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3/16/26

Beyond the Label: Decoding the Democratic Party's Immigration Stance

 


Beyond the Label: Decoding the Democratic Party's Immigration Stance

This article examines the complex dynamics behind Democratic immigration policy, addressing why the party does not explicitly embrace the "open borders and amnesty" label while analyzing their actual policy positions and the political calculations that shape their messaging.

Beyond the Label: Decoding the Democratic Party's Immigration Stance

For years, Republicans have hammered Democrats with a simple, damning accusation: they want open borders and mass amnesty for illegal immigrants. From the campaign trail to cable news, the charge is that the Democratic Party has a secret, radical agenda to erase America's borders and grant citizenship to millions who broke the law to get here.

At first glance, the evidence seems compelling. We have witnessed record surges at the southern border, Democratic-led cities declaring themselves "sanctuaries," and prominent party figures openly advocating for a path to citizenship for the undocumented population. Yet, when pressed, Democratic leaders rarely, if ever, use the phrase "open borders" and often speak about the need for "border security" and a "fair, orderly system." 

This linguistic dance leaves a critical question: If the accusation is true, why won't Democrats simply admit it? The answer lies not in a secret conspiracy, but in a messy reality of political strategy, ideological division, and a fundamental disagreement over what "enforcement" and "fairness" truly mean.

The Semantics of "Open Borders"

To understand the Democratic position, one must first understand why the term "open borders" is politically toxic. Polling consistently shows that an overwhelming majority of Americans, including many Democrats, oppose a complete elimination of border controls. According to Pew Research, the illegal immigrant population swelled from approximately 10.5 million in 2021 to 14 million in 2023 the largest two-year increase in over three decades. This surge created a political liability for the Biden administration, which voters punished in the 2024 election.

Because of this political reality, Democratic strategists know that embracing the "open borders" label is electoral suicide. Instead, they frame their policies through the lens of humanitarianism and practicality. They argue that the choice is not simply between "open borders" and "mass deportation," but between a chaotic, cruel system and an orderly, humane one.

When Rep. Maxwell Frost (D-FL) said, "Let's document every single one of them with a speedy path to citizenship," he framed it as a solution to the problem of illegality, not an embrace of it. To Republicans, this is a distinction without a difference a demand for amnesty wrapped in progressive language. To Democrats, it is a moral and economic imperative to bring people "out of the shadows."

Amnesty: The "Path to Citizenship" Debate

The question of amnesty or as Democrats prefer, a "path to citizenship" is the second rail of the debate. Republicans point to statements like that of Sen. Chuck Schumer, who has spoken of the "ultimate goal" of a "path to citizenship for all 11 million undocumented" as proof that Democrats want to reward lawbreaking .

However, the modern Democratic position is not a monolith. While the left wing of the party, energized by groups like the "open borders activists," pushes for a rapid, unfettered path to citizenship, centrist "New Democrats" have a different vision . In August 2025, the New Democrat Coalition released an "Immigration & Border Security Framework" that explicitly calls for "smart border security," funding for scanning technology at ports, and resources for the removal of violent offenders, alongside expanded legal avenues for those with long ties to the U.S. .

Furthermore, the existence of the bipartisan DIGNIDAD (Dignity) Act of 2025 complicates the narrative of a unified Democratic push for simple amnesty. Co-introduced by Rep. María Elvira Salazar (R-FL) and Rep. Veronica Escobar (D-TX), the bill offers a path to legal status for undocumented immigrants, but it is conditioned on billions in border security funding, mandatory E-Verify, and crucially, it offers no special pathway to citizenship only a renewable legal status after paying a $7,000 restitution payment . That 20 Democrats have co-sponsored this bill suggests that for a significant portion of the party, the goal is structured legality, not open borders.

The Political Strategy: Coalition vs. Persuasion

So why don't Democrats just admit they want these things? Because admitting to "amnesty" alienates the moderates they need to win elections, while abandoning the "path to citizenship" language alienates the activist base that powers their ground game.

The 2024 election served as a brutal wake-up call. Voters, including Hispanic voters, cited illegal immigration as a primary reason for backing Donald Trump. The Democratic-aligned Blueprint polling firm found that the second-most popular reason voters chose Trump was that "too many immigrants illegally crossed the border under the Biden-Harris administration" . In response, Democrats are attempting a delicate balancing act: conceding to the need for enforcement while demanding that enforcement be "fair."

This is why you see figures like Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV) arguing that Democrats aren't for "defunding ICE," but want to fund it at "traditional levels" and focus only on "violent criminals". To conservatives, this is a ruse a way to hamstring enforcement through bureaucratic slowdowns, creating a de facto amnesty by making deportation legally impossible. Vice President JD Vance articulated this suspicion, accusing Democrats of wanting "to accomplish through fake legal process what they failed to accomplish politically: The ratification of Biden's illegal migrant invasion" .

The Nullification Strategy: Sanctuary Cities and Judicial Blockades

Perhaps the strongest evidence for the Republican claim lies not in what Democrats say, but in what they do. When the Trump administration attempted to ramp up deportations in 2025, Democratic officials engaged in what can only be described as mass resistance.

New York City Comptroller Brad Lander was arrested for physically obstructing ICE agents, demanding to see a warrant . Sen. Alex Padilla (D-CA) was escorted out of a Homeland Security press conference after interrupting the Secretary . Meanwhile, federal judges appointed by Democratic presidents issued rulings blocking the administration from revoking parole status for hundreds of thousands of migrants .

To critics, this is the "nullification" strategy laid bare using the judiciary and local power to make federal immigration law unenforceable. If the law cannot be enforced against the 10 to 14 million illegal immigrants in the country, they argue, the result is functionally identical to open borders. As one Federalist columnist put it, Democrats will "turn every illegal alien Trump doesn't deport into a voter," leveraging population counts for congressional apportionment and future elections .

A House Divided: The Party's Internal Civil War

However, to paint the entire party with the same brush ignores the internal civil war raging within Democratic ranks. The activist left, which chants "abolish ICE" and believes that "no human being is illegal," is pulling the party toward a genuine open-borders position . But the electoral wing of the party, the New Dems and those in competitive districts, are desperately trying to pull it back to the center.

This internal conflict explains the confusing messaging. When President Biden took office, he initially halted deportations and loosened Title 42, signaling a victory for the left . But by the end of his term, his administration was quietly constructing deterrent policies to close the border, signaling a victory for the centrists. The party is not hiding a single, coherent agenda; they are publicly tearing themselves apart over one.

Conclusion: Why "Admitting It" is Impossible

Democrats will never simply "admit" they want open borders and amnesty for the same reason a general never admits he wants to lose the battle: it is not a true description of their political goal. Their goal is to win elections and retain power. For the activist base, that means legalizing millions of new potential voters and residents. For the party strategists, that means not alienating the swing voters in Arizona and Georgia who are sick of the chaos at the border.

Until the party resolves its internal war between the "DIGNIDAD Act" pragmatists and the "abolish ICE" activists their rhetoric will remain frustratingly vague. They will continue to say they want "secure borders" and "fairness," because admitting that for a large portion of their party, "fairness" means allowing millions to stay with minimal consequences, would be to admit a truth the American electorate has repeatedly rejected.

#Democrats #OpenBorders #ILLEGALS #Amnesty

The Alarming Rise of Antisemitism: A Global Crisis in 2026

 


The Alarming Rise of Antisemitism: A Global Crisis in 2026

The first months of 2026 have witnessed a disturbing escalation in antisemitic incidents across the Western world, prompting international condemnation and deep concern among Jewish communities. From synagogue arson attacks in the United States to vehicular assaults on Jewish institutions and a surge in online hatred, the pattern is unmistakable: antisemitism is no longer a fringe phenomenon but a mainstream crisis that demands urgent attention.

A Surge in Physical Attacks

The statistics are sobering. Global antisemitic incidents surged by 34 percent in the week following the outbreak of the war against Iran, with nearly half directly linked to the conflict, according to the Combat Antisemitism Movement . This continues a pattern observed during previous Middle Eastern conflicts, where geopolitical tensions translate directly into violence against Jewish communities worldwide.

March 2026 has been particularly brutal. In the United States, a man was shot dead after crashing his truck into a synagogue and its preschool in Michigan. Local reports suggest he had recently lost family members in an Israeli strike in Lebanon . In Belgium, authorities are investigating a powerful explosion outside a historic synagogue in Liège that caused significant structural damage. Canadian Jewish communities have been terrorized by three separate synagogue shootings in different cities within a single week. Dutch officials are investigating an arson attack on a synagogue in Rotterdam after security cameras captured an individual setting fire to the entrance overnight.

These incidents follow January's devastating arson attack on Beth Israel Congregation in Jackson, Mississippi, which destroyed Torah scrolls and caused extensive damage. According to court filings, the suspect explicitly framed the attack as a successful act against Jews . The synagogue had suffered the same fate in 1967 at the hands of the Ku Klux Klan, a painful reminder that antisemitism is not a new phenomenon but one that adapts and persists across generations.

The Normalization of Hate in Daily Life

Beyond the headline-grabbing attacks, a quieter but equally troubling pattern has emerged: the normalization of antisemitic incidents in everyday public spaces. In New York City's Riverside Park, graffiti declaring “Kill a Jew, go to heaven” was discovered on a popular bike path, in one of the neighborhoods with the largest Jewish populations in the world . The Combat Antisemitism Movement reported 28 antisemitic incidents in New York during January alone.

In San Jose, California, university authorities found graffiti calling for the “eradication of the Jews” and containing the phrase “Kill all Jews”. A children's playground in Brooklyn's Gravesend Park was vandalized with swastikas on two consecutive days. Police later identified the perpetrators as two 15-year-olds, placing the incident outside familiar profiles of organized or adult perpetrators but highlighting how deeply antisemitic symbols have penetrated youth culture.

In a particularly brazen act, a man repeatedly rammed his vehicle into the entrance of Chabad World Headquarters at 770 Eastern Parkway in Crown Heights while the building was occupied . The NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force opened an investigation, and the incident illustrated a frightening new reality: Jewish communal spaces that function as open, public-facing sites are increasingly vulnerable to attacks that require no specialized equipment or organizational infrastructure.

Europe's Growing Problem

European Jewish communities face similar threats. In Germany, a man was arrested after setting fire to a synagogue entrance while performing a Nazi salute. In Turin, Italy, antisemitic graffiti was discovered on the private residence of a Jewish woman during International Holocaust Remembrance Day a cruel irony that underscores how commemorative dates no longer guarantee safety. In Barcelona, more than twenty Jewish graves were desecrated at the Les Corts Jewish Cemetery.

Switzerland has officially recognized the rise in antisemitic incidents as a risk to its image and foreign policy . The Federal Council described the trend as a “serious challenge to social cohesion and security.” According to the Swiss Federation of Jewish Communities, incidents in the digital space increased by 37 percent in 2025 compared to the previous year. At the beginning of 2024, an orthodox Jew was seriously injured in a knife attack in Zurich.

The European Commission published a Special Eurobarometer in January revealing that 55 percent of Europeans now consider antisemitism a problem in their country, up from 50 percent in 2018. Nearly half of Europeans acknowledge a rise in antisemitism over the past five years, and 69 percent believe that conflicts in the Middle East influence perceptions of Jewish people in their country.

Online Hate and Institutional Blind Spots

The digital sphere has become a primary vector for antisemitic content, often in forms that evade traditional moderation. The International Institute for Counter-Terrorism's January monitoring found that antisemitic narratives circulate primarily through indirect formats: memes, ironic framing, and casual commentary that allows delegitimization to blend into ordinary online discourse.

Platforms like Reddit function as normalization spaces where antisemitic content appears through casual remarks and discussion prompts. When such content gains engagement, similar language often resurfaces on more visible platforms in softened form. This “plausible deniability” approach using humor and irony to reduce emotional weight complicates moderation and allows hateful narratives to spread as observational or playful content.

The technological challenge extends to artificial intelligence. The Anti-Defamation League published an evaluation of major AI language models, ranking Grok (integrated into X) last in its ability to identify and respond to antisemitic content, with repeated failures to recognize Holocaust denial, classic antisemitic tropes, and incitement.

In a particularly alarming institutional failure, West Midlands Police in the United Kingdom acknowledged that false information generated by Microsoft Copilot had been incorporated into intelligence materials used to justify banning Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters from attending a football match. The claim referred to a match that never took place .

Policy Responses and Gaps

Government responses have been uneven. In New York City, Mayor Zohran Mamdani's first actions in office included revoking the city's formal adoption of the IHRA working definition of antisemitism and lifting restrictions on municipal support for Israel-related boycotts. Critics argue this removes an operational reference point widely used by public bodies to identify contemporary antisemitism.

Conversely, the Swiss Federal Council recently adopted a National Strategy against Racism and Antisemitism 2026-2031 and increased financial aid for the protection of threatened minorities . The European Commission continues implementing its EU Strategy on combating antisemitism and fostering Jewish life, developing a network of trusted flaggers to tackle online hate and strengthening security measures to protect public spaces and places of worship.

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has forcefully condemned the wave of attacks, stating through his spokesperson that “houses of worship must be safe havens for all, and attacks on them strike at the core of our shared humanity” .

The Psychological Toll

Behind the statistics lies a profound human cost. According to the American Jewish Committee's State of Antisemitism in America Report, roughly nine in ten American Jews (91 percent) say they feel less safe as Jewish people in the United States as a result of major attacks in the past year . AJC CEO Ted Deutch warns: “When fear is normalized, for any group, that suggests there's much deeper problems because it affects society as a whole” .

Several countries discouraged public celebration of Hanukkah in 2025, causing Jewish communities to withdraw and fear even more for their lives . This followed the deadly attack in Bondi Beach, Sydney, where fifteen celebrants were killed at a Hanukkah community event a type of violence that had not previously characterized the Australian continent .

A Crisis from All Sides

What makes the current moment particularly dangerous is the convergence of antisemitism from multiple political directions. As one commentator observed in the Jerusalem Post, “Yesterday, Jews were accused of being either too capitalist or too communist. Today, American Jews find themselves in the dock of the decolonial far Left, but also targeted by the nativist, isolationist far Right” .

In both cases, Israel has become the new scapegoat either as the embodiment of oppressive colonialism or as a foreign power exerting undue influence. This “totalizing framework” places Jews in the camp of evil, at least those who refuse to renounce their support for Israel .

Lessons from Holocaust Remembrance

On International Holocaust Remembrance Day 2026, world leaders drew explicit connections between past and present. Secretary-General Guterres warned: “The Holocaust is not only history. It is a warning. When hate is unleashed, it consumes everything”. He emphasized that the Holocaust did not begin with gas chambers but with words, with the manipulation of information, with the erosion of democratic institutions .

European Commissioner Magnus Brunner stressed that “remembrance is the opposite of passivity; it is a constant call to action. Our future and the future of our democracy depends on our collective ability to remember and learn from the past” .

A UNESCO survey released on January 27 found that teachers across European countries frequently encounter Holocaust distortion, denial, and the use of Nazi symbols among students, while reporting limited training to address antisemitism in the classroom. Reliance on a single commemorative date as an anchor for confronting antisemitism appears increasingly limited, underscoring the need for sustained educational engagement throughout the year.

The Road Ahead

The rise in antisemitism is not a Jewish problem alone. It is a societal crisis that threatens the fabric of democratic nations. When synagogues are set on fire in Mississippi and Michigan, when Jewish children cannot play safely in Brooklyn playgrounds, when families hide their identities in Switzerland and Australia, the basic compact of pluralistic society is broken.

The international community faces a clear choice: treat these incidents as isolated crimes or recognize them as symptoms of a deeper malady that requires comprehensive response. As Secretary-General Guterres warned, “when those in power stand by and do nothing, evil goes unpunished” . The evidence of early 2026 suggests that evil is no longer waiting for permission.
#Israel #Jews #AntiSemitism 

Capitalism vs Communism, South Korea vs North Korea

 


Capitalism vs Communism:

Look at a satellite picture of South Korea vs North Korea at nite ... North Korea goes dark at night ...

The Lanterns of Liberty: What the Korean Peninsula Teaches Us About Capitalism and Socialism


In the vast, silent expanse of space, hundreds of miles above the Earth, an undeniable truth is visible every single night. It requires no political manifesto, no academic lecture, and no media spin. All it requires is a clear view and an honest pair of eyes. The satellite imagery of the Korean Peninsula at night is, without hyperbole, one of the most powerful and damning indictments of socialism in the modern world.

To the south, the map of South Korea is a dazzling, intricate web of light. It pulses with the energy of a thriving, modern nation. The city of Seoul, a sprawling metropolis of nearly 10 million people, blazes like a beacon, its light spilling out along river valleys and coastlines, connecting cities like Busan and Incheon in a brilliant constellation of human achievement. It is a testament to industry, innovation, and the relentless pursuit of a better life.

Directly north of the 38th parallel, the contrast is so stark it is almost shocking. North Korea lies before you as a vast, inky blackness. Save for a faint, flickering pinpoint of light in the capital city of Pyongyang a Potemkin village of power, likely reserved for the regime’s elite and its propaganda the country is shrouded in an abyss of economic and human darkness. It is as if someone has simply erased an entire nation from the map.

This single image, a photograph taken from the darkness of space, is a parable for our times. It is a stark, visual representation of the choice between two opposing worldviews: capitalism and socialism. And for those willing to see with eyes unclouded by ideology, it settles the debate once and for all.

The Engines of Prosperity: Choice, Competition, and the Market

Before the Korean War, both North and South Korea shared a common history, culture, and people. They had similar levels of poverty and destruction following the Japanese occupation and World War II. They were, for all intents and purposes, a blank slate. But in the decades that followed, they chose two radically different paths.

South Korea, despite early periods of authoritarian rule, embraced the fundamental principles of a market economy. It understood that true and lasting prosperity does not flow from a government ministry in Seoul, but from the creative potential of its people. The government’s role, at its best, was to provide a framework of stability, property rights, and the rule of law, and then get out of the way.

This unleashing of human potential is what the conservative mind recognizes as the only reliable engine of prosperity. It is the profit motive, so derided by the Left, that incentivizes a farmer to work harder, an inventor to stay in his lab, and a business owner to take a risk. It is competition that drives down prices and improves quality. It is the freedom to choose your job, where to live, what to buy, and how to spend your money that creates the dynamic, adaptive, and resilient economy that we see lit up from orbit.

The lights of South Korea are not government-issued. They are the sum total of millions of individual decisions. They represent the factory owner who stayed late to fill an order for Samsung, hoping to win a new contract. They are the convenience store owner in a Seoul neighborhood who keeps his lights on late to serve his community. They are the family in their high-rise apartment, the children doing homework under a desk lamp, their future bright with possibility. The light is the physical manifestation of hope, ambition, and the dignity of work.

South Korea didn’t get rich by accident. It got rich by trading with the world, by embracing globalization on its own terms, and by recognizing that wealth must be *created* before it can be *distributed*. The "Miracle on the Han River" is a testament to the simple, proven truth that free people, operating in a free market, will generate prosperity that can then lift everyone.

The Geography of Despair: Central Planning and the Cult of the State

Now, look north. The darkness of North Korea is not a natural phenomenon. It is a political and economic one. It is the direct, inevitable result of socialism or its more extreme form, communism put into practice. Here, the state owns everything. It controls everything. And consequently, it has suffocated everything.

The regime in Pyongyang operates on a core socialist principle: that the wisdom of a central committee can plan an economy better than the spontaneous order of millions of free individuals. This idea, which sounds almost noble in theory, has been a catastrophic failure every single time it has been tried, from the Soviet Union to Cuba to Venezuela. But in North Korea, it has produced a hell on earth.

In a socialist system, there is no profit motive. Why work harder than the person next to you if the state takes the surplus and distributes it based on political loyalty rather than merit? Why innovate, if innovation threatens the existing power structure? Why take a risk, if failure means not just bankruptcy but state-directed punishment? The result is a system designed for stasis, not growth.

The darkness of North Korea is the darkness of a command economy. Without market prices to signal what is needed and where, the central planners in Pyongyang are flying blind. They build factories that produce nothing anyone wants. They allocate resources to the military and to the glorification of the ruling family, while their people starve. They forbid the free flow of information, cutting their citizens off from the very ideas and technologies that could lift them out of poverty. This is not just economic mismanagement; it is the logical conclusion of a system that places the abstract ideal of the collective over the concrete needs of the individual.

The faint, pathetic light in Pyongyang is a metaphor for the socialist promise itself: a small, flickering, heavily-guarded island of privilege for the ruling class, surrounded by a sea of human misery and unrealized potential. The rest of the country is dark because the people have been denied the most basic tools of modern life: reliable electricity, personal property, the freedom to start a business, and the right to keep the fruits of their own labor.

The Moral Dimension: Dignity vs. Dependency

This comparison is not merely about economics or kilowatt-hours. It is about human dignity. The conservative worldview holds that human beings are not cogs in a machine, nor are they wards of the state. We are created with unique gifts, talents, and ambitions. The proper role of a just society is to allow those gifts to flourish.

Capitalism, for all its flaws and occasional excesses, is the only system that is fundamentally aligned with this truth. It respects the individual as a decision-maker. It rewards hard work, thrift, and ingenuity. It allows a person to build something, to own something, and to pass that legacy on to their children. It is a system of upward mobility, where a person’s destiny is not determined by the lottery of birth but by the content of their character and the strength of their effort.

Socialism, by contrast, views the individual as a problem to be managed. It seeks to flatten human ambition in the name of equality, not realizing that in trying to make everyone equal, it makes everyone equally poor. It substitutes the judgment of a distant bureaucrat for the wisdom of the people. It creates dependency, not dignity. The darkness of North Korea is a darkness of the soul, a place where human potential has been locked away by a state that fears its own people more than it fears any foreign enemy.

The Choice Before Us

We do not need to look to the Korean Peninsula to see this choice. It is playing out in our own backyards. We see it in the calls for "Medicare for All" that would put a government bureaucrat between a patient and their doctor. We see it in the push for a "Green New Deal" that would cripple our energy independence and centralize control over our lives. We see it in the ever-expanding welfare state that too often traps people in a cycle of poverty rather than offering them a ladder out.

The satellite image of Korea is a warning. It is a prophecy of what happens when a society chooses the cold, dark comfort of state control over the warm, brilliant light of human freedom. The light of South Korea is not just the light of cities and factories; it is the light of liberty. It is the light of a free press, of religious worship, of open debate, and of a people who have the power to choose their own leaders.

When you see that image, remember what it represents. On one side of a line, millions of people live in the dark because their government owns their lives. On the other side, millions live in the light because they are free to own their own lives. It is the most profound argument for capitalism and against socialism ever captured in a single photograph. And it is an argument we must continue to make, for as long as there are those who would trade the lanterns of liberty for the false promise of the darkness.

#Capitalism #Socialism #Communism #NorthKorea #SouthKorea

White House Announces Chief of Staff Susie Wiles' Cancer Diagnosis — but Prognosis Is 'Excellent'



White House Announces Chief of Staff Susie Wiles' Cancer Diagnosis — but Prognosis Is 'Excellent'

Governor Abbott Designates Muslim Brotherhood, CAIR As Foreign Terrorist Organizations

 


Governor Abbott Designates Muslim Brotherhood, CAIR As Foreign Terrorist Organizations


Rep. Jasmine Crockett’s Security Guard Killed by Police



Rep. Jasmine Crockett’s Security Guard Killed by Police

The Beirut Barracks Bombing: A Day of Infamy and the Consequences of Weakness


The Beirut Barracks Bombing: A Day of Infamy and the Consequences of Weakness

#Beirut #Bombing #Lebanon #Iran

October 23, 1983, began as a quiet Sunday morning in Beirut, Lebanon. But at 6:22 a.m., that silence was shattered by a thunderous explosion that ripped the soul of a nation. A suicide bomber driving a Mercedes-Benz truck laden with the equivalent of over 12,000 pounds of explosives crashed through the perimeter of the Beirut International Airport (BIA) and detonated his payload at the four-story building serving as the headquarters of the 1st Battalion, 8th Marines. The blast was so powerful that it was the largest non-nuclear explosion ever recorded at the time, instantly reducing the building to a pile of rubble.

When the dust settled, 241 American service members 220 Marines, 18 sailors, and 3 soldiers lay dead. It remains the single deadliest day for the United States Marine Corps since the Battle of Iwo Jima in World War II. Across town, a simultaneous attack on a French paratroopers' barracks killed 58 more. The world had witnessed a brutal act of terror, and the name Hezbollah, a proxy of the Iranian regime, was written in blood on the pages of American history.

For conservatives, the Beirut barracks bombing is not just a historical tragedy; it is a profound and enduring lesson on the nature of radical Islamic terrorism, the necessity of a robust national defense, and, most critically, the catastrophic consequences of projecting weakness on the world stage.

To understand the tragedy, one must first understand the confused and feckless mission that put those Marines in harm's way. In the aftermath of Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon to root out Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) fighters, the situation in the country was chaotic. The Reagan administration, with the stated goal of restoring Lebanese government sovereignty and facilitating the withdrawal of foreign forces, deployed U.S. troops as part of a Multinational Force (MNF). Initially, the mission after the Sabra and Shatila massacre was to provide a presence to protect Palestinian civilians.

However, the mission quickly drifted. The Marines, stationed at the airport, found themselves in an impossible position. They were deployed in the middle of a vicious Lebanese civil war, surrounded by warring factions, including the Shia militant group that would become known as Hezbollah. Yet, they were hamstrung by restrictive rules of engagement. Their rifles were unloaded, and they were not authorized to conduct patrols with rounds in their chambers. They were there to be a "presence," not a fighting force. In essence, the United States had deployed its finest warriors and then tied one hand behind their backs.

This was a recipe for disaster, and the terrorists noticed. From a conservative perspective, the foundational error was a misunderstanding of the enemy. The Reagan administration, for all its domestic successes in restoring American optimism, initially viewed the conflict in Lebanon through a Cold War lens, worrying more about Soviet influence than the rising tide of radical Shia fundamentalism. They failed to grasp that to groups like Hezbollah created, financed, and armed by the Islamic Republic of Iran America was not a neutral peacekeeper but the "Great Satan." To them, our presence was an infidel occupation, and our rules of engagement were not a sign of restraint, but of weakness.

The attack itself was a masterpiece of terrorist planning, and the trail of evidence led directly to Tehran. The truck that carried out the bombing had been modified with specialized steel plates to protect the driver and maximize the blast. The bombers were members of Hezbollah, a group that would later openly boast of its subservience to Iran's Supreme Leader. In 1983, Hezbollah did not exist in a vacuum; it was the vanguard of Iran's revolutionary export. The Iranian regime, still flush with fervor from its 1979 revolution, saw Lebanon as a prime battleground to spread its ideology and destroy American influence. The bombing of the Marine barracks was their declaration of war.

The immediate aftermath of the bombing was a moment for decisive action. The French, showing a resolve that their modern counterparts often lack, launched a retaliatory airstrike against Iranian Revolutionary Guard positions in the Bekaa Valley. President Reagan, initially appearing resolute, famously stated, "If there is to be a tragedy, they must know that it will be met with our fury." He commissioned a study, the Long Commission, which rightly placed blame on the confused mission and the rules of engagement that made the Marines a "target of opportunity."

But then came the true tragedy. Instead of retaliating with "fury," the Reagan administration ultimately chose retreat. Within four months, President Reagan ordered the Marines to "redeploy" to ships off the Lebanese coast. We cut and ran.

For conservatives who revere the Gipper, this remains one of the most difficult and disappointing moments of his presidency. It was a strategic blunder of the highest order. By withdrawing without punishing the state sponsors of the attack, the United States sent a clear and devastating message across the Middle East: America could be bloodied, and if you hit them hard enough, they would leave. The lesson was not lost on our enemies. Osama bin Laden would later cite the Beirut bombing and the subsequent U.S. withdrawal as proof of American cowardice, a belief that helped inspire the attacks on the Khobar Towers, the U.S. embassies in Africa, the USS Cole, and ultimately, the attacks of September 11, 2001.

The failure in Lebanon was not a failure of the American fighting man. The Marines in Beirut were heroes, conducting themselves with discipline and honor under impossible conditions. The failure was at the strategic level. It was a failure to define a clear and achievable mission. It was a failure to provide our troops with the rules of engagement necessary to defend themselves. And most egregiously, it was a failure of will in the aftermath of the attack, a retreat that validated the terrorists' barbaric tactics.

We saw a similar failure repeated in 1993 in Somalia after the "Black Hawk Down" incident, where a pinned-down force led to another rapid withdrawal, further emboldening groups like al-Qaeda. It wasn't until the War on Terror following 9/11 that a more robust doctrine one of striking our enemies before they can strike us began to take hold, a philosophy that found its strongest proponent in the Reagan-esque foreign policy of the Trump administration, which broke from the pattern of endless, nation-building wars and instead focused on decapitating terrorist leadership and applying maximum pressure on state sponsors like Iran.

The Beirut barracks bombing was a direct attack by Iran on the United States. Forty-one years later, the Iranian regime remains the world's foremost state sponsor of terror, and its proxies—Hezbollah, Hamas, the Houthis continue to threaten American lives and interests. The men who died on October 23, 1983, were not victims of a random act of violence. They were casualties of a policy that failed to recognize the existential nature of the enemy. They were betrayed by a chain of command that put them in a war zone and expected them to act as peacekeepers.

We owe it to their memory to learn the lesson of Beirut. We must never again send our servicemen and women into a hostile environment with rules of engagement designed more for public relations than for force protection. We must understand that radical Islamic terrorism is not a law enforcement problem, but a military one. And we must ensure that any nation or group that spills American blood faces overwhelming and immediate retaliation.

The 241 Americans who died in Beirut did not die in vain if we remember why they died. They died because we were indecisive. They died because we underestimated an evil enemy. And they died because, for a time, we forgot the cardinal rule of American power: speak softly, but carry a big stick, and never, ever show weakness to those who wish you dead. Their memory is a sacred trust, and the only way to honor it is to ensure that such a tragedy born of strategic confusion and a lack of resolve never happens again.

YES!!! I VOTED FOR IT 3 TIMES

 "YES!!! I VOTED FOR IT 3 TIMES!"


#Illegals #Migrants #FBI #ICE #CBP #Border


Judge accused of helping immigrant dodge ICE agents found guilty of obstruction

Sen. Hawley Bill Bans Abortion Pill, Strips FDA Approval



Sen. Hawley Bill Bans Abortion Pill, Strips FDA Approval



U.S. is allowing Iranian oil tankers through Strait of Hormuz, says Bessent



U.S. is allowing Iranian oil tankers through Strait of Hormuz, says Bessent



CIA acknowledges 1953 coup it backed to overthrow leader of Iran was undemocratic


 

CIA acknowledges 1953 coup it backed to overthrow leader of Iran was undemocratic

Trump Says Talks With Cuba Ongoing, Action Possible After Iran




Trump Says Talks With Cuba Ongoing, Action Possible After Iran

Destructive severe weather outbreak slams the Heartland, charges toward East Coast on Monday

 


Destructive severe weather outbreak slams the Heartland, charges toward East Coast on Monday

Cuba confirms talks with US amid energy crisis



Cuba confirms talks with US amid energy crisis

Contacts with the Trump administration come as nationwide blackouts deepen following Washington’s oil restrictions and the Iran war
#Cuba #Trump #Iran

3/14/26

1ST LT. ARIANA A. BOUCHE U.S. AIR FORCE

 

PRAY FOR

1ST LT. ARIANA A. BOUCHE

U.S. AIR FORCE

KC-135 Stratotanker Pilot

One of six American airmen lost in the tragic KC-135 crash in western Iraq.

Behind every call sign is a real person.

A daughter. A friend. Someone deeply loved.

She took off to serve her country and never came home.

Tonight, we remember her courage and the sacrifice she made in uniform.

Rest in Peace, Lieutenant.

May God hold her in eternal peace and bring comfort to the family she left behind.

🇺🇸🙏🕊️

#AirForce #KC135 #Iran

3/11/26

Biscuits & Gravy Breakfast

 


Biscuits & Gravy Breakfast

Start by warming two soft biscuits, then split them open so the fluffy centers show.

Brown breakfast sausage in a skillet, sprinkle in flour, and slowly whisk in milk to make a thick, creamy sausage gravy.

Spoon the hot gravy generously over the opening biscuits so it sinks into the soft bread.

Cook two eggs in a buttered skillet until the whites are set and the yolks stay soft.

Plate the eggs beside thick slices of seared ham and the gravy-covered biscuits.

Finish with a dash of black pepper and a drizzle of hot sauce.

#Food #Breakfast #Recipes #Recipe

Alfred the Great’s Indian Embassy



People Wait On Tax Season For Other People's Money

 


People Wait On Tax Season For Other People's Money:

I was a tax assistance officer in the Army. I was a tax preparer in California. You have to go through the IRS Tax Preparer Class to do it. I was legally able to help people profit from the tax system.

There should be no TAX RETURN. The Government should not take more of your money during the year to have you 'reconcile' by April 15th for the previous year. People shouldn't profit from the tax system and get money from other people for their kids in the form of Child Tax Credits. Their money is not your money. That is not the purpose or the intention of the tax code.

The Great Tax Swindle: Why Your Refund Means the Government Wins and You Lose

By a Former Army Tax Assistance Officer

There is a peculiar ritual that plays out across America every spring. Millions of citizens eagerly file their tax returns, hoping for that one specific outcome: a refund. They wait with bated breath for the government to send them a check, often celebrating it as if they’ve won a prize. Having served as a tax assistance officer in the Army and worked as a tax preparer in California roles that required me to pass the IRS Tax Preparer Class I can tell you with confidence that this entire system is backwards. The refund you’re celebrating was never a gift. It was always your money. The government merely held it for months, interest-free, while you struggled to pay bills, save for a home, or cover everyday expenses.

The problem runs far deeper than the annual refund ritual. The very existence of a tax “return” signals a fundamentally broken relationship between citizens and their government. There should be no tax return. The government should not confiscate more of your hard-earned money than necessary throughout the year, only to force you into an April 15th reconciliation that feels more like an audit of your life than a simple accounting exercise.

The War-Time Creation You Were Never Meant to Keep

Most Americans don’t realize that the withholding system the mechanism that takes money from every paycheck before you ever see it is not some eternal feature of the republic. It is a wartime measure that never died. Before 1943, Americans paid their taxes in quarterly installments, much like freelancers and small business owners do today. They saw their full earnings, managed their own money, and wrote checks to the government.

World War II changed everything. The government needed vast sums quickly, and rather than trust citizens to pay what they owed, they invented a system that takes the money first and asks questions later . Here’s the bitter irony that every conservative should appreciate: the modern withholding system was developed in part by Milton Friedman, the free-market legend who would later regret his role in creating what he called “machinery that would make possible a government that I would come to criticize severely as too large, too intrusive, too destructive of freedom”.

Friedman understood something that remains true today: when the government takes your money before you receive it, you barely notice the loss. The pain of taxation is hidden. You never possess what was rightfully yours, so you never feel the violation of having it taken. As one economist observed, this system is like casino chips it separates people from their actual money through a psychological barrier. The government accomplished what casino owners mastered long ago: making the loss feel less real.

The Interest-Free Loan You’re Forced to Make

Let’s talk about what your tax refund actually represents. When you receive a refund, you are getting back money that you overpaid throughout the year. The average refund often runs close to $3,000. That means the average American is lending the federal government $3,000 annually with zero interest.

Think about what you could do with an extra $250 each month. You could pay down credit card debt, which carries interest rates that would make a loan shark blush. You could contribute to a 401(k) and watch that money grow through the magic of compound interest. You could save for your child’s education, make home repairs, or simply have breathing room in your monthly budget.

Instead, millions of Americans treat this forced savings plan as a windfall. They spend their refunds on televisions, vacations, or other discretionary purchases, never realizing that they’ve effectively given the government an interest-free loan while often carrying high-interest debt themselves . Financial advisors across the political spectrum agree: a large refund is a sign of poor tax planning.

The Child Tax Credit: Your Money or Their Entitlement?

Now we arrive at an even more troubling aspect of the current system. The author’s original statement cuts to the heart of the matter: “People shouldn't profit from the tax system and get money from other people for their kids in the form of Child Tax Credits. Their money is not your money. That is not the purpose or the intention of the tax code.”

This deserves careful consideration. The Child Tax Credit was originally designed to provide relief to working families to ensure that raising children didn’t push middle-class families into financial distress. But over time, particularly with the 2021 expansion pushed by Democrats, the credit transformed into something else entirely. Under that expansion, families received monthly payments regardless of whether they paid any income tax at all. The credit became refundable, meaning that even those with zero tax liability could receive checks from the government.

From a conservative perspective, this represents a fundamental perversion of the tax code. The purpose of taxation is to raise revenue for legitimate constitutional functions of government, not to redistribute income through the IRS. When the Child Tax Credit becomes a welfare program administered through the tax system, it blurs the distinction between taxpayers and tax recipients. Your neighbor receiving a check for children they chose to have is not paying taxes they are receiving them .

The current political debate illustrates this tension perfectly. Recent Republican proposals would increase the credit to $2,500 per child, but policy experts note that the lowest-earning families may still be excluded. Meanwhile, Democrats push for expansions that would send monthly checks to millions who pay no income tax whatsoever. The question conservatives must ask is simple: at what point does tax relief become welfare? And should the tax code be in the business of writing checks to people who fund none of the government’s operations?

The Transparency We’ve Lost

Perhaps the greatest damage wrought by the withholding system is the destruction of fiscal transparency. When you write a check for a significant expense a car, a refrigerator, even a dinner out you feel the cost. You weigh whether the purchase is worth the money. You make conscious decisions about value.

But when taxes are silently extracted from every paycheck, that calculation disappears. You never see the full $60,000 you earned; you see the $45,000 that remains after federal, state, Social Security, and Medicare taxes vanish into the ether . The cost of government becomes invisible, and an invisible cost is a cost that faces no political resistance.

The pre-1943 system had a virtue that modern taxpayers cannot appreciate: accountability. When people paid their taxes in quarterly installments, they knew exactly what government cost them. They could compare the services received against the dollars paid. They could demand better performance from their representatives.

Today, that accountability is gone. The government takes its cut before you ever possess your earnings, and by the time April arrives, you’re simply reconciling accounts. The political class loves this arrangement. As the Treasury Department once frankly admitted, withholding “greatly reduced the taxpayer’s awareness of the amount of tax being collected” and “made it easier to raise taxes in the future”.

A Better Way: End Withholding, Restore Accountabilit

What would a conservative reform of this system look like? It begins with a simple principle: your money belongs to you. The government has no rightful claim to your earnings until the moment taxes are due.

Imagine a system where every American received their full paycheck. Where families managed their own finances throughout the year. Where quarterly tax payments were made directly to the Treasury, and every citizen saw exactly what their government cost them .

Such a system would transform American politics overnight. People who currently celebrate their refunds would suddenly face the real cost of government. They would ask harder questions about where their money goes. They would demand better value for their tax dollars. And they would think twice before supporting politicians who promise new programs funded by other people’s money

Critics will argue that Americans cannot be trusted to save for their tax bills. But this argument is fundamentally paternalistic. It assumes that citizens are incapable of managing their own affairs and must be protected from themselves by a benevolent government. This is the same logic that justifies every expansion of state power, and conservatives should reject it outright.

The tax code should not be a tool for social engineering, wealth redistribution, or forced savings plans. It should raise necessary revenue for limited government functions—and nothing more. That means ending the withholding system that hides the true cost of government. It means ensuring that credits and deductions serve to reduce tax burdens for those who actually pay taxes, not to write checks to those who don’t. And it means treating Americans like the responsible adults they are, capable of managing their own money without government supervision.

As someone who has worked inside the tax system, I can tell you that the current arrangement benefits only one party: the government. It’s time we took back what belongs to us not just our money, but our dignity as citizens who deserve to know exactly what we’re paying for the privilege of being governed.

#Taxes #IRS

3/10/26

Navarro to Newsmax: Control of Hormuz is Key for Global Economy



Navarro to Newsmax: Control of Hormuz is Key for Global Economy

The Havana Smoke Signal: Why "Clinton/Lewinsky Cigars" Are the Wrong Way to Remember a Scandal

 


The Havana Smoke Signal: Why "Clinton/Lewinsky Cigars" Are the Wrong Way to Remember a Scandal



In the whipsaw news cycle of the Trump administration, it is easy to become numb to the sheer velocity of change. One week, the headlines are dominated by the successful conclusion of operations against the Maduro regime in Venezuela. The next, President Donald Trump is hosting Latin American leaders at his Doral resort, signaling that the island of Cuba a thorn in America’s side for over six decades is next on the agenda .

According to exclusive reporting from *USA Today*, the Trump administration is in active discussions with Havana regarding a potential economic deal that could reshape the geopolitical landscape of the Caribbean. The discussions are said to include access to ports, energy exploration, and a relaxation of travel restrictions for Americans . It is a stunning development, particularly coming from a president who, in his first term, reversed many of the Obama-era overtures to the Castro regime.

Predictably, the news has sent shockwaves through the legacy media and the online chattering classes. But in the cynical echo chamber of social media, one particular joke has risen above the rest, a punchline so predictable it almost writes itself: "We're in talks with CUBA! Soon we'll all have the CLINTON/LEWINSKY Cigars!!!"

It is a reference so vile, so steeped in the tabloid muck of the 1990s, that it warrants a pause. For conservatives, this reflexive linking of a potential foreign policy realignment with the most sordid details of the Clinton impeachment is not just a lapse in taste; it is a dangerous distraction from a serious strategic moment. We must separate the cigar from the smokescreen.

The Ghost of the Starr Report

To understand why the "cigar joke" lands with such a thud in certain circles, we must revisit a dark chapter in American political history one that conservatives did not cause, but were forced to clean up.



The year was 1998. Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr, tasked with investigating the Whitewater land dealings, instead delivered a report to Congress that read more like a tawdry paperback than a legal document. As detailed in the report, one of the most lurid allegations involved then-President Bill Clinton and White House intern Monica Lewinsky engaging in a sexual act in a hallway off the Oval Office, during which Clinton used a cigar as a "sexual prop." He reportedly then placed the cigar in his mouth and remarked, "It tastes good" . To add an almost cinematic layer of disrespect to the office, this allegedly occurred while Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat was waiting for a meeting in the Rose Garden .

For conservatives watching the drama unfold, it was a moment of profound moral reckoning. Here was a man who had sworn an oath to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution, debasing the highest office in the land in a manner that made late-night comics blush. The details were so graphic that many news organizations initially hesitated to print them . Judge Richard Posner, a Reagan appointee, later criticized the report's excessive detail, arguing it was designed more to humiliate the President than to serve justice .

The Clinton/Lewinsky scandal was never really about sex; it was about perjury, obstruction of justice, and the degradation of the presidential seal. It represented a failure of character that required a public reckoning. For millions of Americans, it shattered the notion that the presidency demanded a certain level of dignity.

The Geopolitics of a "Friendly Takeover"

Fast forward to 2026. The political landscape has shifted tectonically. President Trump, having secured the capture of Venezuela's Nicolás Maduro on narco-terrorism charges, has effectively cut off the lifeline of cheap oil that kept the Cuban regime afloat for years . "Cuba's at the end of the line," Trump recently stated. "They have no money. They have no oil. They have a bad philosophy" .

The deal being discussed is not one of weakness, but of leverage. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, whose family fled the island, is reportedly negotiating from a position of overwhelming American strength. Trump himself framed it bluntly, stating that regime change in Cuba may come as a "friendly takeover" or it may not .

This is where the conservative mind must engage, rather than meme. The "Clinton/Lewinsky Cigar" joke conflates two entirely different things: the personal depravity of a Democrat president with the strategic national interest of the United States. It is a form of intellectual laziness that the Left would love to see us embrace.

By reducing the Cuban negotiation to a punchline about a sex act, we ignore the substantive debate happening *within* the conservative movement. As argued in *The American Conservative*, a "flexible realism" suggests that engagement with Cuba if done to secure American dominance, block Chinese influence, and stop the flow of migrants might actually be the most "America First" policy available .

Think about it. For sixty years, the embargo has been the policy. And for sixty years, the Castro regime has survived, eventually turning to Russia and China as economic patrons. Today, Russian warships sit in Havana harbor—a harbor that could, under a new deal, host American cruise ships again . Currently, China is digging its claws into Cuban nickel and cobalt mines minerals essential for American supply chains .

Is it truly conservative to maintain a policy that has failed to dislodge the regime but has successfully ceded economic influence to our geopolitical rivals? Or is it conservative to recognize, as President Trump does, that making Cuba economically dependent on the United States is a far more effective tool for long-term change than simply shouting into the hurricane?

The Real Offense to Decency

The reflexive resort to the "cigar joke" is also an offense to the concept of forgiveness and redemption. Bill Clinton was impeached by the House of Representatives. He was disbarred. He was humiliated on a global stage. The conservative movement held him accountable.

But accountability, for a conservative, should eventually give way to a grudging acceptance of history. Clinton left office. The nation moved on. To continually weaponize the most graphic details of his misconduct as a way to score cheap political points whenever Cuba is mentioned is to suggest that the degradation he brought to the office is the only thing we remember about that era.

Furthermore, it distracts from the current administration's successes. While the Left is busy snickering about cigars, the Trump administration is systematically dismantling the axis of authoritarianism in the Western Hemisphere. Venezuela has fallen. Cuba is isolated. The "Donroe Doctrine," as the President calls it, is being enforced .
Yet, this hawkish posture has its own conservative critics. Megyn Kelly recently eviscerated Senator Lindsey Graham for brandishing a "Free Cuba" hat and hinting at further military action, warning against an "endless war" mentality . This is a legitimate conservative debate: Should we be using military power to liberate nations, or should we be securing our borders and bringing our boys home?

That is the conversation we should be having. Not whether Marco Rubio is going to be handing out novelty cigars at press conferences.

A Final Thought on Taste and Memory

The "Clinton/Lewinsky Cigar" is a potent symbol but not for the reasons the meme-makers intend. For those who lived through it, it is a symbol of an era when the Left told us that character didn't matter, that private actions had no bearing on public service, and that a man who defiled the Oval Office was simply the victim of a "vast right-wing conspiracy."

It is a symbol of a media that protected a Democrat president while obsessing over the supposed moral failings of Republicans. It is a reminder of why so many Americans lost faith in institutions.

As the Trump administration navigates these delicate talks with Havana, conservatives should keep their eyes on the prize: the end of the Castro regime, the security of the southern border, and the expulsion of Chinese and Russian influence from our hemisphere.

Let the Left make the jokes. They have nothing else. We, however, have the responsibility to govern. And governing requires us to look past the phantoms of 1998 and see the opportunities of 2026. If a deal with Cuba brings stability, security, and freedom to the island, no one will care about the brand of cigars available in Havana. They will care that, once again, America won.

#cigar #Clinton #Lewinsky #Scandal