no overall change.”

But they acknowledged that despite their statistical acrobatics in adjusting and torquing certain variables, their findings lent only “modest” support to their initial assertions.

Ultimately, they were able to contort the data to link students’ self-reported perceptions of identity-based bullying with a district’s political leanings. “Specifically, students reported a higher prevalence of being bullied and were more likely to report observing that their peers were teased or put down because of their race or ethnicity.”

Even so, the reasons and circumstances behind the bullying remained purely speculative. “These findings are correlational and cannot establish a causal relationship,” they noted.

Lingering Questions

Was it that there was a greater prevalence of bullying or simply more awareness and reporting of it?

As media reports clamored about what a bully Trump was and the #MeToo movement waged a full-fledged assault on masculinity, as classroom teachers and administrators continued to cultivate students’ entitled snowflake mindset and researchers continued to ask if they were totally sure bullying wasn’t a problem, might those have created a trickle-down hypersensitivity to their own grievances?

How might other mitigating factors, such as affluence and homogeneity, have impacted bullying perceptions while removing politics from the equation?

Despite the assumption—without evidence—that it is Republican kids doing the bullying in those red districts, could it be that, mirroring the overall U.S. society, those on the Left simply became more vicious when in the minority?

Of course, the study also fails substantially in addressing what bullying in predominantly blue districts may look like.

Will the researchers conduct a similar examination after the recent midterm elections on the bullying language used by liberal extremists like Rep. Rashida Tlaib, or the violent mob mentality of Antifa—or will those data points once again be “adjusted” in their next study?

And let’s not forget the soft prejudice that went unreported on the survey: the frequency with which conservative or pro-Trump students—although less likely to feel targeted over demographic factors—are systemically discriminated against and bullied for their beliefs by many teachers in both liberal and conservative districts.

What might a statistical examination of the Universities of Virginia and Missouri reveal about the research institutions’ tolerance of dissenting beliefs versus the prevalence of intellectual bullying?

Contrived Conclusion

The conclusion of the report is to enthusiastically express support for the racist, Eric Holder-initiated policy—euphemistically titled “positive behavior intervention”—of refusing to suspend minority students and penalizing schools with higher minority suspension rates, regardless of reason.

Many teachers struggled with the radical shift in school-discipline enforcement, which undermined authority, leaving them saddled with negative behaviors and disruptive students who interfered with the learning environment. Is it possible that this change in policy from the Obama era, forcing disruptive students to remain classrooms, may have had more to do with the rise in bullying than the ascendance of Trump to the presidency?

Trump Education Secretary Betsy DeVos recently announced she was ending the Holder rule and again empowering the schools—rather than the Justice Department—to use their discretion in how best to address localized discipline matters.

Data-Driven Decline

The publisher of the study—and of many academic journals—is SAGE Publishing, whose founders, George and Sara McCune, are equally known for the foundation where they shovel money into pet causes such as open borders.

But increasingly, those academic journals are now being questioned over their vetting and screening methods—with several having been forced to retract fake articles—not to mention their prejudices against research conclusions that might counter the liberal dogma.

As issues such as climate-change have continually revealed, flawed and biased researchers often use their own form of bullying to arrive at the so-called scientific consensus.

Numbers are easy to manipulate, and false conclusions based off of specious variables are a dime a dozen. Until the researchers themselves can be trusted to maintain scholarly integrity, such politically motivated efforts as these only harm perceptions of scientific and academic research.

Trump Admin Quietly Readying for Another SCOTUS Fight

‘It would be a brutal confirmation…’

Justice Ginsburg's Sexism Charge Undercut By Scientific Poll
Ruth Bader Ginsburg/IMAGE: YouTube

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) After the knock-down, drag-out confirmation battle for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh nearly tore the nation asunder, the White House and Senate are preparing for another, potentially even more divisive, showdown.

The two GOP-led branches are cautiously conferring on a list of possible nominees—and urging allied groups to be prepared—if health concerns force the ailing Ruth Bader Ginsburg, 85, to leave the bench, Politico reported.

The names would be culled in part from Trump’s earlier shortlist, which included Seventh Circuit judge Amy Coney Barrett.

But with Democratic activists having anticipated a Kavanaugh nomination as early as 2012, there is a greater sense of urgency now to avoid being railroaded by any surprise tactics that the Left may have had ample time to formulate.

At the same time, the Republican leaders must tread carefully while Ginsburg is still recovering from her recent cancer surgery in order to avoid sparking the righteous indignation of well-organized and well-funded liberal radicals, who spent weeks protesting in and around Capitol Hill last fall.

“They’re doing it very quietly, of course, because the idea is not to be opportunistic, but just to be prepared so we aren’t caught flat-footed,” one anonymous source told Politico. 

Ginsburg, who took the unprecedented step of attacking Trump as a candidate, is unlikely to step down willingly, even if incapacitated, meaning the seat would become open only upon her death.

Chief Justice John Roberts said despite Ginsburg’s missing the start of oral arguments for the first time ever this week, she remained engaged in reading briefs, filings and a transcript of the proceedings.

Trump tweeted his well-wishes to her in December.

Bucking a long tradition in which members of the opposition party avoided partisan fights over Supreme Court appointments (with only a few prior exceptions from Senate Democrats), both of Trump’s replacements—Neil Gorsuch for the conservative Antonin Scalia, and Kavanaugh for the moderate Anthony Kennedy—were near party-line votes.

With Gorsuch, protestations over the denial of Obama nominee Merrick Garland forced Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to implement the nuclear option—a simple 50-vote majority rather than a 60-vote, filibuster-proof super-majority. Gorsuch eventually garnered 54 votes, with a handful of red-state Democrats breaking ranks.

The Kavanaugh vote was even tighter, with moderate Republicans being accosted and facing death threats for supporting the judge in the face of unsubstantiated, 30-year-old sexual-assault accusations. The 51–49 vote saw only one Democrat (Joe Manchin of West Virginia) and one Republican (Lisa Murkowski of Alaska) going against their caucuses.

John Malcolm, director of the Heritage Foundation’s Meese Center for Legal and Judicial Studies, told Politico that the fight to fill Ginsburg’s absence with any conservative would be worse yet. “It would be a brutal confirmation,” he said.

Although Republicans netted three Senate pickups in the recent midterm election, giving them a 54-vote majority, the fact that Ginsburg’s successor would likely be her ideological opposite—effectively picking up a seat—hearkens back, once again, to the last big confirmation battle of the pre-Trump era.

“[I]f you are replacing Justice Ginsburg with a Trump appointee, that would be akin to replacing Thurgood Marshall with Clarence Thomas,” Malcolm said. “It would mark a large shift in the direction of the court.”

Like the liberal civil rights icon Marshall, who retired for health reasons during the George H.W. Bush presidency, Ginsburg has been the subject of much adulation on the Left, including books, speaking tours and a recent Hollywood biopic.

Politico said many of the prospective nominees to replace Ginsburg were women, which theoretically would derail the likelihood of sexual-assault claims such as those faced by Justices Thomas and Kavanaugh.

Leftist intersectionality theory posits that it would be impossible for a member of a minority class (e.g. gender-identity, race, sexual orientation, citizenship status) to commit such an act of victimization—unless it were against a member of another minority group even higher on the grievance taxonomy.

But with Trump Derangement Syndrome at fever-pitch, even a transgender illegal alien nominated by the president would likely come under intense scrutiny, requiring both a spotless record and an unflappable demeanor.

Given the Left’s propensity for heated rhetoric and mob violence, owning a secured, well-stocked underground bunker might also be a plus for any jurist unfortunate enough to be nominated.

Weirdos Schumer and Pelosi Fall Flat in Effort to Pose as America’s Scolding Parents

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‘All they had to do is not look crazy…’

President Urges Americans to Contact Congress to Support Border Wall 1
Charles Schumer & Nancy Pelosi/IMAGE: YouTube

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) Under any of his predecessors, President Donald Trump’s televised Oval Office address Monday, presenting his case for a border crisis that warranted immediate executive action, would have seemed perfectly reasonable.

Instead, Trump’s own cult of personality—paired with the partisan media attacks and increasingly radicalized, obstructionist Democrats—turned it into something bordering on the surreal.

This was, in large part, due to the unprecedented move by opposition-party leaders to demand equal time for a rebuttal.

Although they may have upstaged the president, their effort to optically outmaneuver the former reality TV star proved instead to be an unmitigated disaster for the Left and pure gold for social-media meme lovers.

Squeezing behind a single podium, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., attempted to frame themselves as America’s concerned mom and dad reacting to Trump’s “temper tantrum.”

However, many instead saw the pair evoking everything from coerced hostages to Grant Wood‘s “American Gothic” to aliens and lizard-people.

As one Twitter user pointed out, their objective should have been a simple one:

Even liberals, more emboldened recently to espouse their true political intent, declared their exasperation with the wooden performance.

Paste magazine angrily charged that the duo had conceded the messaging battle by claiming—without justification—that Democrats supported tighter border security.

Pelosi “does not argue for the humanity of the poor people trying to cross into the United States, or condemn the bigotry of Trump’s attempt to paint them broadly as terrorists and rapists and murderers and every other species of criminal,” bemoaned Paste writer Shane Ryan. “Instead, Pelosi is appealing to the imagined beliefs of an ‘ordinary’ American…”

While some in the mainstream press continued to lay cover, such as NBC News — which egregiously used its “fact-checking” label for a blatant cheer-leading campaign — the groundswell of ridicule underscored the hollowness of the Left’s opposition to the wall.

Despite what may appear to be a losing proposition for Trump (he reportedly told the press Wednesday, “I didn’t want this fight”), some have speculated that the longtime deal-broker may have more strategy in sight than he is revealing.

Regardless, it is becoming increasingly clear that in digging in and doubling down, the president’s winning plan is mainly to let Democrats defeat themselves.

And as Twitchy reported, it appears to be working, with Cher on Wednesday becoming one of the first public figures to call on Congressional Democrats (in all caps) to stop the madness.

NC City Wants to Display Mangled Confederate Statue Like a ‘Perverse Trophy’

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‘Durham County officials have a long history of ignoring and, in many cases, breaking the laws … either in spirit or blatantly…’

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) As if tacitly encouraging protestors to vandalize public property weren’t enough, the city of Durham, N.C., added insult to injury by proposing that the mangled remnants of a Confederate monument be put on display, effectively celebrating the act of lawlessness.

Durham’s Committee on Confederate Monuments and Memorials formed last spring in response to the August 2017 mob-driven toppling of a statue outside the county courthouse.

On Tuesday, they presented their report to city and county officials, proposing that the damaged statue be displayed in the nearby County Administration Building, along with information recounting the tale of its destruction.

“We believe that the statue should be displayed in its current condition so that whole history of race relations and the fight for civil rights in Durham may in part be illuminated through this object,” said the commission.

Members of the Sons of Confederate Veterans responded by questioning the council’s motives and its supposed spirit of community inclusiveness.

“Durham County now is going to reward the mob’s verdict by refusing to repair and replace the statue according to the law, even though there is insurance money to pay for it,” the group said in a statement.

“Further, the crumpled metal, like some kind of perverse trophy for illegal behavior, will be ‘contextualized’ with historical inaccuracies and lies about its meaning and origin.”

They also pointed to the broader tradition in the community of skirting the law for the sake of partisan political whims.

“Durham County officials have a long history of ignoring and, in many cases, breaking the laws of North Carolina—either in spirit or blatantly,” said the SCV statement.

“One need only look at the many murder convictions that have been overturned and killers let free by official misconduct. Or in the cases of innocent people—such as the Duke Lacrosse players—being wrongfully charged with serious crimes, all in pursuit of political expediency.”

While the Duke lacrosse case made national headlines, other more recent episodes have continued fomenting racial strife and causing outrage—including recent allegations of election fraud long overlooked by state officials and the toppling of another Confederate statue, “Silent Sam,” at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

Although Takiyah Thompson, a leftist radical, was arrested for the toppling of the Durham statue, the felony charges against her and several co-conspirators were later dismissed.

She was reportedly seen on site for the destruction of the Chapel Hill statue.

Plans initially unveiled by UNC to house the “Silent Sam” statue in an off-site facility generated protests, most notably among a group of graduate teaching assistants who refused to submit student grades until their demands were met.

Law enforcement and other authorities have also been particularly cagey when it comes to illegal immigration.

In November, Immigration and Customs Enforcement met with community resistance for arresting a 47-year-old Mexican national with a criminal history who had been hiding out in a church for nearly a year to avoid deportation.

In adjacent Wake County, which encompasses the state capital, Raleigh, newly elected left-leaning Sheriff Gerald Baker, after refusing to cooperate with ICE, allowed a violent illegal immigrant accused of assaulting his domestic partner, to walk free in December.

Kasich Thrives in Role as Trump-Basher for Liberal Talk Circuit

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‘Since becoming one of the leading Republican foils for President Donald Trump, Kasich’s star has grown…’

John Kasich/IMAGE: CNN via Youtube

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) When it comes to NeverTrump Republicans, Ohio’s lame-duck Gov. John Kasich may not be the belle of the ball, but he can still make a pretty good living pooh–poohing the party leader on cable news shows.

An analysis by Cleveland.com showed a spike in Kasich’s appearances on five major Sunday talk shows in his second term as governor, up to and around his 2016 GOP presidential primary run, and continuing to flourish as he fashioned himself into a center–right critic of President Donald Trump.

“Since becoming one of the leading Republican foils for President Donald Trump, Kasich’s star has grown, and he’s devoted more and more time to national media appearances,” wrote the website’s Seth Richardson.

During his presidential run, between July 2015 and May 2016, Kasich made 42 appearances on the Sunday shows.

After a dip in the second half of 2016, as he presumably refocused himself on the task of running Ohio, Kasich’s appearances began to rise again, with 27 network segments in 2017 and 2018. No word on whether those were paid or unpaid appearances.

Kasich hosted the show “Heartland” on Fox News from 2001 to 2007, prior to his 2010 gubernatorial election, but curiously enough, his former network—and the one most often labeled as “conservative”—had him on the least both during and after the election.

His visits to Fox News since the 2016 election have numbered only three, while he has appeared on CNN’s “State of the Union” 12 times during that span.

Kasich has publicly mused that he may try to return to a regular television spot, likely as the Republican token on one of the left-skewing networks.

However, he is also continuing to weigh the possibility of another Republican primary challenge against Trump, or even a third-party run.

Either way, he will continue doing what he does best: undermining the Trump agenda while masquerading for the Left as a voice of reason.

The Cleveland.com report said the brand-conscious Kasich, who began promoting his cable news appearances on Twitter around 2017, received his top retweets from posts that took direct aim at criticizing the president.

Of course, Kasich has met with his own share of criticism from Ohioans who bemoan his absentee stewardship and indecisiveness.

A June 2018 poll by Quinnipiac University showed that he had a 57 percent favorable rating from Democrats in the state, compared with only 46 percent from Republicans.

Likewise, the majority of Ohio Democrats (52 percent) wanted Kasich to run for president against Trump in 2020, while a whopping 73 percent of Ohio Republicans opposed the idea.

Christian Bale Thanks Satan for His Award-Winning Role as Dick Cheney

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‘I can sink and ruin a perfectly good movie and a so–so career in one speech…’

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) A bold prediction for 2019: Christian Bale’s stock will soon plunge.

The actor, already notorious for his tyrannical on-set behavior, went off the deep end at Sunday’s Golden Globes, alienating a sizable market share with petty comments about former Vice President Dick Cheney, whom he portrayed in the movie Vice.

“Thank you to Satan for giving me inspiration on how to play this role,” he said.

Ironically, Bale—who was recently named the 11th most bankable star of 2018, with an average lifetime box-office gross of just under $91 million (driven largely by the “Dark Knight” franchise)—demonstrated remarkable self-awareness and prescience in his two-minute speech.

Immediately before taking the nuclear option on his career by going political, Bale thanked his wife for telling him “less is more” and reminding him that he “can sink and ruin a perfectly good movie and a so–so career in one speech.”

On Monday, Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., the daughter of the former veep, fired back on Twitter, reminding people of the Batman actor’s less-than-stellar personal code of conduct.

The Golden Globes is known for being a more free-wheeling, off-the-cuff alternative to the Academy Awards, evident from the ample bottles of Moet champagne on the tables at Sunday’s ceremony.

It also has been known for ginning up political controversy, as when Meryl Streep used the podium to attack President Donald Trump two years ago.

Many in the industry speculated that Streep hoped her virtue-signaling might give her an edge with Oscar voters in the Hollywood Foreign Press Association.

Ultimately, that effort fell short, although the rant did earn her a tweeted response from Trump.

The fallout from liberal grandstanding was apparent as last year’s awards ceremonies faced record declines in viewership. But apart from Bale’s speech, this year’s Golden Globes ceremony was, in fact, notably apolitical, perhaps suggesting behind-the-scenes pressure from producers to quell the ratings losses.

Some public figures in recent memory have found that political posturing can reap dividends when marketed properly. The controversy generated by Nike last year for hiring NFL anthem-kneeler Colin Kaepernick took the athletic-apparel company’s stocks to an all-time high by rebranding it to millennial consumers as both socially aware and anti-establishment.

In Hollywood, A-list stars such as Leonardo DiCaprio and Angelina Jolie who express cause-awareness that is generally benign—albeit  insufferably preachy—have been able to maintain their brand, whether in spite of or because of their political bent.

However, direct affronts on red-state viewers’ values and political sensibilities rarely pay off, particularly where hypocrisy is concerned.

After Jim Carrey mocked gun advocates in the wake of the Sandy Hook school shooting and refused to promote his violence-friendly movie “Kick-Ass 2,” his marketability plummeted, and the once prodigious comedian became essentially unbankable as a film star.

Likewise, gratuitous attempts at forcing progressive “wokeness” onto audiences have proven miscalculated, as revealed by 2016’s all-female “Ghostbusters” remake, which despite a $144 million production budget pulled only $128 million domestically (although it was able to recoup its losses in foreign receipts for a net gain of $85 million).

By contrast, conservative moviegoers have rewarded major releases that support their values, such as two of the top-grossing R-rated films of all time, Mel Gibson’s Passion of the Christ (net gain $581 million over production costs) and Clint Eastwood’s American Sniper (net gain $488 million over production costs).

Eastwood’s latest, The Mule, opened Dec. 14 and already has surpassed its $50 million production cost with about $80 million in total domestic receipts.

Bale’s Vice opened Christmas Day and thus far has pulled only around $30 million in the box office—half its estimated production cost.

But the Cheney biopic—which was unlikely to draw conservative audiences from the start, and tempered its expectations accordingly—is desperately hoping to court favor with its niche audience of leftist hatemongers in Tinseltown itself.

“The fate of Vice depends on how it fares with critics and moviegoers,” wrote IndieWire. “But no matter what happens in that arena (and the fate of [production company] Annapurna may hang in the balance, as this smart, angry liberal movie cost some $60 million), screen actors will give Bale and [Amy] Adams the love.”

It’s a risky gambit that may have necessitated Bale’s headline-grabbing Globes performance in order to generate the buzz it needs to become Oscar bait. But short of a Faustian deal with the devil, history says it will likely backfire, with potentially disastrous consequences for its leading man.

Appeals Court Tosses Injunction on Trump’s Transgender Military Ban

‘The far-Left was so busy cheerleading Barack Obama’s wave of social experimentation that they never stopped to ask how those policies were received by the people they affected most…’

Unelected Judge Overrides Trump's Transgender Military Policy
IMAGE: YouTube

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) A protracted legal battle over transgenders in the military took another step toward an inevitable Supreme Court showdown as a D.C. appeals court sided with Commander-in-Chief Donald Trump over the military assessments of activist liberal benches.

Although the appellate court overturned one lower court ruling, several other federal judges have also issued injunctions blocking Trump’s ban on transgender soldiers from taking effect.

Solicitor General Noel Francisco filed a request in November asking the Supreme Court to bypass the normal process in order to fast-track a decision on the four separate injunctions.

“The decisions imposing those injunctions are wrong, and they warrant this Court’s immediate review,” Francisco wrote.

Trump first put forward the idea after consulting with generals and military experts in July 2017, announcing it in a pair of tweets:

A month later, he issued a formal directive to the Pentagon. However, he quickly met with resistance from transgender activists and even opponents in his own party. Late Sen. John McCain came out against the ban, as did former Defense Sec. James Mattis.

Although a financial analysis determined that the Trump policy would save $8.4 million annually by breaking from the Obama-era approach of paying for service-people to have gender-reassignment operations, the judges said reversing the Obama protocol—which was first implemented in 2016—would be far too disruptive.

“There is absolutely no support for the claim that the ongoing service of transgender people would have any negative effect on the military at all,” District Judge Colleen Kollar–Kotelly ruled. “In fact, there is considerable evidence that it is the discharge and banning of such individuals that would have such effects.”

The service members “are already suffering harmful consequences such as the cancellation and postponements of surgeries, the stigma of being set apart as inherently unfit, facing the prospect of discharge and inability to commission as an officer, the inability to move forward with long-term medical plans, and the threat to their prospects of obtaining long-term assignments.”

The judges not only thwarted the outright ban, but even fought against other changes in policy, such as halting the recruitment of transgendered troops or ending the government funding of their sex-change surgeries.

The troops “are already suffering harmful consequences such as the cancellation and postponements of surgeries, the stigma of being set apart as inherently unfit, facing the prospect of discharge and inability to commission as an officer, the inability to move forward with long-term medical plans, and the threat to their prospects of obtaining long-term assignments,” said District Judge Marvin Garbis.

According to recent surveys, including one by Military Times, service members overwhelmingly support Trump, with his approval rating among active-duty troops triple that of Obama.

A poll by Smithsonian magazine of 1,031 service members said 61 percent of troops supported the transgender ban.

“The far-Left was so busy cheerleading Barack Obama’s wave of social experimentation that they never stopped to ask how those policies were received by the people they affected most,” wrote Tony Perkins for the religious values think-tank Family Research Council. “Now, two years into the Trump era of putting war-fighting first, new polls are showing just how relieved the rank and file are.”

Newly Sworn-In Rep. Tlaib: ‘We’re Gonna Impeach the Motherf***er’

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‘They only want to impeach me because they know they can’t win in 2020…’

Editors Note: This article contains profanity.

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) It would take an awful lot of disgraceful behavior to fill the shoes of former Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., the long-serving octogenarian congressman who resigned in 2017 amid shocking sexual harassment and misconduct allegations.

But his successor, Rashida Tlaib, seems poised to do just that—and is already off to a strong start.

In her first day on the job, Tlaib help set the tone for the 116th Congress and candidly revealed the Democratic majority’s chief legislative agenda by declaring of President Donald Trump, “[W]e’re gonna impeach the motherf***er.”

Tlaib was addressing a gathering of liberal activists with the group Move On when she made the remarks, according to Mediaite.

Prior to making the comments, she had spoken about the meaningfulness of being a role-model for young girls. “I cannot wait to inspire the next generation,” she said.

She also told the George Soros-backed organization, “For me it’s really about taking down these corporate billionaires.”

The impeachment remark was one of many such indicators from House Democrats, including newly elevated Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who, despite previous comments downplaying the possibility of partisan impeachment efforts, refused on Thursday to rule it out.

The drumbeat elicited a response from Trump, who said in a pair of tweets, “They only want to impeach me because they know they can’t win in 2020, too much success!”

Tlaib, a former state representative, ran with no significant opposition in Michigan’s 13th District, comprising the predominantly African–American outskirts of Detroit, and became the first Palestinian–American elected to Congress, as well as one of the first Muslim women. She was sworn in Thursday on Thomas Jefferson’s personal copy of the Quran.

However, those historic milestones in identity politics have been eclipsed by the negative press she has received for anti-Semitic rhetoric—as well as her virulent, often obscene attacks on Trump.

On the day after Christmas, Tlaib coarsely criticized the president over the death of a Guatemalan child in custody at the U.S.–Mexico border.

Although many Democrats during the campaign season tried to refocus their message away from the polarizing and risky impeachment talk, Tlaib ran openly with it as a central part of her platform.

In fact, she credited Trump’s election with being a “bat-signal” that caused her to run and first rose to prominence after heckling Trump at a rally, according to a CNN interview following her primary victory.

Shrewd Pelosi Forces First Official Flip-Flop for 19 Freshman House Dems

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‘It took nearly no time at all for these new members to succumb to the pressure from D.C. Democrats and break their promise…’

House Democrats Change the Rules, Make It Much Easier to Increase Taxes
Nancy Pelosi/IMAGE: CNN via Youtube

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) Although increasingly befuddled at times in recent years, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D.-Calif., proved shrewd enough to deftly navigate the political waters into a reprise role as the country’s third-most powerful person.

The 69-year-old San Francisco congresswoman not only garnered the surprise support of President Donald Trump—despite a tooth-and-nail battle over border-wall funding—in her bid to become speaker of the House, but she also was able to stave off challenges from the far-left by negotiating a package of rules changes and leadership positions in the new Congress.

In the end, 19 newly elected Democrats who made campaign pledges to oppose Pelosi’s push for speaker fell in line for the final tally, enabling Pelosi to defeat GOP Rep. Kevin McCarthy and claim the speaker’s gavel.

The conservative America Rising PAC made hay of their capitulation in a message to supporters. “Their constituents will be less than pleased to learn it took nearly no time at all for these new members to succumb to the pressure from D.C. Democrats and break their promise.”

Those who flip-flopped on their opposition to Pelosi were:

Two others who abstained by voting “present” were Elissa Slotkin and Jeff Van Drew.

America Rising also produced a short video montage showing the new congresspeople making their pledges.

McAuliffe’s 2020 Run a Throwback to Corrupt Clinton Politics

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‘In the history of American politics, there has never been a gubernatorial candidate more embroiled in political scandal and questionable financial dealings than Terry McAuliffe…’

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) Those hoping the Clinton era ended with the 2016 election may have to wait a little longer.

Even if on-again, off-again contender Hillary Clinton ultimately decides not to try for a third time, one of the Clintons’ closest allies, former Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, confirmed on Sunday what many have long assumed.

The one-time fundraiser and all-around henchman for the Clintons told Dana Bash on CNN’s “State of the Union” that he now has his own aspirations for the Oval Office—not to mention the White House’s lucrative Lincoln Bedroom.

“I’m obviously looking at it,” McAuliffe said. “I’ve got time. I’ve got a lot of great relationships. I have 40 years of working for this party.”

‘Sharp Elbows’

Although McAuliffe declined to outright declare his candidacy, he offered a preview of his sales pitch, touting his executive experience as Virginia governor, as well as his extensive Rolodex from previous stints as a fundraiser and chair of the Democratic National Committee.

“People want politicians to get results,” he said. “That’s why I think governors are always important. We have to balance budgets. We have to build roads. We have to clean the roads. We have to fund education. Very results-oriented.”

However, McAuliffe’s long record of involvement in Democratic politics may also be a liability.

Although he—and others in the media echo chamber—will no doubt emphasize his ability to turn a previously red state into solid-blue territory and attempt to paint him as a fiscally conservative moderate, McAuliffe is far from it.

Even The Washington Post in analyzing his CNN ‘audition tape’ seemed to acknowledge that among McAuliffe’s biggest assets to the party was his bag of dirty tricks. “Democrats may not be keen on McAuliffe—for a host of good reasons,” it said. “But they need to embrace his message: optimism, realism and a couple of sharp elbows.”

A Slimy Legacy

As with all things Clinton-related, McAuliffe’s main legacy as Virginia governor was the slimy residue he left behind.

Many of his top priorities, in fact, focused on securing the state for Clinton during the 2016 race, if not serving his own personal interests.

Among his signature achievements, McAuliffe boasted of restoring the voting rights of 200,000 felons. To do so, he proudly circumvented the state legislature through executive action—and persevered despite a scathing opinion from the state supreme court that he grossly overstepped his clemency powers.

For McAuliffe, who narrowly won in Virginia by a margin of only 56,000 votes—his lead coming, suspiciously, from a single county in the twilight hours of the vote tabulation—the extra cushion of Democratic voters from the prison-to-polling-station pipeline was merely one piece of the puzzle.

Despite clear evidence of thousands of illegal immigrants casting ballots in the state, he also repeatedly vetoed voter reform efforts and pressured jurisdictions not to cooperate with watchdog groups seeking to inspect the tainted voter rolls.

McAuliffe also was instrumental in helping Eric Holder’s National Democratic Redistricting Committee and lawyers representing the national Democratic party use courts to bypass the state legislature and redraw districts to favor Democrats, resulting in several congressional seats flipping blue in the 2018 midterm.

And he was at the heart of the FBI’s bias scandal, functioning as a middleman for the Clintons once again by providing $675,288 in payments through political action committees to fund the 2015 state Senate campaign of Jill McCabe while her husband, FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, was helping oversee the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s private email server.

Dark Money

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Ken Cuccinelli/Photo by Gage Skidmore (CC)

Another advantage of McAuliffe’s in securing the Virginia governor’s mansion was the influx of dark money.

“In the history of American politics, there has never been a gubernatorial candidate more embroiled in political scandal and questionable financial dealings than Terry McAuliffe,” said Chris LaCivita, a strategist for McAuliffe’s GOP opponent, Ken Cuccinelli.

With help from billionaire donors including Tom Steyer and Michael Bloomberg, McAuliffe was able to raise and spend nearly twice that of Cuccinelli in the Virginia race.

But with both Steyer and Bloomberg eyeing their own 2020 presidential bids, McAuliffe may instead have to put in some calls to his old friends in China.

If McAuliffe were to take on Trump, though, his days as a Clinton bundler and his partnerships with foreign nationals would surely be scrutinized.

Clinton Foundation

McAuliffe, who previously served on the board of the Clinton Foundation, was reportedly investigated after his gubernatorial campaign received more than $13 million from 120 donors to the foundation, including $120,000 from one communist Chinese billionaire, whom he met at the Clintons’ home in Washington, D.C.

Oddly enough, the FBI probe went nowhere.

McAuliffe defended the Clintons’ suspicious fundraising activity in a 2015 interview with The Washington Post: “If the biggest attack on Hillary’s going to be that she raised too much money for her charity, okay, I’ll take that,” he said. “No one’s alleging anything beyond that she raised money and people gave her money and foreign governments gave her money. At the end of the day, that’s fine. It went to a charity. It helped a lot of people.”

Since then, however, many other allegations against the Clinton Foundation have cropped up. Most recently, a hearing by the House Judiciary and Oversight committees revealed that the Clintons frequently blurred the lines between their charity and personal interests, and likely used foundation money given by foreign entities during Hillary Clinton’s tenure as secretary of State to effectively operate an unregulated slush fund for her 2016 campaign.

Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton, testifying at the congressional hearing, said, “There’s no wall of separation between the Clinton Foundation and the Department of State. It’s so bad that the crown prince [of Saudi Arabia] couldn’t get a meeting with Mrs. Clinton through the State Department, so he went to the Clinton Foundation.”

Chinagate

Bill and Hillary Clinton Kickstart Speaking Tour to Empty Audience
Bill & Hillary Clinton/IMAGE: YouTube

When it comes to shady foreign dealings, the Clinton Foundation was but the tip of the iceberg for McAuliffe.

He also was a key figure in the “Chinagate” controversy—an elaborate pay-to-play operation during Bill Clinton’s 1996 campaign that some have called the most serious scandal in American history.

At its heart, the scheme involved the transfer of sensitive U.S. missile and satellite technology to the Chinese in return for millions of dollars in campaign contributions.

McAuliffe worked closely with Loral Space and Communications, a company that lobbied on behalf of the Chinese—and whose chairman, Bernard Schwartz, was a top Democratic donor.

While nearly 100 people fled the country or took the Fifth in the aftermath—and Commerce Secretary Ron Brown, whose department was deeply involved, tragically died in a plane crash during the proceedings—the scandal was largely overlooked by the media.

GreenTech

McAuliffe—along with business partner Tony Rodham, brother to Hillary Clinton—also was at the center of an Obama-era scam involving electric-car company GreenTech, which faced multiple investigations and allegations that it abused a special visa program to give permanent residency to its Chinese investors.

The Free Beacon reported that the business received special treatment from the Department of Homeland Security due to McAuliffe’s “persistent and obnoxious” lobbying. DHS Deputy Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas wrote that after attempting to deny visas to GreenTech investors he received several voicemails from McAuliffe that were “laced with expletives at a high volume.”

McAuliffe resigned from the company prior to his 2013 gubernatorial run, and GreenTech subsequently declared bankruptcy after coming under fire from Watchdog.org.