Teacher Strike in Los Angeles Underscores Need for Education Choice


Public school teachers in Los Angeles are
on strike, affecting half a million children attending some 900 public schools in
the district.

Although students in the Los Angeles Unified School District—the second-largest school district in the country—can still access the schools, classes are being taught by substitute teachers while teachers outside are striking.

Many students are staying home—leaving some
parents scrambling for child care.

Students who are going to school during the strike are passing the day playing games on iPads. Missing school or being relegated to busy work as a result of public education employee strikes are critical learning days lost. 

Students in Los Angeles can ill afford that: Just 18 percent of fourth-graders can read proficiently, a figure which jumps just one point to 19 percent for eighth-graders. Only one-quarter of Los Angeles fourth-graders score proficient in math, a figure that declines to 18 percent for eighth-graders.

Among the striking teachers’ demands are increased
pay and smaller class sizes, along with regulations on charter schools and a
push to increase the number of nonteaching personnel, such
as librarians and counselors
.

Yet since 1992, nonteaching staff in
California has increased nearly 50 percent, greatly outpacing the 24 percent
increase in the number of students.

As economist Ben Scafidi of Kennesaw State University in Georgia found, had California just kept the nonteaching staff levels on par with increases in student enrollment, the state would have saved nearly $3 billion—which could have gone toward unfunded pension liabilities.

The state’s unfunded pension liability—the gap between benefits owed and funding available for that purpose—was $107 billion in 2018.

That $3 billion also could have funded 373,000
children with $8,000 education savings accounts
.

The increase in nonteaching personnel only exacerbates
existing spending issues in the district.

As Chad
Aldeman points out
, from 2001 to 2016, the Los
Angeles Unified School District increased overall spending by more than 55
percent. Public employee benefits in the district increased 138 percent.

My colleague Jonathan Butcher closely followed teachers union strikes, which last year disrupted learning in Colorado, Arizona, Kentucky, Oklahoma, and West Virginia. He draws three important lessons from those strikes.

First, Butcher notes, strikes are hard on families, and send parents scrambling. Strikes can test parents’ patience, even when they support the demands of the strikers.

Second, it’s school districts, rather than
state lawmakers, who are ultimately responsible for teacher salaries. Third,
tax increases on California taxpayers will not necessarily lead to increased
teachers’ salaries.

Ultimately, school districts should be
transparent in their spending, making administrators’ salaries publicly
available, and they should reduce—not increase—the number of nonteaching
personnel.

Furthermore, they should reward excellent
teachers by basing teachers’ compensation on job performance.

During the strike, more
than 117,000 students
in Los Angeles are still able
to attend school without being affected by the walkouts; namely, those in
charter schools.

So, most critically, parents should be empowered with choice, including more charter school options and private school choice options.

Increasing spending and the number of nonteaching personnel, and further regulating education choice options, such as charter schools, will only amplify a failed status quo in California.

Instead, California should immediately empower families to choose learning options that are effective and meet their needs by moving toward increased school choice opportunities.

via The Daily Signal

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

Legal Experts: NYT’s ‘Bombshell’ Report Casts Skepticism on FBI, Not Trump


Several top legal experts say the New York Times‘ report that the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) launched a criminal and counterintelligence investigation into President Trump after he fired former FBI Director James Comey casts more skepticism on the FBI than on the president.

It was first reported in the Washington Post on June 14, 2017, that Special Counsel Robert Mueller was investigating Trump for obstruction, and that the investigation was launched days after he fired Comey. It was the first time an investigation into Trump himself was revealed. Previously, Comey had told Trump he was not personally under investigation.

But the Times report on Friday revealed more details about the investigation into Trump. It said in addition to a criminal investigation into whether he had obstructed justice by firing Comey, Trump was also being looked at in a counterintelligence investigation on whether he was acting on behalf of Russia by firing Comey.

Legal experts and political strategists on both sides of the aisle said the Times‘ report showed the FBI was motivated by revenge for Comey’s firing rather than by any evidence Trump was acting on behalf of Russia.

Mark Penn, a Democrat and former strategist for Bill and Hillary Clinton, wrote in an op-ed on Sunday that the FBI and the Justice Department’s actions “appear to be wholly without justification — and were based instead on politically inspired emotion and hysteria.”

“I didn’t support Donald Trump, and there are lots of things he does I don’t support,” he wrote. “But the idea that he was the Manchurian candidate working for the Russians when he ran on an America First platform is patently ridiculous.”

Andrew McCarthy, a former federal prosecutor and senior fellow at the National Review Institute, argued that the only thing the report showed was that the FBI was out to get Trump all along. He wrote on Sunday that the Times‘ report was “clearly intended to be a blockbuster report.”

“But in truth, the only thing the story shows is that the FBI, after over a year of investigation, simply went overt about something that had been true from the first. The investigation commenced during the 2016 campaign by the Obama administration – the Justice Department and the FBI – was always about Donald Trump,” he wrote.

McCarthy argued that the FBI and DOJ had “rationalized” that Trump fired Comey to impede the investigation, and coupled that with a memo that Comey himself wrote and leaked to the media that alleged Trump had tried to impede the investigation into former National Security Adviser Mike Flynn.

“Legally, none of this was obstruction. Yet, the FBI and Justice Department settled on this novel and flawed legal theory: Even though the president has constitutional authority to fire subordinates and weigh in on investigations, he may somehow still be prosecuted for obstruction if a prosecutor concludes that his motive was improper,” McCarthy wrote.

“The FBI, hot-headed over the director’s dismissal, concluded that this obstruction theory was a sound enough basis to go overt with the case on Trump they had actually been trying to make for many months,” he wrote.

McCarthy also noted that Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein at the time had also discussed wearing a wire while talking to the president, and invoking the 25th Amendment, before appointing Mueller to take over the FBI’s Russia investigation.

“What this chain of actions supports is that there is a deep state — a group of unelected officials who now wield power far beyond their constitutional authority – who believe, like Comey, that they know best,” Penn said. “In this case it was aided by Obama administration holdovers who never accepted the outcome of the election and sought to prevent it and later reverse it.”

Neither Penn nor McCarthy supported Trump during the election, but have both frequently spoken out about what they believe is improper behavior at the DOJ and FBI.

Jonathan Turley, a professor at the George Washington University Law School and lawyer who has worked for both Democrats and Republicans, said the “real benefit” of the story is exposing the cognitive bias that has led to the “current quagmire.”

“What if there were no collusion or conspiracy but simple cognitive bias on both sides, where the actions of one seemed to confirm precisely the suspicions of the other?” he wrote.

Turley noted that the Times story does not suggest “any basis for the original allegation” that Trump was a Manchurian candidate controlled by Russia, and that the story even notes “no evidence has emerged publicly that Trump was secretly in contact with or took direction from Russian government officials.”

Instead, he wrote, there were two separate narratives that fed off the actions of each other. Turley wrote:

There likely was bias in the initial assumptions, with a willingness at the FBI to believe Trump would be a tool of the Russians, and a willingness by Trump to believe the FBI would be a tool of the Clintons. Every move and countermove confirmed each bias. Trump continued to denounce what he saw as a conspiracy. The FBI continued to investigate his obstructive attitude. One side saw a witch hunt where the other saw a mole hunt.

In other words, there may have been no Russian mole and no deep state conspiracy. Moreover, the motivations may not have been to obstruct either the Trump administration or the Russia investigation. Instead, this could all prove to be the greatest, most costly example of cognitive bias in history, and now no one in this story wants to admit it.

Republican lawmakers who have been investigating the DOJ and FBI are less forgiving.

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) said Sunday that the FBI officials who would have launched the investigation into Trump all exhibited animus towards Trump, and have all either been fired, demoted, or have otherwise left the FBI, including former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, former FBI lawyer Lisa Page, former FBI Deputy Head of Counterintelligence Peter Strzok, and former FBI General Counsel Jim Baker.

“These four people are the ones who have this extreme animus towards the President. They’re the ones who are saying to start this counterintelligence investigation on the President. It’s ridiculous,” he told Fox News’ Judge Jeanine Pirro.

“And remember when it happened, it happened just days after their best pal, Jim Comey is fired. So remember that critical week, those critical eight days. May 9th, Comey gets fired. May 17th, Bob Mueller gets named Special Counsel. Andy McCabe is running the FBI.”

House Intelligence Committee Ranking Member Devin Nunes (R-CA) said in a statement:

This is yet more evidence that FBI leaders actually had no real evidence against the Trump team. Instead they were simply trying to undermine a president they didn’t like and avenge Comey’s firing. By relying on the Steele dossier — a fraudulent document funded by Democrats and based on Russian sources — FBI leaders were either complicit or too oblivious to notice they were being used in a disinformation operation by the Democratic Party and Russian operatives.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-SC) said he found the Times‘ report “astonishing” and said he would investigate.

“To me, it tells me a lot about the people running the FBI, McCabe and that crowd. I don’t trust them as far as I throw them. So, if this really did happen, Congress needs to know about it and what I want to do is make sure how could the FBI do that? What kind of checks and balances are there?”

via Breitbart News

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

San Diego TV Station Accuses AP of ‘Fake News’ Headline


A wall is seen along the border between the United States and Mexico in Tijuana, Mexico

A wall is seen along the border between the United States and Mexico in Tijuana, Mexico / Getty Images

BY:

A San Diego television station has hit back at an Associated Press report that said it had “backed off” its belief that CNN decided against using one of its reporters for a border-fencing story because it didn’t fit the network’s narrative.

Steve Cohen, KUSI’s news director, issued a statement Sunday denouncing an Associated Press headline about their position as “fake news,” and clarifying that the rest of the AP story about the clash between KUSI and CNN is accurate.

“We are not backing away. The headline is a fiction, for the issue was never raised,” Cohen said. “The AP story is factual, but the headline is fake news.”

On Friday, the AP ran a story with the headline: “TV station backs off accusation that CNN played politics.”

The body of the story said that Cohen, in an interview with the AP, had “conceded” that he didn’t really know why the network turned down his offer to have KUSI reporter Dan Plante appear on CNN to discuss how the border fencing was working in the San Diego area.

CNN had called KUSI earlier in the week to see if one of its reporters could appear on a program discussing how the border barrier was working in the San Diego area.

When CNN never responded, Cohen decided to inform KUSI’s viewers that he suspected CNN declined to have Plante interviewed because Plante’s reporting had repeatedly concluded that the border wall there had worked well, and that such a conclusion might not fit the cable network’s consistent negative reporting against the wall.

He said he never got a call back and said he believed the reason was because the KUSI reporting didn’t fit the CNN narrative against Trump’s argument in favor of a border wall.

“CNN requests KUSI for local view on the border, declines our reporter after finding out wall works,” KUSI stated in a headline of a similar broadcast report with the same message.

“They didn’t like what they heard from us,” said anchor Anna Laurel.

CNN denied it had anything to do with Plante’s reporting conclusions and called the issue a “non-story.”

The network said it had reached out to reporters at other local stations about a possible segment but didn’t follow through when the plans changed.

“This happens many times every single day,” CNN said in a statement. “This is a non-story.”

Cohen admitted that he didn’t know why CNN go with his reporter for the segment, but that didn’t mean he believed the network’s explanation that it was simply because they decided to use someone else or let the issue slip.

“It’s certainly plausible that they didn’t want it for the viewpoint, or they just didn’t want it,” Cohen told the AP. “Both are plausible conclusions. I made one rather than the other.”

KUSI is not affiliated with any larger broadcast network. The San Diego Business Journal has described its general manager as “a longtime supporter of conservative causes and candidates in the broader San Diego area,” the AP reported.

via Washington Free Beacon

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

Wisconsin Judge Rules in Favor of Religious Freedom


Sister Caroline attends a rally with other supporters of religious freedom (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

BY:

A county judge in Wisconsin ruled last month that the city of De Pere’s nondiscrimination ordinance infringed on the right of religious freedom, granting a victory to five churches and a religious broadcaster which brought a legal challenge against the statute.

In late 2017, De Pere adopted a nondiscrimination ordinance that, among other issues, addressed “gender identity and sexual orientation in housing, employment, advertising, and public accommodation,” according to World magazine. The new policies were to apply to all “places of public accommodation.”

Five churches and a local religious broadcaster challenged the ordinance. The plaintiffs’ complaint argued that the city’s ordinance differed from similar statutes in other states as “the De Pere ordinance does not clearly exempt religious organizations.” They contended that “the ordinance is likely to be imposed on churches and other religious organizations in a manner that would mandate government orthodoxy in core religious functions, communication, and conduct.”

More specifically, the churches asked the judge to determine whether they fell under the statute’s definition of discrimination, given that the plaintiffs “hold views relative to family and marital status, religion, sex, gender identity and sexual orientation for which they make employment and facilities-use decisions. Additionally, each of the religious institutions notices, promotes, publishes and otherwise disseminates their views relating to these topics on certain communication-platforms including their websites and for some, blogs, and the radio.”

If the judge determined the plaintiffs would be subject to the definition of discrimination, the churches asked the court to declare “that these provisions are unconstitutional absent an exemption for religious institutions.”

A crucial question for determining whether the plaintiffs would be subject to the ordinance’s regulations was whether the statute considered churches to be “places of public accommodation,” which the ordinance defined as “all establishments within the City of De Pere which offers goods, services, accommodations and entertainment to the public. A place of public accommodation does not include any institution or club which by its nature is distinctly private.”

Kevin Snider, chief counsel for the Pacific Justice Institute, which represented the plaintiffs, told the Washington Free Beacon he was surprised that the city claimed churches fell into that category.

According to Snider, the city argued that churches should be subject to public accommodation laws because they “at times allow the general public to enter their facilities, and sometimes the church activities or programs are not such that they require people to be of like faith to engage in the activities or programs.”

“I know of no other place—no other courts, I should say—that’s ever looked at a church and said that’s a place of public accommodation,” Snider said.

Snider said the plaintiffs feared the broadness of the statute would prevent them, for example, from saying no to hosting or officiating weddings, given that these churches have certain views on same-sex marriage and other nuptial arrangements.

“The ordinance is written so broad, if a church is a place of public accommodation, it can’t essentially say no based on things such as religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender,” said Snider.

The chief counsel also pointed to issues such as controlling the use of the church building by outside organizations, managing membership in the church, and hiring employees.

Under Wisconsin’s freedom of conscience clause, which Snider said offers broader religious freedom protections than the First Amendment, the judge determined churches would not have to be deemed places of public accommodation if it violates their religious beliefs.

The city attorney for De Pere did not offer comment on the case, telling the Free Beacon they are awaiting a written order before issuing a comment.

Mark Goldfeder, who is the director the Restoring Religious Freedom Project at Emory University and was not involved in the case, explained to the Free Beacon some of the questions concerning religious freedom attached to cases like the one in Wisconsin. He gave the example of a church that does something “that is not necessarily completely tied to the religion,” such as hosting a community potluck.

“I think it is a reasonable approach to say that would fall under the broad gambit of services that the church offers to its members and to a larger community,” said Goldfeder. “But sometimes the church just rents its hall out and is a business and is renting its hall out for things that are completely unrelated to the church and they’re just using the facility in a way to gain assets. To me, during that period of time, I think it’s easy to say that they’ve become public accommodations during that period of use, so that the nondiscrimination laws would fall under that period of use, but when it reverts back to being a church, it would not.”

“So I think that some of the stuff that we’re seeing here is everyone agrees at the extremes, and there’s some debate…of what exactly are the contours for that middle ground, when is a church acting in a religious way, and the truth is that these debates happen all the time in law and religion,” Goldfeder added.

via Washington Free Beacon

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

Report: Rod Rosenstein Pushes to Weaken Rules on Seizing Journalists’ Records


Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein is overseeing a revision of the Justice Department’s guidelines regarding how investigators can obtain records from members of the media, with a particular focus on leaks, according to The Hill’s John Solomon.

The proposed revision, in which Rosenstein assumed a larger role after Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ November departure, included a watered-down threshold for DOJ prosecutors to meet before subpoenaing a journalist’s records. The new guidelines, if approved, would allow the department to issue a subpoena without first notifying the reporter’s news organization of its intent to obtain documents, the report states.

Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker has reportedly voiced concerns about the plan in the last few weeks, worrying the rule changes could attract negative headlines as President Donald Trump is locked in negotiations to end the longest government shutdown in U.S. history. “After a lengthy period of turmoil and regular criticism from President Trump, DOJ has enjoyed a period of calm normalcy that has put employees’ focus back on their work and not the next tweet. Matt doesn’t want to disrupt that unless a strong legal case can be made,” one source told Solomon.

In August, Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced his agency was “reviewing” media subpoena policies for reporters who cite anonymous sources in leaking classified information. Sessions, flanked by Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats, said at the news conference that federal law enforcement agencies would ramp up efforts to stem the tide of information leaks emanating from within the Trump administration, revealing the DOJ had tripled the number of leak investigations since the president took office.

The government’s war on leaks has seen its share of high-profile causalities, including top FBI and Congressional officials.

Acting on the recommendation of the FBI’s Office of Professional Responsibility, Sessions fired the bureau’s deputy director Andrew McCabe, citing “unauthorized” disclosures to the reporters and lacking candor about it under oath. Federal prosecutors have impaneled a grand jury as part of an investigation into whether McCabe intentionally misled investigators about improperly leaking information to a reporter.

In October, James Wolfe, a former employee of the Senate Intelligence Committee, pleaded guilty to one count of making a false statement to the FBI “during the course of an investigation into the unlawful disclosure of classified national security information.”

In the past, the department has been reluctant to demand reporters reveal an anonymous source of disclosed classified information. However, when subpoenaed to testify, reporters face the possibility of being jailed for contempt of court if they refuse to identify a requested source.

New York Times reporter Judith Miller was jailed for 85 days in 2005 after refusing to divulge the source of a classified leak that revealed the identity of undercover CIA agent Valerie Plame, whose husband had drawn the ire of officials in former President George W. Bush’s administration.

Miller was released from federal prison only after her source, later confirmed as I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, chief of staff to former Vice President Dick Cheney, identified himself. Libby was subsequently sentenced to federal prison for violating federal law by revealing classified information.

 

The United Press International contributed to this report.

via Breitbart News

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

Donald Trump: U.S. Will ‘Devastate Turkey Economically if They Hit Kurds’


President Donald Trump threatened on Sunday to “devastate Turkey economically” if Turkish forces attack the Kurds in Syria after the United States withdraws.

The office of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan responded on Monday by telling Trump it would be a “fatal mistake” to treat a Turkish attack on the Kurdish YPG militia, which Turkey considers a terrorist organization, as an assault on the Kurdish people.

Trump delivered his warning to Turkey in a pair of tweets discussing his Syria policy on Sunday. Trump encouraged both Turkey and the Syrian Kurdish militia to back away from a confrontation:

A spokesman for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan responded on Monday by warning Trump, “It is a fatal mistake to equate Syrian Kurds with the PKK, which is on the U.S. terrorist list, and its Syria branch PYD/YPG.”

“Turkey fights against terrorists, not Kurds. We will protect Kurds and other Syrians against all terrorist threats,” spokesman Ibrahim Kalin promised.

“Terrorists can’t be your partners and allies,” Kalin told Trump. “Turkey expects the U.S. to honor our strategic partnership and doesn’t want it to be shadowed by terrorist propaganda.”

Erdogan’s communications director Fahrettin Altun added that Turkey will “continue its anti-terror fight decisively.”

“Terror is terror and it must be eradicated at its source. This is exactly what Turkey is doing in Syria,” Altun said.

The PKK, or Kurdistan Workers Party, is a violent Kurdish separatist organization in Turkey that the U.S. State Department indeed lists as a foreign terrorist organization. The PYD (Democratic Union Party) is the largest Syrian Kurdish political party, while the YPG (People’s Protection Units) is effectively its armed wing. The YPG militia was one of the most effective battlefield allies of the United States in the war against the Islamic State.

Turkey insists the PYD and YPG are actively allied with the PKK and are essentially branches of the same Kurdish separatist organization. Turkey’s looming strategic nightmare involves Kurds in Iraq, Syria, and Turkey joining together to declare an independent state that would absorb territory from all three nations. Turkey complains that weapons given by Western allies to the YPG to fight ISIS are finding their way across the border into PKK hands.

The United States disputes this characterization and wants Turkey to halt its military incursion into Syria against Kurdish forces, an assault Turkey named “Operation Olive Branch” because it believes peace can only be established by pushing Syrian Kurdish forces away from the Turkish border. President Trump strives to assuage fears that U.S. military withdrawal from Syria will give Turkey a green light to massacre the Kurds.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu complained on Monday that President Trump should not issue public demands while the U.S. is negotiating with Turkey to reach an understanding about Syria.

“Strategic partners do not talk via Twitter and social media,” Cavusoglu said.

The foreign minister said Turkey has proposed a “buffer zone” along the Turkey-Syria border that seems compatible with Trump’s demand for a safe zone around the Kurds, presuming the Kurds agree to fall back outside the buffer zone. He criticized the administration of Trump’s predecessor, former President Barack Obama, for refusing to consider this proposal due to “various excuses” and said the Trump administration is only entertaining it now due to “Turkey’s determination.”

The New York Times noted Trump’s tweet was the first time he has publicly threatened Turkey, a fellow member of NATO. The Times worried Trump’s aggressive comments could “upend Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s attempt to reach a deal with Turkey to protect them.”

Pompeo did not appear perturbed by Trump’s tweets when he spoke with reporters in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Monday.

“You’ll have to ask the president,” he said when asked what Trump meant by economic devastation for Turkey. “We have applied economic sanctions in many places, I assume he is speaking about those kinds of things. You’ll have to ask him.”

Pompeo endorsed Trump’s demand for a safe zone around the Syrian Kurds. “If we can get the space and the security arrangements right it would be a good thing for everyone in the region,” he said.

Just as Turkish and U.S. policies are at odds concerning the connection between Syrian Kurds and the Turkish PKK separatists, so the current proposals clash over the difference between Turkey’s desire to establish a “buffer zone” around its border and the U.S. plan for a “safe zone” around the Kurds.

Despite Turkey’s talk of peace and olive branches, it has repeatedly made clear it intends to attack the Kurds if they do not withdraw from the envisioned “buffer zone,” which is considerably larger than what U.S. planners and the Kurds are comfortable with. Turkey’s determination to push east of the Euphrates River is especially worrisome.

Washington and other concerned foreign powers do not place a great deal of faith in Turkey’s assurances that it can fight Kurdish “terrorist” militias without harming civilians or engaging in battle with Kurdish units directly supported by the West during the fight against ISIS.

Cavusoglu stated on Sunday that Turkey is offended by Trump administration officials, such as National Security Adviser John Bolton, and foreign governments, such as Israel, telling the Turks they cannot push as far into Syria as they deem necessary for their own security interests.

“We do not seek permission from anyone. We would take necessary steps against terrorists near our borders, and we will decide the timing on our own,” Cavusoglu said.

via Breitbart News

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

‘Jeff Bozo:’ Trump Slams Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos on Social Media


President Trump called out Amazon CEO and Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos on Twitter, Sunday, referring to the billionaire as “Jeff Bozo” in a post to Twitter.

“So sorry to hear the news about Jeff Bozo being taken down by a competitor whose reporting, I understand, is far more accurate than the reporting in his lobbyist newspaper, the Amazon Washington Post,” President Trump declared. “Hopefully the paper will soon be placed in better & more responsible hands!” Trump was referring to reports in the National Enquirer about Bezos’ alleged affair.

President Trump and Bezos have previously engaged in public spats, going all the way back to Trump’s 2016 election campaign, and in June, Trump encouraged Washington Post employees to go on strike against Bezos.

On Saturday, President Trump accused the Washington Post of being a “lobbyist” newspaper for Amazon.

“Washington Post, that’s basically the lobbyist for Amazon. You know, he uses that — Bezos has got bigger problems than anybody right now. But Bezos uses that as his lobbyist, OK, as far as I’m concerned,” Trump claimed. “And The Washington Post is almost as bad or probably as bad as The New York Times.”

In March, shares in Amazon dropped after it was revealed that President Trump “hates” the company, and the president has repeatedly referred to the Washington Post as the “Amazon Washington Post,” and “fake news.”

“Amazon is doing great damage to tax paying retailers. Towns, cities and states throughout the U.S. are being hurt – many jobs being lost!” posted President Trump in August 2017, adding in December, “Why is the United States Post Office, which is losing many billions of dollars a year, while charging Amazon and others so little to deliver their packages, making Amazon richer and the Post Office dumber and poorer? Should be charging MUCH MORE!”

In March 2018, he went after Amazon again, posting, “I have stated my concerns with Amazon long before the Election. Unlike others, they pay little or no taxes to state & local governments, use our Postal System as their Delivery Boy (causing tremendous loss to the U.S.), and are putting many thousands of retailers out of business!”

Bezos criticized President Trump’s comments about the Washington Post in September, proclaiming, “it’s really dangerous to demonize the media.”

 

via Breitbart News

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

Nolte — Poll: Trump Approval Climbs as Scorn of Mueller Probe Increases


The latest tracking poll from IBD/TIPP finds that “public disdain for Russia probe intensifies [as] Trump approval climbs.”

This nationwide survey of 903 adults finds that despite a government shutdown for which the anti-Trump media is blaming President Trump, the president’s job approval rating jumped two points above last month, from 40 percent to 42 percent, with 54 percent saying they disapprove.

Though 54 percent of the public disapproves of how Trump is doing his job, 51 percent agree that “the president’s opponents are using the ongoing special counsel investigation into alleged Trump-Russia collusion as a way to delegitimize the 2016 election.”

And, according to the pollster, those “opponents” include the media.

“That includes most independents (52%), as well as the vast majority of Republicans (70%). The poll found that almost a third of Democrats (31%) agree with that statement.”

Overall, only 44 percent disagreed.

Raghavan Mayur, president of TechnoMetrica, who directed the poll, said in a statement that a majority of Americans understand that the real goal of the “opposition and the media is to delegitimize the outcome of the 2016 election and remove Trump from office one way or the other.”

On the impeachment front, two-thirds–65 percent–“say any talk of impeaching Trump at this point is premature. Just 33% say it’s not too early.”

“Satiated” by the media’s “extreme … non-stop vitriolic coverage filled mostly with speculations and insinuations … Americans are worn out,” Mayur adds.

The IBD/TIPP poll is in line with other polls showing Trump’s approval rating in the low-forties. The outlier is CNN, which shows Trump with a 37 percent job approval rating, but CNN is a fake news outlet famous for its terrible polling.

The IBD/TIPP poll also lines up with exit polls taken during the 2018 midterm election that showed nearly the same result, with 54 percent saying the Russian Collusion Hoax is politically motivated and only 41 percent disagreeing.

As the public grows more and more tired of the Russian hoax, far-leftists in the establishment media, like ABC’s Jon Karl, are beginning to prepare the groundwork for a Robert Mueller report that will likely prove that all of this Russian collusion talk was nothing more than a rabidly partisan hoax perpetrated on the American people by a biased and entitled media unable to deal with Trump’s resounding defeat of them in 2016.

Follow John Nolte on Twitter @NolteNC. Follow his Facebook Page here.

via Breitbart News

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

Supreme Court Rejects Challenge to President Trump’s Appointment of AG Whitaker


Supreme Court Rejects Challenge to President Trump’s Appointment of AG Whitaker

Cristina Laila
by Cristina Laila
January 14, 2019


Acting AG Matt Whitaker

On Monday, the Supreme Court rejected a motion challenging President Trump’s appointment of Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker.

The appeal claimed Trump’s appointment of Whitaker was illegal and asked the court to replace Whitaker with Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.

The President appointed Matt Whitaker to Acting Attorney General under the Federal Vacancies Reform Act (FVRA) after Jeff Sessions resigned at Trump’s request in November.

The Democrats immediately attacked Whitaker and claimed his appointment violated federal law because it was done without consent of the Senate.

On Monday, the Supreme Court decided it is staying out of the dispute, reported ABC News.

President Trump’s nominee for Attorney General, Bill Barr (Mueller’s best friend) will be on Capitol Hill this Tuesday and Wednesday for his confirmation hearings.

Comments

As a privately owned web site, we reserve the right to edit or remove comments that contain spam, advertising, vulgarity, threats of violence, racism, anti-Semitism, or personal/abusive attacks on other users. The same applies to trolling, the use of multiple aliases, or just generally being a jerk. Enforcement of this policy is at the sole discretion of the site administrators and repeat offenders may be blocked or permanently banned without warning. Guest posting is disabled for security reasons.

via The Gateway Pundit

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

YouTube Deletes Pro-Life Video Exposing Planned Parenthood


The pro-life group Live Action was censored on YouTube a week before the March for Life.

The streaming service took down a video exposing Planned Parenthood’s medical malpractices, citing it as “hate speech.” The video included someone posing as a pimp, asking a Planned Parenthood official if they reported minors who came in for abortions. The video is from 2011, and features Project Veritas’ James O’Keefe as the pimp.

“Fourteen and under, we do have to report,” the official told O’Keefe. She then told him that those that came in who said they were 15 and older went unreported, “as long as they said [the father] was 15 or 16.” She also told the pimp that they were under no obligation to report minors.

The official gave the pimp a sheet, telling him where to take girls that were 14 and under to get an abortion. “Just play along that they are students,” she said. “We want to make it look as legitimate as possible.”

When the actor, playing as a pimp, asked the official how soon could the girls be sexually active after an abortion, she responded, “Two weeks.” The pimp asked, “Do you have any idea of what they could do in the meantime? I mean, they still have to make money.” The official replied, “Waist up.”

YouTube took down the video, according to a tweet from Lila Rose, the founder of Live Action. The platform told her that the video violated “Community Guidelines.

Live Action has been subject to extensive censorship from the big tech companies, including when Twitter asked the group to remove content from the Live Action website if it wanted to advertise on Twitter.

YouTube has removed pro-life videos before, including one from the American Family Association that criticized Planned Parenthood’s condom ads. YouTube and its sister company, Google, worked with the Irish government to control pro-life ads on both sites before the vote to legalize abortion in Ireland.

The March for Life will take place in Washington D.C. on January 18, 2019.

via NewsBusters – Exposing Liberal Media Bias

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