PROACTIVE: This North Carolina County Has Decided To Hire Armed Security Guards For Every Public School

One county in western North Carolina has reacted pro-actively to the Florida school shooting on Valentine’s Day, deciding to hire and assign armed security guards in every public school.

In Henderson County, where 14,000 students are part of the school system, officials said people with law enforcement or military backgrounds will serve at all 23 schools starting in the 2018-19 school year. School board chairwoman Amy Lynn Holt stated, “Henderson County has always been a sleepy little town. We’ve not felt like we’re threatened here. Well, we have to start acting like we’re threatened.”

Henderson County differs from neighboring counties which are using volunteer school resource officers; Stanly County will start using volunteer school resource officers in April at four elementary schools. As the News & Observer notes, “Johnston County is also considering the possibility of using armed volunteers, while the Rockingham County sheriff wants to use armed volunteers in his county’s schools.”

Henderson County Sheriff Charles McDonald said it would be difficult to find enough volunteers “to be able to hold the kind of standards that we want,” adding that the armed security guards won’t be sworn law enforcement officers, but still have to be vetted the way deputies are, as well as go through psychological testing.

Henderson County Manager Steve Wyatt echoed, “As the sheriff alluded to, you can’t just pick people off the street.”

McDonald concluded, “The consensus here from the Henderson County populace is that we need security people to do security. We need teachers to be able to teach.”

via Daily Wire

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Obama machine getting nervous about Facebook’s response to Cambridge Analytica

Cass Sunstein, a former White House advisor in the Obama administration (and husband of Samantha Power) is warning Democrats “not to overreact” to the news about Cambridge Analytica’s supposed spying on Americans via Facebook, and Facebook’s effort to clamp down on usage of the data from the people who buy it from them. In a column in Bloomberg, Sunstein writes:


The horrendous actions by Cambridge Analytica, a voter profiling company, and Aleksander Kogan, a Russian-American researcher, raise serious questions about privacy, social media, democracy and fraud.



Amidst the justified furor, one temptation should be firmly resisted: for public and private institutions to lock their data down, blocking researchers and developers from providing the many benefits that it promises – for health, safety, and democracy itself.


He adds:


But let’s not overreact. Authorized use of that data can do a great deal of good.


He cites other apps that spy on Americans that can improve health care and income inequality, as well as observe congressional behavior as arguments to not shut all of the data-mining down. These are red flags all by themselves, since we all know how Democrats use health care data and what their solutions are to income inequality. But never mind that.


Obviously, as a far-left Democrat operative in the Obama inner circle, Sunstein’s argument to not overreact, plus his involvement in Facebook as an advisor, which he discloses at the bottom of his piece, suggests strongly that Democrats have a stake in the spying on voters, too. As they see Cambridge Analytica get sanctioned over all the hypocritical outcry, they know that their ox is up to get gored next. And they are feeling flop sweat, given their long history of manipulating social media data. What’s known is described very well in this Investor’s Business Daily editorial that we linked here.


If you are not paying, you are not the customer, so the saying goes. Since nobody pays for Facebook, we know they make their money other ways, and data-mining, which is especially practiced by the left, is a big way. You can’t explain some of their victories in recent elections without suspecting they have an expert operation going on.


Sunstein in particular is worth looking at. Back in his Obama days, he led an operation called “Nudge” as a means of lightly coercing consumers to buy the kinds of products the central planners wanted them to buy, viewing buyers as sheep.


Here is the Investor’s Business Daily editorial I wrote about Sunstein’s brainchild a few years back:


Government: In a bid to make Americans do “what’s good for them,” Obama administration social engineers have come up with a “Nudge” program to manipulate public choices. This won’t end well.


According to a report by Fox News, the federal government is hiring a “behavioral insights team” to study ways to subtly influence citizen behavior through “choice architecture.”


The idea is the brainchild of former White House adviser Cass Sunstein and led by a 26-year-old White House aide who’s recruiting like-minded academics.


On paper, the intentions might sound good to some. The claim is that by mastering the nudge, government can get the public to stop eating fatty food, lose weight, quit smoking and, who knows, maybe save the whales.


But it’s bound to go bad fast, in at least three directions.


So as Sunstein suddenly calls on Democrats not to overreact to Facebook’s clampdown, which is the result of their hysteria, it’s worth noting that his game has always been about manipulating voters himself and obviously, he wants as much space to do it as possible. No wonder he wants Democrats to restrain themselves on their fury at Facebook. His rice bowl seems to be threatened.



Rice Bowl // Credit: Guilhem Velut / Flickr / Creative Commons 2.0 Generic


Cass Sunstein, a former White House advisor in the Obama administration (and husband of Samantha Power) is warning Democrats “not to overreact” to the news about Cambridge Analytica’s supposed spying on Americans via Facebook, and Facebook’s effort to clamp down on usage of the data from the people who buy it from them. In a column in Bloomberg, Sunstein writes:


The horrendous actions by Cambridge Analytica, a voter profiling company, and Aleksander Kogan, a Russian-American researcher, raise serious questions about privacy, social media, democracy and fraud.


Amidst the justified furor, one temptation should be firmly resisted: for public and private institutions to lock their data down, blocking researchers and developers from providing the many benefits that it promises – for health, safety, and democracy itself.


He adds:


But let’s not overreact. Authorized use of that data can do a great deal of good.


He cites other apps that spy on Americans that can improve health care and income inequality, as well as observe congressional behavior as arguments to not shut all of the data-mining down. These are red flags all by themselves, since we all know how Democrats use health care data and what their solutions are to income inequality. But never mind that.


Obviously, as a far-left Democrat operative in the Obama inner circle, Sunstein’s argument to not overreact, plus his involvement in Facebook as an advisor, which he discloses at the bottom of his piece, suggests strongly that Democrats have a stake in the spying on voters, too. As they see Cambridge Analytica get sanctioned over all the hypocritical outcry, they know that their ox is up to get gored next. And they are feeling flop sweat, given their long history of manipulating social media data. What’s known is described very well in this Investor’s Business Daily editorial that we linked here.


If you are not paying, you are not the customer, so the saying goes. Since nobody pays for Facebook, we know they make their money other ways, and data-mining, which is especially practiced by the left, is a big way. You can’t explain some of their victories in recent elections without suspecting they have an expert operation going on.


Sunstein in particular is worth looking at. Back in his Obama days, he led an operation called “Nudge” as a means of lightly coercing consumers to buy the kinds of products the central planners wanted them to buy, viewing buyers as sheep.


Here is the Investor’s Business Daily editorial I wrote about Sunstein’s brainchild a few years back:


Government: In a bid to make Americans do “what’s good for them,” Obama administration social engineers have come up with a “Nudge” program to manipulate public choices. This won’t end well.


According to a report by Fox News, the federal government is hiring a “behavioral insights team” to study ways to subtly influence citizen behavior through “choice architecture.”


The idea is the brainchild of former White House adviser Cass Sunstein and led by a 26-year-old White House aide who’s recruiting like-minded academics.


On paper, the intentions might sound good to some. The claim is that by mastering the nudge, government can get the public to stop eating fatty food, lose weight, quit smoking and, who knows, maybe save the whales.


But it’s bound to go bad fast, in at least three directions.


So as Sunstein suddenly calls on Democrats not to overreact to Facebook’s clampdown, which is the result of their hysteria, it’s worth noting that his game has always been about manipulating voters himself and obviously, he wants as much space to do it as possible. No wonder he wants Democrats to restrain themselves on their fury at Facebook. His rice bowl seems to be threatened.



Rice Bowl // Credit: Guilhem Velut / Flickr / Creative Commons 2.0 Generic






via American Thinker Blog

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Trump’s EPA Chief Planning to Openly Debate Climate Change

It was “absolutely false” the White House shot down plans for a public debate on global warming science, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt said Monday.

The concept of a “red team, blue team exercise” had “evolved” since he first proposed it last year, Pruitt said.

“Don’t believe everything you read,” Pruitt told The Daily Caller News Foundation.

White House chief of staff John Kelly “killed” the effort before any public announcements could be made, The New York Times reported March 9. Kelly “considered the idea ‘dead’ and not to be discussed further,” White House officials said at a mid-December 2017 meeting, The Times reported.

White House officials derailed a public red-blue team exercise, while they suggested alternate routes, an E&E News follow up report claimed. The exercise has indeed “evolved,” Pruitt told TheDCNF.

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Reports of White House opposition to his red-blue team debates were “absolutely false,” Pruitt added, echoing comments he made before Congress in January.

“The red team, blue team exercise has evolved a little bit,” Pruitt explained to TheDCNF. “We’ve been working diligently over the last several months to determine the best way forward to encourage this open, honest, transparent debate about these very important issues. The American people deserve that, frankly, they deserve it.”

“If some believe that CO2 poses an existential threat to mankind, they think it’s more important than North Korea — they do, don’t they?” Pruitt asked. “If that’s the case, I want to know it.”

“Let us make sure that there’s an honest discussion about that,” Pruitt continued. “Let’s go into this and actually have an open mind about what we know and what we don’t know. That’s something we’re working on, we’ll continue to work on, and preferably have some answers on that soon as well.”

Do you think man-made climate change is a threat to humanity?

Pruitt suggested a red-blue team-style exercise to debate climate science last year, echoing former Obama Energy Department official Steven Koonin, who advocated for such an exercise in The Wall Street Journal.

The military uses red-blue team exercises to expose vulnerabilities in strategic plans. President Donald Trump embraced Pruitt’s call for such debates, according to reports, as well as scientists skeptical of catastrophic global warming.

Scientists claiming to be part of the “consensus” and environmentalists oppose red-blue team debates, arguing they will be used to discredit climate science.

Pruitt did not go into detail on how exactly the red-blue team exercise had “evolved,” but E&E’s report suggested EPA could take comments on the endangerment finding.

RELATED: Bombshell Video Shows Obama Team Bragging About Exploiting Facebook

White House officials told EPA staffers they could review the 2009 endangerment finding, taking public comments on the state of climate science, E&E reported. The endangerment finding was issued under the Obama administration and gives EPA legal cover to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.

In fact, Pruitt had concerns over how the Obama administration finalized the 2009 endangerment finding so quickly, utilizing United Nations assessments instead of EPA-generated studies, he said.

“I think the process most definitely was a process that was abused,” Pruitt told TheDCNF.

“Anytime that this agency, or any agency, that would go to a third party, like the UN — in that case the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change — and took the work product of the IPCC and then transferred it to this agency and used that as the basis by which the decision was made, that’s a breach of process, in my view,” Pruitt added.

The George W. Bush administration began the endangerment finding in 2008 but dragged its feet, allowing the Obama administration to take it up in 2009 and quickly turn around a finding carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases threatened public health.

Conservative groups have petitioned Pruitt to reconsider the endangerment finding, citing reports from independent researchers arguing global warming is overblown and relies on flawed climate models.

Pruitt did not say whether or not he would reconsider the finding but tied the matter to the larger issue of transparency in science EPA relies on to issue regulations.

“I think what’s important there — and that’s what drives this discussion that I’ve been focused on over the last four or five or six months on ensuring that there’s an objective, transparent discussion on what do we know and what don’t we know with respect to CO2,” Pruitt said.

“How do we know what the ideal surface temperature should be in the year 2100, looking out 82 plus years, right? It’s a fair question, right? Particularly if you’re basing policy on it now,” Pruitt noted.

A version of this article appeared on The Daily Caller News Foundation website.

What do you think? Scroll down to comment below!

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California sheriff slams ‘spectacular failures’ of his state’s immigration policies

As tensions between federal immigration agents and local authorities escalate over California’s sanctuary law, one sheriff harshly criticized his state’s approach to illegal immigration during a White House meeting Tuesday, KOVR-TV reports.

What happened?

Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones spoke at an immigration enforcement forum at the White House, also attended by President Donald Trump, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Thomas Homan.

Here’s what Jones said:

  • Jones called California “ground zero for the sanctuary state.”
  • He said his deputies don’t perform immigration enforcement, as he would prefer that be left to ICE.
  • Jones said California sanctuary law allows more dangerous criminals on the streets, and that the law does not work.
  • “There are spectacular failures every single day around California, and I’m sure beyond, of folks that ICE wants as part of their priority,” Jones said.
  • Jones said the murder of Sacramento deputy Danny Oliver at the hand of illegal immigrant Luis Bracamontes “started my personal journey and passion toward immigration enforcement.”

California law prevents law enforcement from sharing certain information about people with federal immigration agents, making it more difficult for ICE to operate.

The mayor refuses to respond

Asked about the scathing comments from Jones, Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg didn’t have much to say.

“When a politician grandstands in such a way, it’s not worth dignifying with a comment,” Steinberg said.

via TheBlaze.com – Stories

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Austin Bombing Suspect Blows Himself Up to Avoid Arrest

The city of Austin, Texas may be able to exhale a bit early this morning after a man suspected of conducting a serial mail bomb spree blew himself to smithereens as authorities closed in.

The man was identified by surveillance video from the FedEx store that he shipped an explosive device from that later detonated at one of the shipping giant’s Austin facilities.

According to reports, the individual is as of this point unidentified and he died in the hotel that he was traced to. Details are still sketchy at this early point as they often are with stories like this.

Via the Austin American-Statesman “Austin bombing suspect dies as police close in, official says”:

The suspect in a string of bombings in Austin is dead, interim Austin Police Chief Brian Manley confirmed early Wednesday.

Investigators identified several leads but the case really broke in the past 24 to 36 hours, Manley said.

The chief described how authorities tracked down the suspect’s vehicle to a Round Rock-area hotel. Police began following the suspect’s vehicle, and as SWAT approached, the suspect detonated a bomb in the car, Manley said.

The suspect’s name has not been released, pending notification of his family, Manley said.

Earlier: A man whom authorities were attempting to arrest early Wednesday in a string of bombing attacks in Austin killed himself with an explosive device as authorities closed in, a high-ranking law enforcement official told the American-Statesman.

The official said authorities identified a suspect in the past 24 hours based largely on information gained after police said the suspect shipped an explosive device from a FedEx store in Sunset Valley, a suburb surrounded by Austin. That evidence included security video.

Authorities also relied upon store receipts showing suspicious transactions from the person and obtained a search warrant for his Google search history that showed him conducting searches they considered suspicious, the official said.

Authorities relied upon cell phone technology to trace the suspect to a hotel in Williamson County, the official said.

Four bombs have exploded in Austin since March 2, killing two men and injuring four people. A fifth bomb exploded early Tuesday at a FedEx sorting facility in Schertz, about 60 miles southwest of Austin. A package containing what was believed to be an unexploded bomb was found Tuesday at a FedEx distribution center in Austin. Authorities believe the FedEx packages were sent from the FedEx retail store in Sunset Valley.

It has yet to be confirmed whether all bombs can be traced to him or just those mailed from the FedEx location where he made the mistake of being caught on video at.

This is a developing story….

via Downtrend.com

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Resource Officer Blaine Gaskill: The Good Guy with a Gun Who Stopped MD High School Shooter

Resource Officer Blaine Gaskill: The Good Guy with a Gun Who Stopped MD High School Shooter



The good guy with a gun who stopped the Maryland High School shooter Tuesday was 34-year-old Resource Officer and Deputy First Class Blaine Gaskill.

Gaskill ran toward Great Mills High School, shooting at the alleged attacker — 17-year-old Austin Wyatt Rollins — and ending the incident.

The New York Post reports that St. Mary’s County Sheriff Tim Cameron said, “[Gaskill] had to cover significant ground. The premise is simple: You go to the sound of gunfire.” CNN quoted Cameron saying, “[Deputy First Class] Gaskill fired at the shooter … almost simultaneously as the shooter fired. This is something we train, practice and in reality, hope would never come to fruition. This is our worst nightmare.”

Because of Gaskill’s swift action, the “entire incident” lasted less than a minute. Sadly, two students were shot and injured, one critically, before Gaskill was able to end Rollins’ attack.

On November 5, 2017, a  good guy with a gun likewise ended the heinous attack on First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, Texas. That good guy, Stephen Willeford, grabbed an AR-15 and ran toward the sound of gunfire upon learning the attack was underway. Once at the church, he took up a defensive position and shot at the attacker, striking him and causing him to flee.

The NRA has long contended that “the only the thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.”

AWR Hawkins is an award-winning Second Amendment columnist for Breitbart News, the host of the Breitbart podcast Bullets with AWR Hawkins, and the writer/curator of Down Range with AWR Hawkins, a weekly newsletter focused on all things Second Amendment, also for Breitbart News. He is the political analyst for Armed American Radio. Follow him on Twitter: @AWRHawkins. Reach him directly at awrhawkins@breitbart.com. Sign up to get Down Range at breitbart.com/downrange.

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Parkland shooting victims’ families supporting STOP School Violence Act

If you spend much of your time watching the coverage of the upcoming March for our Lives event and the rest of the fallout from the Florida school shooting last month, you might think that David Hogg (one of the students from the school) was the voice of the community. He’s been everywhere in the media, essentially declaring war on the NRA and calling for strict gun control measures. So he must be representative of most of the survivors and their families, right?

Not really. In fact, when it comes to the families who actually lost children in the attack, they’ve been working behind the scenes on something else and actually producing results. Florida Governor Rick Scott recently signed the Marjory Stoneman Douglas Public Safety Act, with the near unanimous support of those families. They’re also working on similar legislation at the national level in the form of the Students, Teachers, and Officers Preventing (STOP) School Violence Act which has drawn broad, bipartisan support. Unlike the weapons ban measures supported by Hogg and his many media cheerleaders, this measure focuses on real solutions, including the creation of Threat Assessment Teams (TATs) which will train students, teachers, and resource officers to respond to threats against schools. It would also enhance school security measures and allow for anonymous reporting of potential threats.

Hogg appears to be of the same opinion as the father of Stoneman Douglas student Cameron Kasky, who called the bill “a hot steaming pile of NRA crap.” And, of course, those are the quotes which draw all the applause on MSNBC. But in the background, the families of those most affected by the attack are onboard. As Sarah Rumpf explained at Redstate this week, those parents signed a letter supporting the new Florida legislation instead of reflexively rejecting it and asking for gun bans.

The letter is signed by family members representing thirteen of the seventeen people killed at Stoneman Douglas High, but as Ryan Petty, whose 14-year-old daughter Alaina was among those killed, told me earlier tonight, the sentiments expressed in the letter do reflect the wishes of all seventeen families.

As Petty explained, all seventeen families signed a similar letter and voiced their support regarding Florida’s Senate Bill 7026, which contained several provisions to which some of them objected, like the school marshal program.

Still, these seventeen families felt that the overall bill would have a positive impact, and were united in their support for it. Scott signed the bill into law earlier this month.

Some of the parents may not have been fully behind a few of the provisions, but they obviously felt that these measures represent progress. But since they’re not out there demanding a renewed “assault weapons” ban or starting a fight with the NRA, they don’t get invited to very many cable news discussion panels.

This is yet another illustration of how the narrative playing out in the mainstream media doesn’t reflect the underlying reality. The Parkland shooting was a tragedy and if something constructive can come of it we should all have cause be thankful. Unfortunately, it’s being deployed as a weapon of mass media narrative in the effort to force new gun control laws on the country, so opponents of more common sense measures are largely the only voices you hear.

The post Parkland shooting victims’ families supporting STOP School Violence Act appeared first on Hot Air.

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John Brennan: Deep State Political Hack

Considering that John Brennan once proudly admitted that he voted for Communist Party leader Gus Hall and openly supports liars and perjurers like Andrew McCabe, James Clapper, and James Comey, he redefines chutzpah when in a tweet he describes President Trump in words that sound as though they were plagiarized from FBI lead investigator Peter Strzok:


When the full extent of your venality, moral turpitude, and political corruption becomes known, you will take your rightful place as a disgraced demagogue in the dustbin of history.  You may scapegoat Andy McCabe, but you will not destroy America… America will triumph over you.



The only “disgraced demagogues” in this scenario are John Brennan; James Clapper; Andrew McCabe; James Comey; Peter Strzok; and, yes, Rod Rosenstein and Robert Mueller, all parties in a political resistance whose purpose was to keep Hillary Clinton out of prison and Donald Trump out of the White House.  And John Brennan dares to talk about political corruption?


So much for an apolitical intelligence community that is supposed to gather intelligence on and about America’s enemies to guarantee the safety and security of the United States, its people, and the leaders they have democratically elected.  Brennan’s venomous tweet, like Strzok’s infamous text messages to his lover and co-conspirator in the FBI, Lisa Page, show the depth of the political corruption infesting an intelligence community that conspired to interfere in our elections to deny Donald Trump the presidency.  Brennan and his colleagues are supposed to serve the president, not conspire against him.


John Brennan, like Clapper, McCabe, and Comey, is a liar for whom ideological goals overrule political morality and personal honor.  The mind harkens back to the day when an op-ed in the Washington Post, that right-wing rag, called for Brennan to be fired for conducting illegal surveillance of the Senate Intelligence Committee and then lying about it:


Brennan was asked by NBC’s Andrea Mitchell whether the CIA had illegally accessed Senate Intelligence Committee staff computers “to thwart an investigation by the committee into” the agency’s past interrogation techniques.  The accusation had been made earlier that day by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), who said the CIA had “violated the separation-of-powers principles embodied in the United States Constitution.” Brennan answered:


As far as the allegations of, you know, CIA hacking into, you know, Senate computers, nothing could be further from the truth.  I mean, we wouldn’t do that. I mean, that’s – that’s just beyond the – you know, the scope of reason in terms of what we would do. …


And, you know, when the facts come out on this, I think a lot of people who are claiming that there has been this tremendous sort of spying and monitoring and hacking will be proved wrong.


(You can see the video of Brennan’s answer here.)


Now we know that the truth was different.  The Post’s Greg Miller reports:


CIA Director John O. Brennan has apologized to leaders of the Senate Intelligence Committee after an agency investigation determined that its employees improperly searched computers used by committee staff to review classified files on interrogations of prisoners. …


A statement released by the CIA on Tuesday acknowledged that agency employees had searched areas of that computer network that were supposed to be accessible only to committee investigators.  Agency employees were attempting to discover how congressional aides had obtained a secret CIA internal report on the interrogation program.


This is reminiscent of the way James Clapper similarly perjured himself before Congress, a felony for which the statute of limitations just ran out.  As U.S. News and World Report noted, his resignation didn’t assuage critics, who believe that Clapper, like other Obama administration personnel, dodged a perjury bullet when he testified before Congress on the issue of NSA surveillance of American citizens:


Some lawmakers reacted to the long-expected resignation announcement from Director of National Intelligence James Clapper on Thursday by wishing him an eventful retirement, featuring prosecution and possible prison time.


The passage of more than three years hasn’t cooled the insistence in certain quarters that Clapper face charges for an admittedly false statement to Congress in March 2013, when he responded, “No, sir” and “not wittingly” to a question about whether the National Security Agency was collecting “any type of data at all” on millions of Americans.


About three months after making that claim, documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealed the answer was untruthful and that the NSA was in fact collecting in bulk domestic call records, along with various internet communications.


To his critics, Clapper lied under oath, a crime that threatens effective oversight of the executive branch.  In an apology letter to lawmakers, however, Clapper said he gave the “clearly erroneous” answer because he “simply didn’t think of” the call-record collection.


Clapper later told MSNBC he considered the question akin to asking, “When did you stop beating your wife?” and so gave the “least untruthful” answer.


Critics who say President-Elect Donald Trump has no right to disparage our good and faithful intelligence servants or to be skeptical of the intelligence they gather might be willing to accept “least untruthful” answers, but others are not.


As for John Brennan, there is another scenario as plausible as the one saying Team Trump, and perhaps President Trump himself, colluded with the Russians.  It is that John Brennan himself colluded with the Russians to help Hillary win to guarantee his continued tenure as CIA director.  It involves the infamous anti-Trump dossier compiled by former British spy Christopher Steele, used by Brennan and others as a pretext for a Trump investigation bonanza.  As the American Spectator reported:


An article in the Guardian last week provides more confirmation that John Brennan was the American progenitor of political espionage aimed at defeating Donald Trump.  One side did collude with foreign powers to tip the election – Hillary’s.


Seeking to retain his position as CIA director under Hillary, Brennan teamed up with British spies and Estonian spies to cripple Trump’s candidacy.  He used their phony intelligence as a pretext for a multi-agency investigation into Trump, which led the FBI to probe a computer server connected to Trump Tower and gave cover to Susan Rice, among other Hillary supporters, to spy on Trump and his people[.] …


The Guardian story is written in a style designed to flatter its sources (they are cast as high-minded whistleblowers), but the upshot of it is devastating for them, nonetheless, and explains why all the criminal leaks against Trump first originated in the British press[.] … The story confirms that the seed of the espionage into Trump was planted by Estonia.  The BBC’s Paul Wood reported last year that the intelligence agency of an unnamed Baltic State had tipped Brennan off in April 2016 to a conversation purporting to show that the Kremlin was funneling cash into the Trump campaign.


Any other CIA director would have disregarded such a flaky tip, recognizing that Estonia was eager to see Trump lose (its officials had bought into Hillary’s propaganda that Trump was going to pull out of NATO and leave Baltic countries exposed to Putin).  But Brennan opportunistically seized on it, as he later that summer seized on the half-baked intelligence of British spy agencies (also full of officials who wanted to see Trump lose).


The Guardian says that British spy head Robert Hannigan “passed material in summer 2016 to the CIA chief, John Brennan.”  To ensure that these flaky tips leaked out, Brennan disseminated them on Capitol Hill.  In August and September of 2016, he gave briefings to the “Gang of Eight” about them, which then turned up on the front page of the New York Times.


Could it be that Brennan himself is the leaker of classified information and is up to his eyeballs in using foreign sources to gather dirt on President Trump for the purpose of keeping himself out of the White House?  Considering his past record and current shenanigans, it is John Brennan who is guilty of political corruption and using the extraordinary powers of his office – not to serve his country, but to subvert it.


Daniel John Sobieski is a freelance writer whose pieces have appeared in  Investor’s Business Daily, Human Events, Reason Magazine, and the Chicago Sun-Times among other publications.










Considering that John Brennan once proudly admitted that he voted for Communist Party leader Gus Hall and openly supports liars and perjurers like Andrew McCabe, James Clapper, and James Comey, he redefines chutzpah when in a tweet he describes President Trump in words that sound as though they were plagiarized from FBI lead investigator Peter Strzok:


When the full extent of your venality, moral turpitude, and political corruption becomes known, you will take your rightful place as a disgraced demagogue in the dustbin of history.  You may scapegoat Andy McCabe, but you will not destroy America… America will triumph over you.


The only “disgraced demagogues” in this scenario are John Brennan; James Clapper; Andrew McCabe; James Comey; Peter Strzok; and, yes, Rod Rosenstein and Robert Mueller, all parties in a political resistance whose purpose was to keep Hillary Clinton out of prison and Donald Trump out of the White House.  And John Brennan dares to talk about political corruption?


So much for an apolitical intelligence community that is supposed to gather intelligence on and about America’s enemies to guarantee the safety and security of the United States, its people, and the leaders they have democratically elected.  Brennan’s venomous tweet, like Strzok’s infamous text messages to his lover and co-conspirator in the FBI, Lisa Page, show the depth of the political corruption infesting an intelligence community that conspired to interfere in our elections to deny Donald Trump the presidency.  Brennan and his colleagues are supposed to serve the president, not conspire against him.


John Brennan, like Clapper, McCabe, and Comey, is a liar for whom ideological goals overrule political morality and personal honor.  The mind harkens back to the day when an op-ed in the Washington Post, that right-wing rag, called for Brennan to be fired for conducting illegal surveillance of the Senate Intelligence Committee and then lying about it:


Brennan was asked by NBC’s Andrea Mitchell whether the CIA had illegally accessed Senate Intelligence Committee staff computers “to thwart an investigation by the committee into” the agency’s past interrogation techniques.  The accusation had been made earlier that day by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), who said the CIA had “violated the separation-of-powers principles embodied in the United States Constitution.” Brennan answered:


As far as the allegations of, you know, CIA hacking into, you know, Senate computers, nothing could be further from the truth.  I mean, we wouldn’t do that. I mean, that’s – that’s just beyond the – you know, the scope of reason in terms of what we would do. …


And, you know, when the facts come out on this, I think a lot of people who are claiming that there has been this tremendous sort of spying and monitoring and hacking will be proved wrong.


(You can see the video of Brennan’s answer here.)


Now we know that the truth was different.  The Post’s Greg Miller reports:


CIA Director John O. Brennan has apologized to leaders of the Senate Intelligence Committee after an agency investigation determined that its employees improperly searched computers used by committee staff to review classified files on interrogations of prisoners. …


A statement released by the CIA on Tuesday acknowledged that agency employees had searched areas of that computer network that were supposed to be accessible only to committee investigators.  Agency employees were attempting to discover how congressional aides had obtained a secret CIA internal report on the interrogation program.


This is reminiscent of the way James Clapper similarly perjured himself before Congress, a felony for which the statute of limitations just ran out.  As U.S. News and World Report noted, his resignation didn’t assuage critics, who believe that Clapper, like other Obama administration personnel, dodged a perjury bullet when he testified before Congress on the issue of NSA surveillance of American citizens:


Some lawmakers reacted to the long-expected resignation announcement from Director of National Intelligence James Clapper on Thursday by wishing him an eventful retirement, featuring prosecution and possible prison time.


The passage of more than three years hasn’t cooled the insistence in certain quarters that Clapper face charges for an admittedly false statement to Congress in March 2013, when he responded, “No, sir” and “not wittingly” to a question about whether the National Security Agency was collecting “any type of data at all” on millions of Americans.


About three months after making that claim, documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealed the answer was untruthful and that the NSA was in fact collecting in bulk domestic call records, along with various internet communications.


To his critics, Clapper lied under oath, a crime that threatens effective oversight of the executive branch.  In an apology letter to lawmakers, however, Clapper said he gave the “clearly erroneous” answer because he “simply didn’t think of” the call-record collection.


Clapper later told MSNBC he considered the question akin to asking, “When did you stop beating your wife?” and so gave the “least untruthful” answer.


Critics who say President-Elect Donald Trump has no right to disparage our good and faithful intelligence servants or to be skeptical of the intelligence they gather might be willing to accept “least untruthful” answers, but others are not.


As for John Brennan, there is another scenario as plausible as the one saying Team Trump, and perhaps President Trump himself, colluded with the Russians.  It is that John Brennan himself colluded with the Russians to help Hillary win to guarantee his continued tenure as CIA director.  It involves the infamous anti-Trump dossier compiled by former British spy Christopher Steele, used by Brennan and others as a pretext for a Trump investigation bonanza.  As the American Spectator reported:


An article in the Guardian last week provides more confirmation that John Brennan was the American progenitor of political espionage aimed at defeating Donald Trump.  One side did collude with foreign powers to tip the election – Hillary’s.


Seeking to retain his position as CIA director under Hillary, Brennan teamed up with British spies and Estonian spies to cripple Trump’s candidacy.  He used their phony intelligence as a pretext for a multi-agency investigation into Trump, which led the FBI to probe a computer server connected to Trump Tower and gave cover to Susan Rice, among other Hillary supporters, to spy on Trump and his people[.] …


The Guardian story is written in a style designed to flatter its sources (they are cast as high-minded whistleblowers), but the upshot of it is devastating for them, nonetheless, and explains why all the criminal leaks against Trump first originated in the British press[.] … The story confirms that the seed of the espionage into Trump was planted by Estonia.  The BBC’s Paul Wood reported last year that the intelligence agency of an unnamed Baltic State had tipped Brennan off in April 2016 to a conversation purporting to show that the Kremlin was funneling cash into the Trump campaign.


Any other CIA director would have disregarded such a flaky tip, recognizing that Estonia was eager to see Trump lose (its officials had bought into Hillary’s propaganda that Trump was going to pull out of NATO and leave Baltic countries exposed to Putin).  But Brennan opportunistically seized on it, as he later that summer seized on the half-baked intelligence of British spy agencies (also full of officials who wanted to see Trump lose).


The Guardian says that British spy head Robert Hannigan “passed material in summer 2016 to the CIA chief, John Brennan.”  To ensure that these flaky tips leaked out, Brennan disseminated them on Capitol Hill.  In August and September of 2016, he gave briefings to the “Gang of Eight” about them, which then turned up on the front page of the New York Times.


Could it be that Brennan himself is the leaker of classified information and is up to his eyeballs in using foreign sources to gather dirt on President Trump for the purpose of keeping himself out of the White House?  Considering his past record and current shenanigans, it is John Brennan who is guilty of political corruption and using the extraordinary powers of his office – not to serve his country, but to subvert it.


Daniel John Sobieski is a freelance writer whose pieces have appeared in  Investor’s Business Daily, Human Events, Reason Magazine, and the Chicago Sun-Times among other publications.





via American Thinker

Enjoy this article? Read the full version at the authors website: https://www.americanthinker.com/

Global Warming: The Evolution of a Hoax

Only forty-some years ago, “climate science” suddenly turned from advancing a theory of global cooling to one of global warming.  A 123-page paper by Christopher Booker, published by the Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF), explains this sudden change in terms of a “groupthink” belief system formulated and perpetuated by a few strong personalities.  Through key positions, and with sympathetic lobbyist groups, the theory overwhelmed politics during its formative years in the 1970s from its center in various United Nations agencies until its unraveling began in the late 1990s.


The first of those personalities was Swedish meteorologist Professor Bert Bolin (1925-2007), who believed that increasing atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide from industrialization would inevitably lead to global warming.  Bolin presented his views in 1979 at a first-ever meeting of the “World Climate Conference,” sponsored by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).  The WMO is a 191-member-country agency of the United Nations (U.N.), headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland.



Bolin had developed his theory in the 1950s during thirty-five years of declining temperatures.  Through the 1970s, many scientists, activists, and policymakers had voiced alarm at global cooling.  A common view was that the cooling effect of more dust in the atmosphere, from volcanoes and industrial smokestacks, more than offset the warming effects of carbon dioxide and might require dire policies, such as those proposed by Dr. Arnold Reitze, to include banning the internal combustion engine, regulating industrial research and development, and limiting population.


Six years later, Bolin presented a longer paper for a 1985 conference in Villach, Austria, in which he concluded that “human-induced climate change” called for urgent action at the “highest level.”  An attendee who became convinced was Dr. John Houghton, a former professor of atmospheric physics at Oxford, who had been head of the U.K. MET since 1983, was founder of the Hadley Centre in 1990, and would be the lead editor of the first three reports (1990, 1996, and 2001) of the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).  The IPCC was established in 1988 by two U.N. agencies, the WMO and the United Nations Environment Program.  UNEP was founded in 1972 by Maurice Strong, its first director, as a result of the U.N. Conference on the Human Environment held in June, 1972. 


Strong was a Canadian self-made billionaire in the energy business, who once self-identified as a “socialist in ideology, a capitalist in methodology.”  He became greatly involved in U.N. activities and influenced the Stockholm Conference through a 1971 report he commissioned on “the state of the planet,” a summary of the findings of 152 “leading experts from 58 countries.”  A December 2015 Breitbart article described Strong as a “totalitarian control freak” for his expressed desire to deny national sovereignty to achieve “global environmental co-operation” through the transformation of the U.N. into a world government.  (Strong later co-founded the Chicago Climate Exchange.)


The IPCC originally represented 34 nations, with Bolin its first chairman and Houghton chairing “Working Group I,” charged with contributing the climate change section of a first “assessment report.”  Houghton himself wrote the summary of that report, which cited computer models indicating that global temperatures would increase “up to 0.5 degrees Celsius” per decade, despite only a 0.6-degree increase the previous 100 years.  In contrast, the text of the long report was reserved and underscored underlying uncertainty.  The summary was designed to raise concerns, in anticipation of the 1992 “Earth Summit” in Rio, being organized by Strong.  The “summit” added to political momentum and was attended by 108 world leaders, some 20,000 delegates, and an additional roughly 20,000 climate activists.


The only real proof of the scientific theory was computer models, programmed to assume that increasing carbon dioxide was the most important factor driving climate.  One of those who objected to the “predetermined” conclusions of such models was Dr. Richard Lindzen, the Alfred P. Sloan professor of meteorology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  His 1992 paper pointed out that the models ignored other important factors that would have had cooling effects – namely, water vapor, cloud cover, and oceans.  Lindzen also noted that global temperatures had risen in the 1920s and 1930s, when carbon dioxide emissions were comparatively low, but fell back between 1940 and the 1970s, when emissions were rising much more steeply.  He also concluded that the models would have predicted a 20th-century warming four times more than actually recorded.  Some of Lindzen’s criticisms are demonstrated in the chart below, from NASA GISS data.  One should note that the GISS frequently “adjusts” its data to be consistent with warming, so the data in the chart do not reflect those available to Lindzen at the time.



Lindzen also focused on how an “illusion of a consensus” had been used to dominate public debate by marginalizing credible scientists who evaluated the same data and disagreed with the prevailing conclusions.  He described how influential interest groups had fervently joined the cause of global warming, such as the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, and the World Wildlife Fund (itself funded by Maurice Strong).  Many of these had formerly lobbied against nuclear weapons during the Cold War, which had just ended.  While the UCS submitted a petition to combat global warming, only “three or four of them, according to Lindzen, were qualified climate scientists.”  Frank Press, the president of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), stated that “overt advocacy … tended to delegitimize … independent advice on science and policy.”


“Consensus” was furthered with an increase in federal funding for climate research (beginning at 18 minutes) from $240 million annually, in 1989, to $1.5 billion, and to $10 billion over the next twenty years.  The IPCC’s 1996 Second Assessment Report attempted to consolidate consensus by 1) introducing verbiage in the summary that had not appeared in a draft report reviewed by authors and 2) deleting 15 key statements that had appeared in the reviewed draft.  Former head of the NAS Frederick Seitz stated in a Wall Street Journal article that he had “never witnessed a more disturbing corruption of the peer-review process … to deceive policymakers and the public into believing that scientific evidence shows that human activities are causing global warming.”  Responsibility lay with the lead author, Ben Santer, associated with the climate Research Unit (CRU) at East Anglia University.


The 1996 controversy was soon overwhelmed by the some-10,000-person Kyoto Conference the following year, a seeming example of consensus designed to continue the political momentum, and later preparation for the 2009 U.N. Climate Change (Copenhagen) Conference.  But the 2009 release of over 1,000 emails and 3,000 other documents from the CRU, known ClimateGate, further revealed the shakiness of climate change theory and resulted in a weak, nonbinding “Copenhagen Accord.”


An especially controversial “Climategate” email by Jonathan Overpeck complained that “we have to get rid of the Medieval Warm Period.”  A long held conclusion had been that the so-called Medieval Warm Period (c. 950-1250) was much warmer than the modern era, appearing in the IPCC First Assessment report (chart below).


Seemingly on cue, in April 1998, an unknown young Ph.D., Michael Mann, and two colleagues published an article eliminating not only the Medieval Warm Period, but the previous four-century-long “Little Ice Age.”  Known as the “hockey stick” graph, it showed an unwavering downward line, until sharply increasing in the late 20th century. When it appeared in the 2001 IPCC Third Assessment Report, Houghton himself appeared in front of a huge blow-up of the “hockey stick” graph to assert that most of the previous 50 years of warming was attributable to human activities.  The hockey stick was meant to be evidence supporting the conclusions of the widely discredited models.



McIntyre and McKitrick (2003) found that the Mann, et. al study 1) showed temperatures only for the northern hemisphere, hence ignoring the rest of the world, and more disturbingly 2) used “proxy” data in the form of tree rings.  “Almost the only tree rings … which actually had a hockey-stick shape had been one group of bristlecone pines in California.”  But Mann’s algorithm weighted the California samples 390 times more than samples “from Arkansas, which failed to show a ‘hockey stick’ shape.”  Moreover, 3) in the IPCC report, the temperatures for the last decades of the 20th century were from not tree rings, but thermometer data, spliced onto the tree ring data.  In 2006, a committee of the U.S. Congress commissioned a report by Dr. Edward Wegman, an eminent statistician, that rebuked Mann’s methods as well as the wider peer review process.


While the “hockey stick” itself has fallen into scientific disrepute, it still lingers in the public mind, supported by a 2006 National Academy of Sciences report citing seven subsequent studies with similar conclusions.  However, all of those seven studies used “reconstructed” data involving various kinds of proxies (ice cores, tree rings, etc.) and “instrumental” records beginning in 1856, weaknesses found in the Mann, et al. study.  Moreover, many of the authors and participants in these seven studies are the same ones cited in the Wegman report, based on a “network analysis” such that “independent reconstructions are not as independent as one might guess” and that “there was too much reliance on peer review which was not necessarily independent.”


Much more is in this timely, informative, and non-technical report from the GWPF, with its credible twenty-five-member scientific Academic Advisory Council, including eighteen having the title of “professor.”










Only forty-some years ago, “climate science” suddenly turned from advancing a theory of global cooling to one of global warming.  A 123-page paper by Christopher Booker, published by the Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF), explains this sudden change in terms of a “groupthink” belief system formulated and perpetuated by a few strong personalities.  Through key positions, and with sympathetic lobbyist groups, the theory overwhelmed politics during its formative years in the 1970s from its center in various United Nations agencies until its unraveling began in the late 1990s.


The first of those personalities was Swedish meteorologist Professor Bert Bolin (1925-2007), who believed that increasing atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide from industrialization would inevitably lead to global warming.  Bolin presented his views in 1979 at a first-ever meeting of the “World Climate Conference,” sponsored by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).  The WMO is a 191-member-country agency of the United Nations (U.N.), headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland.


Bolin had developed his theory in the 1950s during thirty-five years of declining temperatures.  Through the 1970s, many scientists, activists, and policymakers had voiced alarm at global cooling.  A common view was that the cooling effect of more dust in the atmosphere, from volcanoes and industrial smokestacks, more than offset the warming effects of carbon dioxide and might require dire policies, such as those proposed by Dr. Arnold Reitze, to include banning the internal combustion engine, regulating industrial research and development, and limiting population.


Six years later, Bolin presented a longer paper for a 1985 conference in Villach, Austria, in which he concluded that “human-induced climate change” called for urgent action at the “highest level.”  An attendee who became convinced was Dr. John Houghton, a former professor of atmospheric physics at Oxford, who had been head of the U.K. MET since 1983, was founder of the Hadley Centre in 1990, and would be the lead editor of the first three reports (1990, 1996, and 2001) of the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).  The IPCC was established in 1988 by two U.N. agencies, the WMO and the United Nations Environment Program.  UNEP was founded in 1972 by Maurice Strong, its first director, as a result of the U.N. Conference on the Human Environment held in June, 1972. 


Strong was a Canadian self-made billionaire in the energy business, who once self-identified as a “socialist in ideology, a capitalist in methodology.”  He became greatly involved in U.N. activities and influenced the Stockholm Conference through a 1971 report he commissioned on “the state of the planet,” a summary of the findings of 152 “leading experts from 58 countries.”  A December 2015 Breitbart article described Strong as a “totalitarian control freak” for his expressed desire to deny national sovereignty to achieve “global environmental co-operation” through the transformation of the U.N. into a world government.  (Strong later co-founded the Chicago Climate Exchange.)


The IPCC originally represented 34 nations, with Bolin its first chairman and Houghton chairing “Working Group I,” charged with contributing the climate change section of a first “assessment report.”  Houghton himself wrote the summary of that report, which cited computer models indicating that global temperatures would increase “up to 0.5 degrees Celsius” per decade, despite only a 0.6-degree increase the previous 100 years.  In contrast, the text of the long report was reserved and underscored underlying uncertainty.  The summary was designed to raise concerns, in anticipation of the 1992 “Earth Summit” in Rio, being organized by Strong.  The “summit” added to political momentum and was attended by 108 world leaders, some 20,000 delegates, and an additional roughly 20,000 climate activists.


The only real proof of the scientific theory was computer models, programmed to assume that increasing carbon dioxide was the most important factor driving climate.  One of those who objected to the “predetermined” conclusions of such models was Dr. Richard Lindzen, the Alfred P. Sloan professor of meteorology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  His 1992 paper pointed out that the models ignored other important factors that would have had cooling effects – namely, water vapor, cloud cover, and oceans.  Lindzen also noted that global temperatures had risen in the 1920s and 1930s, when carbon dioxide emissions were comparatively low, but fell back between 1940 and the 1970s, when emissions were rising much more steeply.  He also concluded that the models would have predicted a 20th-century warming four times more than actually recorded.  Some of Lindzen’s criticisms are demonstrated in the chart below, from NASA GISS data.  One should note that the GISS frequently “adjusts” its data to be consistent with warming, so the data in the chart do not reflect those available to Lindzen at the time.



Lindzen also focused on how an “illusion of a consensus” had been used to dominate public debate by marginalizing credible scientists who evaluated the same data and disagreed with the prevailing conclusions.  He described how influential interest groups had fervently joined the cause of global warming, such as the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, and the World Wildlife Fund (itself funded by Maurice Strong).  Many of these had formerly lobbied against nuclear weapons during the Cold War, which had just ended.  While the UCS submitted a petition to combat global warming, only “three or four of them, according to Lindzen, were qualified climate scientists.”  Frank Press, the president of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), stated that “overt advocacy … tended to delegitimize … independent advice on science and policy.”


“Consensus” was furthered with an increase in federal funding for climate research (beginning at 18 minutes) from $240 million annually, in 1989, to $1.5 billion, and to $10 billion over the next twenty years.  The IPCC’s 1996 Second Assessment Report attempted to consolidate consensus by 1) introducing verbiage in the summary that had not appeared in a draft report reviewed by authors and 2) deleting 15 key statements that had appeared in the reviewed draft.  Former head of the NAS Frederick Seitz stated in a Wall Street Journal article that he had “never witnessed a more disturbing corruption of the peer-review process … to deceive policymakers and the public into believing that scientific evidence shows that human activities are causing global warming.”  Responsibility lay with the lead author, Ben Santer, associated with the climate Research Unit (CRU) at East Anglia University.


The 1996 controversy was soon overwhelmed by the some-10,000-person Kyoto Conference the following year, a seeming example of consensus designed to continue the political momentum, and later preparation for the 2009 U.N. Climate Change (Copenhagen) Conference.  But the 2009 release of over 1,000 emails and 3,000 other documents from the CRU, known ClimateGate, further revealed the shakiness of climate change theory and resulted in a weak, nonbinding “Copenhagen Accord.”


An especially controversial “Climategate” email by Jonathan Overpeck complained that “we have to get rid of the Medieval Warm Period.”  A long held conclusion had been that the so-called Medieval Warm Period (c. 950-1250) was much warmer than the modern era, appearing in the IPCC First Assessment report (chart below).


Seemingly on cue, in April 1998, an unknown young Ph.D., Michael Mann, and two colleagues published an article eliminating not only the Medieval Warm Period, but the previous four-century-long “Little Ice Age.”  Known as the “hockey stick” graph, it showed an unwavering downward line, until sharply increasing in the late 20th century. When it appeared in the 2001 IPCC Third Assessment Report, Houghton himself appeared in front of a huge blow-up of the “hockey stick” graph to assert that most of the previous 50 years of warming was attributable to human activities.  The hockey stick was meant to be evidence supporting the conclusions of the widely discredited models.



McIntyre and McKitrick (2003) found that the Mann, et. al study 1) showed temperatures only for the northern hemisphere, hence ignoring the rest of the world, and more disturbingly 2) used “proxy” data in the form of tree rings.  “Almost the only tree rings … which actually had a hockey-stick shape had been one group of bristlecone pines in California.”  But Mann’s algorithm weighted the California samples 390 times more than samples “from Arkansas, which failed to show a ‘hockey stick’ shape.”  Moreover, 3) in the IPCC report, the temperatures for the last decades of the 20th century were from not tree rings, but thermometer data, spliced onto the tree ring data.  In 2006, a committee of the U.S. Congress commissioned a report by Dr. Edward Wegman, an eminent statistician, that rebuked Mann’s methods as well as the wider peer review process.


While the “hockey stick” itself has fallen into scientific disrepute, it still lingers in the public mind, supported by a 2006 National Academy of Sciences report citing seven subsequent studies with similar conclusions.  However, all of those seven studies used “reconstructed” data involving various kinds of proxies (ice cores, tree rings, etc.) and “instrumental” records beginning in 1856, weaknesses found in the Mann, et al. study.  Moreover, many of the authors and participants in these seven studies are the same ones cited in the Wegman report, based on a “network analysis” such that “independent reconstructions are not as independent as one might guess” and that “there was too much reliance on peer review which was not necessarily independent.”


Much more is in this timely, informative, and non-technical report from the GWPF, with its credible twenty-five-member scientific Academic Advisory Council, including eighteen having the title of “professor.”





via American Thinker

Enjoy this article? Read the full version at the authors website: https://www.americanthinker.com/

Minneapolis Grade School Takes Little Children Around 6-7-Years-Old to Protest Against Guns

Minneapolis Grade School Takes Little Children Around 6-7-Years-Old to Protest Against Guns

Minneapolis teachers took little children from the classroom and brought them outside to protest gun violence at Lucay Craft Laney School on Wednesday.

The children look like they are 6 or 7 years old.

This is not learning – This is leftist indoctrination.

They took the kids outside in the snow to protest guns.

Lucy Craft Laney Community School — is a Minneapolis Public School serving PK-5th grade students in North Minneapolis. Our approximately 450 students range between the ages of four and eleven years old.

Here’s video:

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via The Gateway Pundit

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