Friday, December 20, 2024

Excerpts from the Book "Secret Empires"

Then there was the disappearance of $1.8 billion in U.S. taxpayer-guaranteed money. Both Joe Biden and John Kerry championed $1.8 billion in taxpayer-backed loans to be given to Ukraine courtesy of the IMF. The funds were being loaned to the country to keep the country’s financial markets liquid. Much of that money would go through Kolomoisky’s PrivatBank. And more than $1 billion from Privat just simply disappeared.

……………

McConnell and Chao have seen their wealth increase dramatically in a matter of just a few years. In 2004, they had an average net worth of $3.1 million according to public disclosures—well below the senate average of $14.5 million. Ten years later, they had a net worth of between $9.2 million and $36.5 million. The key: in 2008 they received a gift from Elaine Chao’s father, James. The Chao family fortune comes from the Foremost Maritime Corporation (later renamed Foremost Group), a shipping firm that her father founded, and which remains a family business. James Chao is the chairman, and Elaine’s youngest sister, Angela, is deputy chairwoman, running the day-to-day operations. Another sister, Christine, is Foremost’s general counsel.

…………..

So what family role do McConnell and Chao play, exactly? As these two have held court in Washington, Foremost has thrived, thanks in large part to close relations with the Chinese government. As McConnell and Chao have risen in political stature, these relationships have only strengthened.

………….

More recently, Senator McConnell has worked to upend legislation that would be damaging to Beijing. In September 2011, the Currency Exchange Rate Oversight Reform Act (S.1619) was introduced in the Senate. The bill punished countries with “fundamentally misaligned currenc[ies]” by tacking on import duties. While it did not explicitly target China, the bill was considered a direct response to China’s undervalued currency, which threatened U.S. competitiveness in the international marketplace and made U.S. goods more expensive in China. McConnell was adamantly opposed to the bill.

Source: Secret Empires: How the American Political Class Hides Corruption and Enriches Family and Friends (2018) by Peter Schweizer.

Thursday, December 19, 2024

G20 meets to plan YOUR future, your resources, your rights and your land

From Glenn Beck.com (Sept. 25, 2023):

This is a really important story. The G20 met earlier this month in India. The G20 is one of the biggest, if not the biggest, meeting for global economic superpowers that occurs each year. China’s Xi and Russia’s Putin did not attend, even though they are G20 leaders, so the U.S. and India took an even bigger role than usual.

At this year’s event, the G20 produced a statement called the “G20 New Delhi Leaders’ Declaration.” In it, the G20 published a rough outline of its policy plans and priorities for member nations. Keep in mind that these are the priorities the countries agreed on, so there is a general consensus on the Declaration.

The reason the New Delhi Declaration is important is because it provides an exceptional look into the globalist, Great Reset playbook for the next year and longer. All of this is leading up to an incredibly important United Nations meeting in September 2024 called “Summit for the Future,” where a new international pact will be formally approved. Globalist elites are showing us their cards. All we have to do is look at them.

What’s in the Declaration?

To say the New Delhi Declaration is radical is a major understatement. It’s the Great Reset on steroids. The document is 37 pages long, with each page containing numerous bullet-point agenda items for creating a New World Order.

There are literally hundreds of points in the document, so I couldn’t possibly go through them all now, but here are just some of the highlights:

1. An international commitment to dramatically scale back the use of private and public lands.

The G20 committed to “restoring by 2030 at least 30 percent of all degraded ecosystems and scaling up efforts to achieve land degradation neutrality.”

2. A commitment to “halt and reverse biodiversity loss by 2030.”

That would effectively mean not only the end of land development, but also the return of land that’s currently occupied by humans to nature. How can we possibly feed the world’s growing population with a commitment like this? (By the way, we warned about this in Dark Future.)

3. A plan for “international governance for AI.”

According to the document, member nations should “ensure” that AI is developed “responsibly,” which means, among other things, designers take “ethics” and “biases” into account. That would be a good thing if elites agreed with our understanding of "ethics" and "biases," but they don't. They want to use AI to promote ESG, DEI, and other social justice ideas.

Further, the nations committed to promoting AI that’s designed to accomplish the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals. Remember that the SDGs are the foundation for the Great Reset, Agenda 21, Agenda 2030, and nearly every other significant globalist proposal made over the past three decades. That's not my interpretation—that's what the leaders of all of those plans repeatedly said. (All of this is predicted in Dark Future too.) [read more]

The beginning of the New World Order.

The other highlights of the plan:

  • Expanding the “international tax system” and building publicly regulated, controllable “digital public infrastructure.”
  • Embedding global financial institutions, including banks, with ESG, and using international institutions to ensure that the financial system embraces “sustainable” practices.
  • Additional regulations for cryptocurrencies.
  • A goal of increasing “social protection” programs, like universal health care, and implementing policies to make “social security” benefits “portable” between nations.
  • Enhancing the power of the World Health Organization in future pandemics and public health emergencies.
  • Trillions in new climate-related spending programs globally.
  • Additional collaboration and research for the introduction and adoption of central bank digital currencies.

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Google’s RT-2 AI model brings us one step closer to WALL-E

From Arstechnica.com (July 28, 2023):

On Friday, Google DeepMind announced Robotic Transformer 2 (RT-2), a "first-of-its-kind" vision-language-action (VLA) model that uses data scraped from the Internet to enable better robotic control through plain language commands. The ultimate goal is to create general-purpose robots that can navigate human environments, similar to fictional robots like WALL-E or C-3PO.

When a human wants to learn a task, we often read and observe. In a similar way, RT-2 utilizes a large language model (the tech behind ChatGPT) that has been trained on text and images found online. RT-2 uses this information to recognize patterns and perform actions even if the robot hasn't been specifically trained to do those tasks—a concept called generalization.

For example, Google says that RT-2 can allow a robot to recognize and throw away trash without having been specifically trained to do so. It uses its understanding of what trash is and how it is usually disposed to guide its actions. RT-2 even sees discarded food packaging or banana peels as trash, despite the potential ambiguity.

In another example, The New York Times recounts a Google engineer giving the command, "Pick up the extinct animal," and the RT-2 robot locates and picks out a dinosaur from a selection of three figurines on a table.

This capability is notable because robots have typically been trained from a vast number of manually acquired data points, making that process difficult due to the high time and cost of covering every possible scenario. Put simply, the real world is a dynamic mess, with changing situations and configurations of objects. A practical robot helper needs to be able to adapt on the fly in ways that are impossible to explicitly program, and that's where RT-2 comes in. [read more]

Pick up trash, huh? Maybe Google can make a robot with that AI tech and pick up trash in parks. Just an idea.

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Elon Musk's DOGE Plans 6 Cuts to Federal Govt


From Newsmax.com (Dec. 5):

The heads of the newly formed Department of Government Efficiency were set to meet with House and Senate Republicans on Thursday and discuss ways they intend to trim the federal bureaucracy, The Wall Street Journal reported.

President-elect Donald Trump announced in November that Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy will lead the incoming administration's goal of weeding out government inefficiency and wasteful spending. On Thursday, Trump named former White House Cabinet Secretary Bill McGinley to serve as counsel to DOGE aiming to "to provide advice and guidance to end the bloated federal bureaucracy."

Describing their DOGE initiative in a Wall Street Journal opinion article last month, Musk and Ramaswamy wrote: "DOGE will work with legal experts embedded in government agencies, aided by advanced technology, to apply these rulings to federal regulations enacted by such agencies."

The Journal noted six DOGE plans:

  • Musk indicated he could cut $2 trillion from the federal budget but has not specified how or in what time frame. The figure would represent nearly 30% of the current $6.8 trillion the government has spent during the fiscal year ending Sept. 30. One way Musk has floated to trim massive amounts of spending quickly is to eliminate whole entities such as the Department of Education and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
  • Cutting regulations would be the next line of attack for Musk and Ramaswamy, noting two recent Supreme Court rulings that federal agencies can't impose some regulations unless specifically authorized by Congress. DOGE plans to begin by presenting Trump with those regulations the president-elect could use executive authority to suspend and then initiate the review process to officially remove them.
  • DOGE plans to reduce the federal work force. More than 2 million people currently work for the federal government, with many as civilians working for the Department of Defense.
  • Ending remote work has been discussed by Musk and Ramaswamy, of which they assumed the mere discussion would lead to a many voluntary resignations. The Wall Street Journal cited a 2023 Government Accountability Office report, which found 17 agencies that had less than a quarter utilization of their headquarters buildings early that year. 
  • Ending Daylight Savings Time has long been floated by politicians, but DOGE might actually have the wherewithal to see it through. Many Americans find the concept inefficient and outdated. Despite the Senate passing a bill in 2022, the House declined to vote on the measure.  
  • DOGE plans to go through many of President Joe Biden's spending priorities, some of which appeared to be aimed directly at Musk, CEO of Tesla. The Biden administration floated a loan from the $400 billion clean-energy lending program to EV startup Rivian Automotive to fund a plant in Georgia. DOGE could tighten some rules for tax credits making them harder for companies to claim.

Musk and Ramaswamy announced they will launch a podcast called "DOGEcast" with plans to make public all the government cost cutting they're considering and how such streamlining will be implemented. [source]

A good start. Now, if Congress acts on DOGE's recommendations that would be great.

More articles on DOGE: 

Monday, December 16, 2024

Trump Names Kash Patel to Serve as FBI Director


From Newsmax.com (Nov. 30):

President-elect Donald Trump has picked Kash Patel to serve as FBI director, turning to a fierce loyalist to upend America's premier law enforcement agency and rid the government of perceived "conspirators."

It's the latest bombshell Trump has thrown at the Washington establishment and a test for how far Senate Republicans will go in confirming his nominees.

"I am proud to announce that Kashyap "Kash" Patel will serve as the next Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation," Trump posted Saturday night on Truth Social. "Kash is a brilliant lawyer, investigator, and 'America First' fighter who has spent his career exposing corruption, defending Justice, and protecting the American People."

The selection is in keeping with Trump's view that the government's law enforcement and intelligence agencies require a radical transformation and his stated desire for retribution against supposed adversaries. It shows how Trump, still fuming over years of federal investigations that shadowed his first administration and later led to his indictment, is moving to place atop the FBI and Justice Department close allies.

Patel "played a pivotal role in uncovering the Russia, Russia, Russia Hoax, standing as an advocate for truth, accountability, and the Constitution," Trump wrote Saturday night.

It remains unclear whether Patel could be confirmed, even by a Republican-led Senate, though Trump has also raised the prospect of using recess appointments to push his selections through.

Patel would replace Christopher Wray, who was appointed by Trump in 2017 but quickly fell out of favor with the president and his allies. Though the position carries a 10-year term, Wray's removal was not unexpected given Trump's long-running public criticism of him and the FBI, including after a search of his Florida property for classified documents and two investigations that resulted in his indictment.

Patel's past proposals, if carried out, would lead to convulsive change for an agency tasked not only with investigating violations of federal law but also protecting the country from terrorist attacks, foreign espionage and other threats.

He's called for dramatically reducing the FBI's footprint, a perspective that dramatically sets him apart from earlier directors who have sought additional resources for the bureau, and has suggested closing down the bureau's headquarters in Washington and "reopen it the next day as a museum of the deep state" — Trump's pejorative catch-all for the federal bureaucracy.

And though the Justice Department in 2021 halted the practice of secretly seizing reporters' phone records during leak investigation, Patel has said he intends to aggressively hunt down government officials who leak information to reporters and change the law to make it easier to sue journalists.

During an interview with Steve Bannon last December, Patel said he and others "will go out and find the conspirators not just in government but in the media."

"We're going to come after the people in the media who lied about American citizens who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections," Patel said, referring to the 2020 presidential election in which Biden, the Democratic challenger, defeated Trump. "We're going to come after you, whether it's criminally or civilly. We'll figure that out. But yeah, we're putting you all on notice."

The child of Indian immigrants and a former public defender, Patel spent several years as a Justice Department prosecutor before catching the Trump administration's attention as a staffer for the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.

Trump also announced Saturday that he will nominate Sheriff Chad Chronister, the top law enforcement officer in Hillsborough County, Florida, to serve as the Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Agency.

"As DEA Administrator, Chad will work with our great Attorney General, Pam Bondi, to secure the Border, stop the flow of Fentanyl, and other Illegal Drugs, across the Southern Border, and SAVE LIVES," Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social announcing the pick. [source]

Another great pick. Hopefully, Kash Patel will be able to clean up the corruption in the FBI.

Patel could also tell how many FBI agents and informants were at the Jan. 6 protest.

Since the publishing of this article, Sheriff Chad Chronister has dropped out of consideration for DEA Administrator.

Other Kash Patel-FBI articles:

Friday, December 13, 2024

Is Social Justice Killing Science? Why We Need to Define “Truth”

From Breakpoint.org (Dec. 8, 2022):

The mission of scientific discovery, Johannes Kepler believed, was “to think God’s thoughts after Him.” Even for scientists skeptical of the supernatural, for a long time at least, the task of science was to discover truth. As a fictional scientist in Jules Verne’s A Journey to the Center of the Earth put it, “Science, my lad, is made up of mistakes, but they are useful … because they lead little by little to the truth.”

Today, however, the pursuit of truth in the natural sciences is increasingly eclipsed by the tyranny of political correctness, and some frustrated scientists are crying foul. In early November, in fact, over 150 professors and scholars gathered at Stanford University to talk about the growing threats to the scientific enterprise and to academic freedom.

Among the speakers was Williams College biology professor Luana Maroja, who gave a troubling presentation on the ways progressive ideology is strangling her discipline. Dr. Maroja, a frequent advocate for evolutionary theory, has long slammed critics of Darwin as “creationists” who prioritize religion over science. These days, however, she’s more concerned about threats to science coming from another religion, the “woke” left. In her presentation, she cited the growing number of Biology 101 classes where students are taught that the sexes (not just gender) exist on a “continuum.” She pointed to statements by several schools, and even the Society for the Study of Evolution, that blur the distinction between male and female, which is, she said, a “bedrock insight” of biology.

Dr. Maroja cited published papers that urge biologists to be “inclusive” by only talking about organisms that show the least difference between the sexes, even “when that has no relevance to any animal or vascular plant.” She even described efforts to restrict access to population genetics data out of fear that such data might be used to promote discrimination.

In other words, biologists and other scientists are being taught to ignore or are being denied vast amounts of evidence simply because that evidence could threaten politically favored ideologies. According to Dr. Maroja, it has become “taboo” to note “any disparities between groups that are not explained as the result of systemic bias.” Put differently, the push to obscure the truth about sex and keep population genetics under lock and key is the result of a belief that people (and perhaps animals) are blank slates onto which society imposes roles and identities, and no data to the contrary should be allowed.

Sadly, this very unscientific approach to science is becoming a running theme. Recall the recent announcement by the peer-reviewed scientific journal Nature Human Behaviour that they will now filter submissions based on how well they promote diversity, equity, and inclusion. Scientists like Lawrence Krauss, also no friend of religious conservatives, rightly complained that such requirements subjugate science to politics.

The Stanford gathering could be a new high-water mark for anti-“woke” backlash among scientists. As Dr. Maroja concluded at the gathering, when science “becomes an extension of ideology,” it is no longer concerned with “pursuing knowledge and truth.” Simply put, it ceases to be science.

There are, of course, other ideologically driven problems with the scientific establishment that go well beyond social justice censorship. Scientists are fallible, and the worship of science as a source of final knowledge and ultimate meaning is itself a corruption of science called scientism. Even so, the growing number of scientists complaining that their institutions, sponsors, publishers, and even peers are now more interested in reaching approved conclusions than provable ones is revealing. This kind of censorship is not only dangerous: It underscores the impossibility of a value-neutral academy.

In Jules Verne’s rosy telling, scientists fearlessly seek out the truth, following the evidence wherever it leads. However, as authors such as Stephen Meyer, Glen Scrivener, and Rodney Stark have pointed out, this quest for objective truth is itself a feature of a worldview historically distinctive to the West and Christianity. As all three authors argue, it’s no coincidence that modern science was born of Christendom and nowhere else.

In sharp contrast, ideologies rooted in postmodernism render fact subjective and see power plays behind every truth claim, and therefore undermine science. Old-fashioned scientific atheists may mock social justice warriors who want evidence to bend to their feelings but cannot explain why evidence should matter if the world is nothing but matter. There is no way to explain why reality is comprehensible or truth attainable, if, as C.S. Lewis put it, thoughts are nothing more than the “flux of the atoms” in scientists’ brains.

We should all agree that the mission of science is to seek the truth about our world, but that requires a working definition of “truth.” Unless scientists can supply that definition, the very unscientific demands of political correctness will continue to make their jobs difficult. [source]

Yea, if science cannot define truth then it isn’t really science.

Thursday, December 12, 2024

Disinformation and Censorship, 1984–2023

From The American Conservative.com (July 31, 2023):

Orwell, again. 1984 seems written for the Biden era. Underlying it all is the concept of disinformation, the root of propaganda and mind control. So it is in 2023. Just ask FBI Director Chris Wray. Or Facebook.

George Orwell’s novel explores the concept of disinformation and its role in controlling and manipulating society. Orwell presents a dystopian future where a totalitarian regime, led by the Party and its figurehead Big Brother, exerts complete control over its citizens’ lives, including their thinking. The Party employs a variety of techniques to disseminate disinformation and maintain its power. One of the most prominent examples is the concept of “Newspeak,” a language designed to restrict and manipulate thought by reducing the range of expressible ideas. Newspeak aims to replace words and concepts that could challenge or criticize the Party’s ideology, effectively controlling the way people think and communicate (in our own time and place, think of “unhoused,” “misspoke,” LGBTQIAXYZ+, “nationalist,” “terrorist”).

Orwell also introduces the concept of doublethink, which refers to the ability to hold two contradictory beliefs simultaneously and to accept them both as true. This psychological manipulation technique allows the Party to control the minds of its citizens and make them believe in false information or embrace contradictory ideas without questioning (think mandating masks that do not prevent disease transmission). The Party in 1984 alters historical records and disseminates false information through the Ministry of Truth. This manipulation of historical events and facts aims to control the collective memory of the society in a post-truth era, ensuring that the Party’s version of reality remains unquestioned (think war in Ukraine, Iraq, El Salvador, Vietnam, all to protect our freedom at home.)

Through these portrayals, Orwell highlights the dangers of disinformation and its potential to distort truth, manipulate public opinion, and maintain oppressive systems of power. The novel serves as a warning about the importance of critical thinking, independent thought, and the preservation of objective truth in the face of disinformation and propaganda.

Disinformation is bad. But replacing disinformation with censorship or replacement with other disinformation is worse. 1984 closed down the marketplace of ideas. So for 2023.

In 2023 America, the medium is social media, and the Ministry of Truth is the executive branch, primarily the FBI. Topics that the FBI at one point labeled disinformation and sought to censor in the name of protecting Americans from disinformation include, but are not limited to, the contents of Hunter Biden’s laptop, the Covid lab-leak theory, the efficiency and value to society of masks, lockdowns, and vaccines, speech about election integrity and the 2020 presidential election, the security of voting by mail, and even parody accounts mocking the president (for example, one about Finnegan Biden, Hunter Biden’s daughter).

When asked before Congress to define disinformation, FBI Director Christopher Wray could not do it, even though it is the basis for the FBI's campaign to censor Americans. It's a made-up term with no fixed meaning. That gives it its power, as “terrorism” was used a decade or so earlier. Remember “domestic terrorism”? That stretched to cover everything from white power advocates to January 6 marchers to BLM protesters to Moms for Liberty. It just can't be all those things all the time, but it can be all those things at different times, as needed. [read more]

The Left talks about disinformation or misinformation as if they are experts on the terms. That’s because they are masters of both. The Left elites thrive in deception and gray areas. They don’t like the Truth. Or even Reality.

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Departures

From Bill O’Reilly.com (Nov. 10):

Let's all hope Cher doesn't leave the country.  The chanteuse said she would if Trump were elected but that is a tragedy of a mockery of a sham, to quote Woody Allen.  We need Cher right here in the USA.  I forget the reason why but there is one.

Madonna can leave if she wants.  It's reported she's cursing a lot after absorbing the election results.  You would think the material girl would like President Trump because he's a material guy.  But no.  She looks askance at him, and that's not easy when you're botox-ed up.

Taylor Swift can't leave.  What would the Kansas City Chiefs do?  And where would Taylor go?  Yes, you are correct, anywhere she wants.

Same with Oprah.  I passed by her house in Turks-Caicos and nobody in the swanky neighborhood had ever seen her.  Very nice house.  She could go there.

The Obamas have to stay in the USA.  Too complicated to split.  Big Hawaii property, really nice Martha's Vineyard spread, mini-mansion in DC, something in Chicago.  Not bad for the hope and change couple.  Maybe they meant change addresses.  I don't know.

Joe Biden can't leave either.  He would never be able to find his way back.  Jill and Hunter could depart, but they won't. They will recede from public view.  In fact, the last time we heard from Jill Biden was after the June debate when she vowed the Bidens would stay in the White House until the Twelfth of Never.  But now it's back to Delaware for the first couple. There are worse places.

Give me a moment.

A jest for you sensitive folks in Wilmington.

Finally, Vice President Harris is not returning to her middle-class home.  She's alighting to her lavish spread in Brentwood, California, where O.J. Simpson once lived. No way Kamala is going anywhere except the lecture circuit where she'll get around $250 thousand to not answer questions.  Life can be sweet even in defeat.  Yes, that rhymes.  What's it to you?

I may have to leave because there are only so many years in a person's life.  I hope I'm going to heaven, but that is no lock. The nuns warned me, but I didn't listen. They said if I were snippy to people like Cher and Oprah, there would be a price to pay.  Hopefully, the Deity has a sense of humor.

And maybe a MAGA hat. [source]

Funny. I won't miss any of them if they leave.

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

The Myriad Projections of the 2024 Campaign

From AM Greatness.com (Aug. 19):

Projection is a Freudian psychological term. It describes a particular defensive mechanism, when people, often unconsciously, attribute their own (usually undesirable) behaviors to others who do not have them.

These mental gymnastics are intended to alleviate one’s own guilt or sense of inadequacy at the expense of another.

Sound familiar?

But in the political sphere, projection involves more overt dissimulation. It is increasingly common for leftist candidates or political parties to falsely accuse their opponents of the very destructive behaviors and unpopular agendas that they themselves embrace, but out of political necessity must deny.

Rather than an unconscious Freudian defense mechanism, political projection is usually a conscious strategy of hiding one’s own negatives by fobbing them off on antagonists.

Projection often proves a quite successful ploy.

After all, the political projectionist knows best his own hazardous or off-putting conduct and policies. And so, he can most skillfully attribute just these liabilities to those who have had no experience with them.

Our Leftist Projectionists

The 2024 Harris-Walz campaign is turning out to be projectionist to the core. How?

First: Kamala Harris and her new running mate Governor Tim Walz have long advanced fringe leftist political agendas. (Her “everyone needs to be woke” and his claim that riots happen because society doesn’t prioritize “equity and inclusion.”)

They have been loud in their fringe cultural commentaries, which are not just unpopular but roundly rejected by the majority of the electorate. And they know that if they become open and honest about what they have done, they will likely be defeated.

Second: On a more personal level, both are attacking the behavior and conduct of their rivals as a way of deflecting attention from their own weaknesses on that score.

Thus, this kind of projection, about both policy and personal behavior, is more common on the left because its ideology is fundamentally far more distant from the views of most voters.

A few examples reveal that 2024 is turning out to be the most projectionist campaign in memory—and logically so, because the Democratic Harris-Walz ticket is unappealingly left-wing and thus vulnerable.

Harris is now barnstorming the country, repeating many times per day a teleprompted narrative that she sought to close the border and stop illegal immigration.

Donald Trump, she claims, did just the opposite, and is thus weak on the border. This idea of an open-borders Trump pitted against a secure-borders Harris is a classic Big Lie—if not utterly unhinged and surreal.

As a senator in 2017-20, Harris repeatedly fought President Trump’s secure border efforts.

Trump battled for a secure border against the likes of Harris (whose record was the most left-wing in the Senate), the administrative state, “anonymous” moles within his own administration, DNC-spawned lawsuits, and liberal justices.

All of them battled to keep the border open and the inflow of illegal aliens as large as possible—given that they felt subsidizing a huge illegal alien population would create loyal voters in the new era of poorly audited early and mail-in balloting.

Innate to the new hard-left Democratic party is a globalist ideology that regards borders as anachronisms. Thus, anyone should be allowed to travel and reside in any country he pleases, while deserving state support to accomplish such migrations.

Those agendas were why the entire leftist consortium tried to halt Trump’s efforts to build a wall. They embraced catch-and-release and allowed illegal aliens to claim “refugee” status once inside the United States. They fought Trump tooth and nail when he tried to beef up ICE and other border security agencies.

Harris went to absurd lengths in her open-borders agenda. She bizarrely even blasted the public at Christmas time for daring to say “Merry Christmas” when, she alleged, young foreign nationals, here illegally, could not enjoy such holidays. When she called for reforming border security, she said of ICE—“And we need to probably think about starting from scratch.”

Harris accused the border patrol falsely of whipping Haitian illegal aliens and compared them to the enforcers of slavery.

As a California attorney general Harris championed sanctuary cities and the state’s neo-Confederate nullification of federal immigration laws.

She and Tim Walz both supported giving free health care to foreigners who arrived illegally in the United States. Harris claimed that illegal entry into the U.S. was not a criminal offense.

Most notoriously, Harris was part and parcel of the Biden-Harris-Alejandro Mayorkas administration that destroyed the border and allowed a record 10 million illegal aliens to enter the U.S. freely and without vetting.

So why is Harris projecting her own politics onto the border-hawk Trump, falsely claiming that he opposed bipartisan “comprehensive border reform”—a tired euphemism for the failed election-era gimmick of legitimizing the unimpeded entrance of millions more illegal aliens?

Because Harris knows that, of all the unpopular Biden-Harris initiatives, the wide-open border and accompanying unchecked influxes of unvetted illegal aliens have proved the most unpopular.

And Harris knows that she supported this nihilist policy and that she will again embrace it after the election in her remaining three months as vice president—and, if elected president, for another four years.

But for the next 80 days, Harris will lie, in utterly cynical fashion, that she is with the voters on enforced borders and regulated immigration and against Trump, the supposed open-border liberal. Note that Harris is still vice president and apparently remains “border czar” for the next five months. Thus, she could stop all illegal immigration right now. And, even if not elected president, she could ensure its end through November and until January 20, 2025.

In the personal domain, Tim Walz, and his supporters are now alleging that his opponent J. D. Vance is not a true veteran of the Iraq War, because he was mostly assigned to a non-combat unit.

Walz and company are projecting in this absurd fashion because Walz himself has lied that he served in a combat zone and implied he was deployed to either Iraq or Afghanistan or both when he in fact left the National Guard before it was deployed to a combat theater. On yet another occasion, he claimed to have carried weapons “in war” when he had never been in combat theater his entire life. He also falsely claimed to have retired as a Command Sergeant Major, when he instead demonstrably held a lower rank.

As a way of hiding these untruths, Walz projects lies onto Vance.

But anyone knows who has been to Iraq during the war, and especially during the surge—whether as a journalist embedded with ground troops or on an official military-arranged helicopter and plane visits to outlying American bases and troop installations—Iraq was a combat zone everywhere.

There were no traditional fronts and no safe areas. Troops got killed inside the supposedly safe “green zone.” They were shot and killed or blown up in Humvees while traveling on allegedly secure roads and in purportedly secure bases. Journalists and bureaucrats alike were killed by IEDs, barrages, and sniper fire—anywhere and everywhere.

Vance was in such a 24/7 combat environment when he was deployed to Iraq. Classic projection is clear when the soldier who avoided combat deployments projects his guilt, embarrassment, or fear of criticism onto an antagonist who chose the very opposite conduct and behavior.

In the year of the projectionist, watch how Harris—who obsessively avoids any live, impromptu, or ex tempore talk or interview—blasts Trump—who cannot restrain himself from talking publicly to anyone—for supposedly seeking to escape debating her.

Watch how she rails against voter IDs with accusations that her opponents want to warp balloting—while she has encouraged massive, unaudited mail-in voting and third-party vote harvesting, along with 10 million new potential illegal voters conveniently entering the U.S.

Watch how Harris blasts “radical Republicans,” as she intends (together with a Democratic congress) to pack the court, go after the filibuster, and admit new states to get on the cheap four left-wing senators.

Watch Harris scream that the near-unprecedented Biden-Harris inflation—which saw staples including food, power, gas, rent, cars, and insurance soar by 20-30 percent during her tenure—was supposedly caused by ex-president Trump, who left office three years ago with a 1.2 percent inflation rate.

Watch the projectionist Walz claim that Vance, the author of Hillbilly Elegy who grew up in an impoverished Appalachia, is actually an elite because he went to law school at Yale, while Walz was a rural Nebraska boy who stayed rural in outlook.

In fact, Vance is the first poor white boy presidential or vice presidential candidate since Bill Clinton (who also went to Yale Law School) ran in 1992. Meanwhile, Walz once scoffed not to take the overwhelmingly conservative map of Minnesota too seriously since there were only “rocks and cows” out there.

Watch Walz scream about “weird” Republicans—as he let Minneapolis burn for days in the awful summer of 2020 before calling in the National Guard, as his wife opened their official residence’s windows to get an authentic whiff of the revolutionary arson, and as his daughter tweeted out assurances to rioters not to worry about being arrested or stopped by the National Guard given her inside knowledge, they would not be sent in.

Watch Biden claim that Trump will attack democracy if he loses. This comes from a president who has unleashed lawfare against his opponent, who was removed from his own reelection candidacy by a backroom cabal, and whose mental disabilities have been hidden from the public by the same dark forces who recently forced him out—but only when his polls dived, and he threatened other Democratic candidates. Note Harris is the first modern presidential candidate who has never won a single delegate in a single primary but was anointed by a fiat of unnamed donors and politicos.

The first cousin of projection is the more familiar vice of hypocrisy, marginally preferable to projection in that here the other side is at least doing what they’re accused of.

Harris’s hypocrisy is stunning and shameless. For example, she has blasted Trump’s demand for voter IDs as racist and voter suppression. Yet Harris demands the very same sort of photo IDs from all who would attend her rallies.

Her logic, apparently, is that verifying the citizenship of voters is not as important as proving you have obtained a ticket to her rally and are not unlawfully seeking to enter her own event. Her message to the public is that the security of American balloting is hardly as important as the security of her own rallies.

The second cousin of projection is simple lying about one’s real intentions, virtually inevitable for the side with the less popular ideology.

Once elected, Vice President Harris felt she could safely push unpopular restrictions on pipelines, existing oil and gas fields, and new federal energy leasing to please her leftist circle and in pursuit of her ‘green new deal’ agendas. Now facing a presidential election, and the need for cheaper gasoline and fracking jobs in swing states, she is pro-fracking and drilling for oil and gas.

As president, she would inevitably revert to her consistent earlier advocacies. And they range from federal gun confiscation and nullifying (“snatching”) private enterprise patents to controlling not only food prices but also wages that she deems not meeting her standards of “gender equity”.

At long last, can’t we take away the projection, the hypocrisy, and the concealment of one’s real positions, not to mention all the past collusion, disinformation, and lawfare, and just let the people decide whether they really want to return to the leftist vision of America as fundamentally flawed, inherently racist, and in desperate need of corrective illiberalism?

Can’t the left be honest that it wants massive government redistributive action in health, education, and welfare, fueled by enormous government spending increases, more taxes, and more administrative-state overseers?

And can’t the left be honest to Americans about their globalist view that America is only exceptional to the degree that any country believes it is exceptional—but demonstrably not exceptional enough to warrant secure borders, a free market economy, legal-only immigration, a strong deterrent military, and a content-of-our-character-not-color-of-our-skin approach to race?

Or to put it another way, if you don’t want what the people want, you have to project. [source]

A good psychoanalyses of the Left by Victor Davis Hanson.

Monday, December 09, 2024

4D Chess: Democrats Admit Trump Actually Won In 2020 And Is Now Unable To Serve Third Term

From Babylon Bee.com (Nov. 7):

U.S. — Controversy erupted today following Donald Trump's landslide election victory, as Democrats admitted that Trump actually won in 2020 and is therefore now ineligible to serve a third term as president.

In a shrewd move, Democratic Party leaders finally disclosed that Trump had, in fact, won the 2020 election against Joe Biden and has been the rightful president this whole time, rendering him term-limited and unable to take office in January.

"Yeah, he actually won a second term in 2020. Sorry about that," said Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi. "It's a real shame he already served two terms. Unfortunately, that means he wasn't eligible to run again, which nullifies Tuesday night's election. We probably should have been more up-front about the fact that we stole the election and Biden was never president, but oh well. Hindsight is 20-20. I guess Kamala wins by default now, right?"

Other prominent Democrats seconded the admission. "That's true, Trump was already elected twice," said Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro. "Trust me, I worked really hard to help steal the election and convince everyone that Biden won. So, even though Tuesday night was certainly an impressive showing by the American people, we're just bound by law to block Trump from serving what is, in actuality, a prohibited third term. Sorry, everyone. But, hey, congrats to Trump on that win in 2020."

At publishing time, Nancy Pelosi announced that she had retroactively filed articles of impeachment against Trump for the second term he should have been serving the last four years. [source]

They wish. The Left is having a meltdown.

Friday, December 06, 2024

Why You Should Think Twice Before Pursuing a Career in Research

 From Daniel Șterbuleac on FEE.org (Nov. 27, 2022):

Scientific research concerns discovering facts about the natural world and, to the largest extent possible, putting them to good use for mankind. It seems like a noble endeavor, right? You get to choose whether you wish to study any of the four main branches of STEM: science, technology, engineering, or mathematics. As for science, it usually divides by the nature of the studied object into: computer science, physics, astronomy, chemistry, and biology, to mention the most common disciplines. Well, I have chosen the latter field, the biological sciences at their intertwining with medicine.

Which seems like a great choice in our times.

However, working in this field is not a walk in the park. Unless you are blessed by working in the right environment and having the right motivation, such a choice may do you and others more harm than good.

Research Often Is a Wild Goose Chase

The next time you are reading a piece of scientific evidence, hold it in your mind that it is most likely false. This was actually theorized and proven in a 2005 paper, and led to a stirring debate. Let me explain this theory, as simply as possible; it applies to all research fields, STEM and non-STEM.

In order to make a scientific discovery, you (usually) formulate a hypothesis, then you put it to the test. But you cannot test it on the whole statistical population (which consists of all the possible objects of study). You obviously cannot put all cancer patients in the world on an experimental pill. You cannot analyze the effects of an economic change in your country and assume it applies in the same way wherever and whenever. Rather, you design and experiment with a limited set of individuals, and then extrapolate (with a certain amount of uncertainty) to the whole population. For a hypothesis to be considered highly likely to be true, the uncertainty rate should be less than .05 (5 percent).

Experiments may lead to inconclusive results, due to chance (coincidence) or other factors. And there are a lot of factors that can influence the experiments. A researcher may be biased (willingly or not) in his choice of subjects, statistical methods, or experimental protocols. Models may not replicate the real-world scenarios (e.g. animal models in cancer research, statistical models in economics research). An association of two different events could foolishly imply causation; rather, a third, confounding variable, may influence the former two. Another difficulty arises when the initial hypothesis is split into smaller, more specific, ones, which are tested out individually (allowing cherry-picking, which taints results).

In addition to the aforementioned factors, there stands yet another hindrance: researchers are inclined to test out an unusually high number of fallacious hypotheses (as opposed to actual true ones) and erroneously prove (at least part of them) true. The incentive of proving that something apparently false is actually true is enormous. Who would not want his research (“inflation lowers unemployment,” “dark chocolate prevents cancer”) making the headlines and securing further funding?

This problem has been repeatedly confirmed, by simply allowing different researchers to redo the initial analyses, using the same methodology; such attempts take the form of “replication studies.” In an extensive effort to replicate previous studies in cancer research, a tiny 11 percent (6 out of 53) revealed similar conclusions to the initial ones. Comparatively, in Economics, replication surveys are scarce; one report showed that 39 percent (7 out of 18) studies failed replication. This area certainly requires further attention.

Choosing the Right  Direction Is Difficult

To research, you must base your assumptions on previous knowledge. Yet, when previous knowledge can be flawed, how can one be sure to follow a fruitful path?

During my work, I had to spend a considerable amount of time not only retrieving past discoveries related to my research, but also assessing their scientific quality. An assumption found in the scientific literature can easily be taken for granted—it has been proven, so it seems. But its proof may be flawed. I recall finding a handful of high-level studies that completely crushed previous conclusions and made me switch my research strategy. Ingenuity can help in taking advantage of scientific discrepancies, but could also end up adding even more “debris” to an overloaded scientific literature.

In extreme situations, the research may be so shoddy that one particular study gives out manipulated results stemming from malevolent conduct (false numbers, figures, charts or tables). Further investigations often mandate the retraction of such published papers. The number of retracted papers increases steadily, but they may only be the tip of the iceberg. This amalgam catches researchers up in a never-ending struggle to pursue the truth.

Publish or Perish

Unless you work as a researcher in a private company, whose purpose is to compete and devise concrete solutions for its clients, you may find your work judged not by its quality, but rather by the scientific output. The aphorism “publish or perish” refers to the pressure to publish research output in renowned journals; its negative connotations resonate throughout academia and research facilities.

Journals compete to attain a higher scientific status. In this way, they can attract higher quality papers and charge more. Unfortunately, the “scientific status” of a journal is routinely measured through scores reflecting the number of citations its published papers received in the past two to three years. Such an abstract number reflects poorly the quality of the published research – citations can be made even to unrelated papers, artificially increasing scores. Editorial houses may take advantage of self-citations to boost their ratings.

Similarly, an article bearing a pompous title or a high-sounding (probably false) result attracts citations and makes it easier to get published in a top journal. In extreme cases, journals have been found to not even check the paper or author before publishing it.

Freedom and Mental Health

A scientific career begins by pursuing a PhD. Although it may seem like a privilege, getting into a PhD has multiple downsides, and they all come down to the supervisor. There are accounts of PhD students being forced to do “quasi-slave” work, being bullied, or working overtime (over three quarters of respondents in a large-scale study work overtime). Later in one’s career, academic research revolves around high expectations, job insecurity (research funding is highly dynamic) and a push for productivity – common recurrent themes found throughout surveys.

Such a highly-competitive work culture combined with a narrow path to success leads frequently to stress and anxiety. A large-scale study revealed 36 percent of PhD students have sought help for anxiety or depression; the same problem was shared by 34 percent of academics worldwide. There are even more researchers showing probable signs of depression: an overwhelming 53 percent among UK research staff.

Conclusion

Despite its barriers and pitfalls, a scientific career can be fulfilling. Worldwide efforts are made in order to create more precise standards in statistical analysis, improve journal ratings, and facilitate doctoral experiences. Through smart work, in the right place (surrounded by like-minded people) and at the right time (for the research to find its use), the best minds of the world make our life easier and unravel what had been waiting to be revealed.

Yet, such right places and moments are rare; finding one’s place in the scientific world can be challenging. Anyone wanting to pursue such a career in scientific research should do their “research” first. [source]

Good information for any potential researcher. Something to keep in mind.

Thursday, December 05, 2024

Brazil's Bolsonaro Dons MAGA Hat, Cheers Trump's Win

 From Newsmax.com (Nov. 12):

Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro publicly celebrated President-elect Donald Trump’s election victory on Monday, donning a “Make America Great Again” hat and performing Trump’s campaign dance alongside young political allies, Breitbart reported.

The show of solidarity underscored Bolsonaro's continued admiration for Trump, which has implications for Brazilian politics as the country's right-wing groups rally behind their embattled leader.

In a video shared by Brazil's Liberal Party (PL) on Monday, Bolsonaro was seen dancing to “Y.M.C.A.” by the Village People alongside young, recently elected PL councilors from Brazil's October municipal elections.

“Our president Jair Bolsonaro joined the trend and did the Donald Trump dance with the PL youth,” the PL's message on social media read, capturing the upbeat mood of the gathering. The display came as an endorsement of Trump, reflecting Bolsonaro’s admiration for the U.S. leader, whom he has described as a “warrior” for conservative values.

Bolsonaro has remained a staunch supporter of Trump, calling last week's election win “historic” and claiming it rekindles “the flame of freedom, sovereignty, and true democracy.”

The Brazilian politician, who served as president from 2019 to 2022, quickly congratulated Trump following the election results, asserting that the victory inspired his conservative movement in Brazil. Bolsonaro, who was narrowly defeated by current Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in 2022, faces a ban on running for public office until 2030 due to his previous challenges to Brazil’s electoral integrity.

Bolsonaro’s opposition to Lula's administration remains firm. Although Lula did eventually congratulate Trump on his victory, he had earlier expressed support for U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris and warned that a Trump win could represent “Nazism with a different face.” This ideological divide continues to shape Brazil’s political landscape as Bolsonaro's allies in the PL explore ways to secure his return to office despite current legal restrictions.

Since his presidential loss, Bolsonaro has faced mounting legal challenges. In February, the Brazilian Supreme Federal Tribunal (STF) seized his passport and imposed a travel ban. The tribunal was investigating his alleged involvement in a coup attempt following the 2022 election. Bolsonaro was also barred from communicating with other individuals under investigation, including PL’s president, Valdemar Costa Neto.

However, last week, Bolsonaro expressed hope that he might still attend Trump’s inauguration in January if he receives an invitation. Speaking to the Brazilian newspaper Folha de Sao Paulo, he remarked, “If Trump invites me, I’ll petition the TSE [Superior Electoral Tribunal] [and] the STF,” hinting at his willingness to navigate the Brazilian legal system to attend.

“Now, with all due respect, the strongest man in the world … do you think he’s going to invite Lula?” Bolsonaro said, referencing Trump’s preference for him. “Who will he invite from Brazil? Maybe only me,” he continued.

Bolsonaro’s supporters within the PL have hinted that they are prepared to back him as a candidate in the 2026 elections, with efforts underway to pass legislation that could lift his ban. [source]

Nice!

Wednesday, December 04, 2024

GOP Senators Tweet the Majority Leader Won't Let Dave McCormick Participate in Orientation

 From Twitchy.com (Nov. 10):

Several Republican senators tweet that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-New York) is not allowing Dave McCormick to participate in orientation.

As of the time of this post, which is a bit after 2 PM EST on Sunday, November 10th, 2024, the interactive election map at Townhall.com shows the state of Pennsylvania with a red and white candy-striped look, as opposed to solid red. A checkmark does not appear by any of the candidates' names when a cursor is hovered over that state. So it appears that in the opinion of some, that race is still uncalled.

It also appears that in the opinion of the majority leader of the U.S. Senate, Mr. McCormick should not be allowed to get himself oriented. [source]

His opponent conceded the race, so let Dave McCormick participate. It's disappointing to see such a reaction. The majority of Americans clearly rejected the Left's agenda.

Tuesday, December 03, 2024

How to Drain the Lobbyist Swamp in One Easy Step

 From Christopher R. Barron on Revolver.news (Nov. 15):

In 2016, I worked for one of the largest lobbying firms in Washington, D.C. Despite our reputation as a “Republican-leaning” lobby shop, I was the only Trump supporter in our entire firm. My support for Trump, and indeed my insistence that he would win the presidency, were constantly the butt of jokes in client meetings and client pitches: “This is Chris; he supports Trump, and he thinks Trump will win! HAHAHA.”

A little after 2:30 a.m. the day after Election Day, right after the race was called for Donald J. Trump, I got a text from my boss asking me if I could meet the president of the firm for breakfast that morning. Suddenly, it wasn’t so funny that I had been a vocal supporter of Trump. Despite the fact that the overwhelming majority of lobbyists in DC had opposed Trump and actually wrote checks to his opponent, the Trump administration was willing to work with them. When Trump was ascendant in DC, the swamp happily requested—and were given—meetings with members of the Trump administration.

Not surprisingly, once the political tide turned against President Trump, the DC swamp once again turned on President Trump. Late in the first Trump administration, I was asked to come in and interview for a job with the White House. I told very few friends about the interview but did confide in a former long-time lobbying colleague, who was a GOP Chief of Staff on the Hill and who I thought of as a mentor. Her response was, “Personally, I hope you don’t get the job. The people who work in this administration won’t be remembered fondly for it.” Indeed, in the wake of the overwrought hysteria over January 6th, you would be hard-pressed to find more than a handful of lobbyists who were willing to publicly support Trump.

If you want to drain the DC swamp in one easy step, here is how you do it: the Trump administration, at a bare minimum, should refuse to take a single meeting with a single lobbyist who supported Kamala Harris. A vastly superior option would be to only take meetings with lobbyists who openly supported Trump during the election and donated to his campaign. And it’s not just blacklisting the Harris-supporting swamp; this policy should include refusing to take meetings with lobbyists who lined the pockets of Trump’s primary opponents in 2024.

Almost none of the supposedly Republican lobbyists in DC wrote checks to support President Trump’s campaign in the primary. Indeed, most of them first propped up Ron DeSantis’ campaign and then were the driving force behind Nikki Haley’s kamikaze mission against Trump. The same energy and enthusiasm that President Trump has promised to bring the administrative state to heel should be employed to break the back of the swamp.

Like the entrenched bureaucracy, the swamp thinks that they run DC. They treat outsiders like Trump as temporary speed bumps. They will use this administration and line their pockets when it’s politically necessary, but at the first opportunity, they will work to destroy Trump, to stop his agenda, and to dismantle the political movement that he has built. If we are going to fundamentally change the trajectory that our country is on, then we absolutely have to fundamentally change the institutions in this country.

It is not enough to simply elect President Trump and to win the House and the Senate. To truly be successful in our effort to make America great again, we must break the back of the corrupt mainstream media, we must bring the administrative state to heel, and we must drain the DC swamp. Elections have consequences. Those of us who were vocal supporters in his first administration, and especially after January 6th, were shunned by the DC lobbying establishment—and that’s fine; like I said, elections have consequences. And it is past time for the new right to start employing the tactics that the establishment swamp has employed for decades.

This policy isn’t about vengeance or holding grudges; it is about recognizing that we cannot make lasting change without these kinds of reforms. If we simply allow the swamp to do business as usual, they will continue to undermine President Trump’s agenda—and get rich doing it in the process. The media is overwhelmingly run by liberals, the administrative state is overwhelmingly run by liberals, colleges and universities are overwhelmingly run by liberals, pop culture is overwhelmingly dominated by liberals, and the swamp is overwhelmingly controlled by liberals. It is time to change that. [source]

Good idea. I like it.  It's what the Left would do if they won the election.

Monday, December 02, 2024

Trump's POWERFUL 10-point plan to TEAR DOWN the Deep State

 


From Glenn Beck.com (Nov. 14):

Since 2016 President Trump has promised to drain the swamp, but with Trump's new ten-point plan, do we finally have a solid roadmap to dismantle the deep state?

In March 2023, President Trump released a video detailing his plan to shatter the deep state. Now that he is the President-Elect, this plan is slated to launch in January 2025. Recently, Glenn reviewed Trump's plan and was optimistic about what he saw. In fact, he couldn't see how anyone could be against it (not that anything will stop the mainstream media from spinning it in a negative light).

But don't let Glenn tell you what to think! Check out Trump's FULL plan below:

1. Remove rouge bureaucrats

Trump's first order of business will be to restore an executive order he issued in 2020 that allowed him to remove rouge bureaucrats. Trump promises to use this power aggressively eliminate corruption.

2. Clean and overhaul the intelligence apparatus

Next, Trump promises to oust corrupt individuals from the national intelligence apparatus. This includes federal bureaucracies like the CIA, NSA, and other agencies that have been weaponized against the left's political opponents.

3. Reform FISA courts

Trump's next promise is to reform the FISA courts, which are courts tasked with reviewing and approving requests to gather foreign intelligence, typically through surveillance. These courts have been unaccountable to protections like the 4th Amendment that prohibits the government from unwarranted surveillance, resulting in severe government overreach on American citizens, both on US soil and abroad.

4. Expose the deep state.

Trump want to establish a "Truth and Reconciliation" commission that will be tasked with unmasking the deep state. This will be accomplished by publishing and declassifying all documents on deep state spying, corruption, and censorship.

5. Crackdown on government-media collusion

Next, Trump will crack down on government "leakers" who collaborate with the mainstream media to spread misinformation. These collaborators purposefully interject false narratives that derail the democratic process within the country. The plan will also prohibit government actors from pressuring social media to censor content that goes against a particular political narrative, as was done, for example, in the case of the Biden administration pressuring Facebook to crack down on Hunter Biden laptop-related content. [read more]

The other points are:

  1. Isolate inspector generals
  2. Create a system to monitor the intelligence agencies
  3. Relocate the federal bureaucracy
  4. Ban federal bureaucrats from taking corporate jobs
  5. Push for congressional term limits

Not sure about congressional term limits (maybe for the Senate).

I'm no longer burdened by what could have been. President Trump is back! The Deep State, of course, won't go down without a fight.

More articles on the Deep State:

Friday, November 29, 2024

The Libet Experiments and How to Maximize Free Will

From LP Koch on Luctalks.substack,com (Nov. 27, 2022):

The experiments carried out by Benjamin Libet in the early 1980s have caused quite the stir. I vividly remember how even in the late 90s and early 2000s, the media was hammering home the message that these experiments somehow proved that Free Will was an illusion—just as those zeitgeist-enslaved philosophers and scientists had been saying all along.

At the very least, this interpretation has been given much room and put those who challenged it on the defensive.

However, the “no free will” interpretation of the Libet experiments amounts to little more than an opinion, and an unsophisticated one at that. There is a lot more to it than meets the eye, with direct and practical consequences for our lives.

But first, let’s give a brief overview of the Libet experiment.

Short Summary of the Libet Experiments

Libet gave participants of his experiments a simple task, while measuring their brain activity: they had to decide to flex a finger whenever they wished, and note the position on a fast-moving clock at the precise moment they took the decision.

 

The result was that the brain showed activity at least 400ms before the participants became aware of their “decision making.”

Here’s a diagram showing what’s going on:1

 

 

“RP” stands for “Readiness Potential,” that is, the supposed build-up in brain activity before the decision to act and the subsequent action. What we see is that this brain activity starts before the participants became aware of their intention to flex the finger.

The results have led the no-Free-Will crowd to exclaim, “see, everything is driven by your brain, and you taking decisions is just an illusion!”

However, this seems to be a typical case of taking something very specific and isolated out of context and then drawing conclusions based on existing biases.

First, Libet himself thought that there is still enough time between our awareness of intention and the action itself for us to “veto” the decision and stop the movement. This would leave free will intact: remember that even the tiniest bit of actual free will leads to the philosophical position of what is called libertarian free will, that is, genuine free will with the power to really cause something.

Second, critics of the “no Free Will” interpretation have pointed out that the process of our decision-making is actually much more complex and involves the generation of different alternatives before we pick out one of those. This would explain the brain activity before our awareness of intention: we begin thinking about flexing that finger, possibly weighing different times when we should do so, before we actually decide to go for it. This “potential” builds up and becomes detectable about half a second before we “shoot.” Heck, it seems that just by introspection, we can literally feel that this is the case—how, tasked with lifting a finger at random times, things start moving in our mind until we decide to execute, with the built-up right before we close the deal rising exponentially.

I might also add that even if we accept that we literally make the decision after the build-up, I can’t see a reason why such things should not take the form of a blurry occurrence in time instead of an imaginary, abstract, dimensionless point on a scale: for all we know, we attract a potential, which shows up on the brain scan, but only actualize that potential a little later.

Alternatively, to leave the safe space of respectable academic orthodoxy entirely, there might even be retro-causation involved: we take a decision, and by doing so, something which is slightly in the past becomes a logical necessity, and therefore actualized.2

All that being said, there’s a more straight-forward interpretation of the experiment that I find very useful.

A Better Interpretation of Libet

A slightly different take comes from Christopher Langan—one that I find very interesting and which may have important implications for our lives.

He argues that decision-making might involve different layers, where an overarching decision might be made, which is then split up and executed in different sub-decisions. Such sub-decisions may be taken on an unconscious level, but reported to our conscious awareness so that we still have the option to stop it: to execute our veto power. In other words, when we take overarching decisions (or follow an overarching instruction), we relegate the execution of the sub-decisions to our subconsciousness, which then makes us aware of those along the way, if we are lucky.3

In the Libet experiments, the overarching plan is dictated to the participant by the experimenter: look at the watch, take decisions, note times. The participant then decides to follow these instructions and build a plan in his or her mind. After that, the plan is simply executed. And so, what appear to be individual decisions to flex the finger are really part of this bigger plan, and these are simply brought to the participant’s awareness to enable veto power. [read more]

Interesting. Yea, the Langan interpretation makes more sense. 

Thursday, November 28, 2024

The First Steps of the New Trump Administration

From Gingrich360.com (Nov. 13):

In the first week since his stunning election victory, President Donald J. Trump has begun assembling the team with which he will lead America. These first appointments give some sense of how President Trump will govern for the next four years.

First, with the exceptions of soon-to-be Border Czar Tom Homan and Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller virtually everyone President Trump has named so far has come without prior experience in the first Trump administration.

It is clear President Trump is looking for new energy and enthusiasm – and deep loyalty to him and to the Make America Great Again movement.

The first announcement was Chief of Staff Susie Wiles. She was central to President Trump’s comeback after the 2020 election. Wiles ran the most effective presidential campaign in modern times. It included a decisive defeat of the other Republican candidates and a near complete takeover of the Republican Party in every state.

Wiles is important because she really understands President Trump and can anticipate what he needs to be effective. She also has the best ability of anyone other than Melania Trump to talk with him candidly and keep him focused on winning.

It was interesting that the next two announcements were both New Yorkers. President Trump’s love for his home state has grown in recent years, and he is determined to make New York a much more competitive state for Republicans. Announcing House Republican Conference Chair Elise Stefanik from upstate New York as the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations was a brilliant move. Rep. Stefanik proved in the public hearings on antisemitism on college campuses that she is bright and tough. At least three university presidents lost their jobs after tangling with her. I expect she will be the most dynamic U.N. Ambassador since Jeane Kirkpatrick.

Next, President Trump picked former Congressman Lee Zeldin to head up the Environmental Protection Agency. Zeldin ran a great campaign for governor in 2020. For a Republican in New York, he did remarkably well. Zeldin is smart and tough – and he will reorient the EPA toward practicality, common sense, and results.

Callista and I were delighted when we learned Sen. Marco Rubio may be named Secretary of State. We chatted with Sen. Rubio at the Convention Center early Wednesday morning while we waited for President Trump to make his victory speech. Sen. Rubio is keenly aware of the collapse of the Cuban economy as its Soviet era power grid increasingly fails. There may be an opportunity for the United States to work with the Cuban people and replace the eight-decade old communist dictatorship. That would have a revolutionary impact on Latin America.

Sen. Rubio has been solid in his opposition to Chinese Communist activities. Having served on the Senate’s foreign relations and intelligence committees, he would approach his new job with an enormous amount of knowledge – and a mature determination to protect America and our allies and undermine our opponents.

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem was a surprise choice for Secretary of Homeland Security, but if you consider the importance President Trump places on communicating with the American people her selection makes a lot of sense.

The media will almost certainly criticize (and exaggerate) the Trump administration’s work on the border. The administration will regain control of the border (as President Trump did in his first term) and engage the largest illegal immigrant deportation program in American history – starting with convicted criminals who threaten Americans. Only President Dwight Eisenhower’s deportation project in the 1950s will be comparable.

Gov. Noem will balance Holman’s toughness and directness with a people-oriented effort to explain what is happening. There will undoubtedly be deeply human stories that emerge while controlling the border and deporting people who have come here illegally. Having an articulate and sympathetic governor, who has the skillset that comes from working directly with voters, will make it much easier for President Trump to sustain popular support for what is inherently a difficult policy to implement. Gov. Noem will be an effective advocate for a firm but humane program of returning America to a legal system of legitimate immigration.

The first days of the transition have been encouraging. President Trump is making solid, sound personnel decisions – and he is building a team capable of helping America move to greatness. [source]

All good picks. Hopefully, they'll be loyal to the MAGA agenda. I think they will.

President Trump’s other nominations:

Wednesday, November 27, 2024

Trump plans ambitious tax agenda — with insiders revealing how it could put more money in Americans’ pockets

From NY Post.com (Nov. 9):

On the campaign trail Trump repeatedly promised to slash taxes on tips and social security benefits, and suggested the total elimination of income taxes with the hope or replacing the revenue with tariffs.

With the signature tax cuts of Trump’s first term set to expire in 2025, and the high likelihood Republicans will have full control of Congress, extending and even expanding tax changes are high on his agenda.

Chief among the wish-list items of an expanded tax cut program would be lowering corporate tax rates.

In 2027, Trump slashed the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21% — and now wants to bring it down even more to 15%.

“When you reduce the corporate rate by 2% wages go up 1%, corporations have more money to invest for workers,” Grover Norquist, and activist and president of Americans for Tax Reform, told The Post.

Norquist, a longtime insider in GOP tax circles, said he expected House and Senate leadership would be completely on board with the reduction.

Trump has also promised to walk back a product of his 2017 tax law: the $10,000 cap on state and local tax deductions, known as SALT.

The cap overwhelmingly targets residents of high-tax blue states where soaring state and local taxes support bloated state bureaucracies, and Trump’s promise to repeal it has the potential to be an early bipartisan win.

“I take President Trump at his word and will hold him accountable for his promise to eliminate the SALT cap. I will work with him and anyone to get things done on behalf of the people,” said Long Island Democratic Rep. Tom Suozzi, an avowed enemy of the cap.

Insiders, however, say the repeal will be a significantly heavier lift.

“The major problem is it pits high tax states against low tax states. Certain states like New York and California and New Jersey have really high and state and local tax rates, and it gives people who live there an advantage in their deductions over people who live in [low-tax] places like Florida or Texas,” said Phil Magness, an economic historian at the Independent Institute.

Far-left progressives may also find themselves loathe to support what amounts to a tax cut for the rich. Socialist Squad Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has blasted past efforts to remove the SALT cap as a “gift to billionaires.”

Norquist said he wasn’t so sure Trump could get the cap totally lifted, but that raising the deduction could be a compromise solution. [read more]

More money in American's pockets is always a good plan.  The Congress should also make the tax cuts permanent from Trump's first term.

Tuesday, November 26, 2024

Trump Officially Wins Nevada, All Seven Swing States


From Newsmax.com (Nov. 9):

President-elect Donald Trump officially won Nevada on Saturday, closing out the last of the coveted seven swing states, Politico has confirmed.

Trump won a solid 3 percentage point victory over Vice President Kamala Harris in the Silver State, 50.7% to 47.4%.  The win raises Trump's electoral vote total to 312 over Harris' 226. The president-elect's popular vote total has now passed 74 million. Trump is the first Republican to win Nevada and its 6 electoral votes since former President George W. Bush in 2004.

The state’s abundant Latino population caused some insiders to predict an easier win for Harris, yet Trump’s populist message proved effective. In May, Trump announced his plan to make tips tax-exempt, a move that appealed to the state’s high percentage of hospitality workers.

Also on Saturday, Democrat Senator Jacky Rosen officially held on after a valiant effort by Republican Sam Brown to flip the Nevada seat held by Rosen since 2018.  Although a favorite of Trump, Brown suffered from a sizable cash disadvantage and lack of national support from Senate Republicans. [source]

Good for him and the country. It's a shame Sam Brown didn't win. Hopefully, the next Republican Senate leader will financially support America First Senate candidates.

Monday, November 25, 2024

Hamas Calls for 'Immediate' End to War After Trump Election Win

From Newsweek.com (Nov. 6):

A senior Hamas official has called for an immediate end to Israel's war against the group in the Gaza Strip and a plan to achieve Palestinian statehood in remarks shared with Newsweek in the wake of former President Donald Trump's election victory.

"The election of Trump as the 47th president of the USA is a private matter for the Americans," Hamas Political Bureau member and spokesperson Basem Naim told Newsweek, "but Palestinians look forward to an immediate cessation of the aggression against our people, especially in Gaza, and look for assistance in achieving their legitimate rights of freedom, independence, and the establishment of their independent self-sovereign state with Jerusalem as its capital."

"The blind support for the Zionist entity 'Israel' and its fascist government, at the expense of the future of our people and the security and stability of the region, must stop immediately," he added.

When previously in office, Trump forged a close relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is today engaged in a multifront war against the Iran-aligned Axis of Resistance that began with a large-scale Hamas-led attack against Israel in October 2023. However, Trump has also expressed criticism of Netanyahu's wartime leadership and has called for a timely end to the conflict.

Reached for comment, an Israeli official told Newsweek that "maintaining and building upon the special relationship between the U.S. and Israel has been a bipartisan feature of American politics since the founding of the Jewish state."

"We have no doubt that this will continue to be the case," the Israeli official said. "Going forward, we look forward to a strong working relationship with his administration to bring about a more peaceful, secure and prosperous Middle East." [read more]

Here's an idea: Hamas can unconditionally surrender and release all their hostages.  Just saying.