1) “By Appeasing Rogue Judges, Trump Legitimizes Leftists’ Judicial Coup” (Shawn Fleetwood, Federalist)
From the article — Leavitt’s evasive answer prompted Hemingway to once again pressure the press secretary about how the White House intended to fight back against activist judges’ efforts to sabotage the will of the more than 77 million Americans who voted for Trump last year. “You’re saying you’re responding to each and every one of these actions, efforts by these judges to delay or thwart the implementation of the agenda. But is there going to be anything more than that, or is it just going to let this operation continue even though it could delay everything for years until the presidency is over?” Hemingway asked.
Leavitt’s answer was less than reassuring.The press secretary said the administration “is operating under the directive given … from the president that we need to comply with the court’s orders,” and added that the White House intends “to fight them in court, and we’re going to win on the merits of these cases, because we know we are acting within a president’s legal and executive authorities.”
In other words, Trump and his administration have no current plans to end the judicial coup at all. They’re going to continue abiding by these rogue lower court judges’ overreaching edicts, thereby giving legitimacy to the unconstitutional effort crippling Trump’s presidency and America’s separation of powers.
Related article: “Trump Should Buck Rogue Judges, Not Buckle To Them” (Brianna Lyman, Federalist)
2) “Indoctrinating Children Into The Demonic: It’s Past Time For A Total Rethink Of ‘Education’” (Alex Newman, Harbinger’s Daily)
From the article — As the Newman Report has been documenting for years, paganism and anti-Christian religious indoctrination have become a staple of what passes for “education” in government schools today, all across the nation. Aside from Hinduism, Buddhism has also been invading classrooms nationwide under the guise of “meditation” techniques and “mindfulness” education.
In fact, peddlers of these programs openly boast of teaching this supposedly “secularized” Buddhism and Hinduism to government-schooled children across America. In a video on “Mindfulness in Education” by expert Amy Burke, the very first quote comes from an Indian guru and so-called “World Teacher” by the name of “Jiddu Krishnamurti,” from his book “Education and the Significance of Life.”
The decision to quote this particular guru offers significant insight into what this is all about. The guru, adopted and trained by the head of a Luciferian cult known as the “Theosophical Society” that inspired the National Socialist (Nazi) movement, was blunt about his pagan agenda. “You want to have your own gods – new gods instead of the old, new religions instead of the old, new forms instead of the old – all equally valueless, all barriers, all limitations, all crutches,” Krishnamurti explained.
3) “The Party of Ba’al and Jezebel” (Kevin Finn, American Thinker)
From the article — In my debates with Democrats, I like to ask them for their Top Ten List of things their party has done to make America safer, stronger, more prosperous, and more united. Only one person has ever listed ten, most list a few and then change the subject. But even the items they list turn out to have been ultimately harmful or ineffective. Obamacare is high on the list, as are the COVID “vaccines,” public schools and welfare.
When I look at that party’s history I see a consistent and frightening pattern. Southern Democrats owned the slaves, started the Civil War, formed the KKK, opposed passage of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments, and passed Jim Crow laws and the Great Society legislation that decimated the nuclear family. They currently promote the losing side of every 90/10 issue facing America, such as championing MS-13 gang-bangers and Islamic terrorists and placing graphic pornography in K-12 schools.
How likely is it that a party would consistently choose actions that are harmful to those they claim to serve? “Once is happenstance, twice is a coincidence, three times is enemy action.” (Ian Fleming) Promoting evil for personal gain is as old as humankind and people have always looked for the source. Scripture warns us that we “…do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this age, against spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places.”
4) “On The Moral Misanthropy of the Left: They operate on a single principle: nihilism and civilizational regression.” (Jason D. Hill, Front Page Magazine)
From the article — Against the backdrop of all this decades ago, a friend of mine told me of a paradox he presented to a friend of his. His friend is a female pediatrician in her 60s who is childless. He asked her: Do you think there is anything paradoxical about pro-choice vegans who are committed to the inviolable dignity of chickens and fish, to the point of refusing to eat hens’ eggs or caviar on moral grounds, but not extending that moral principle to protecting fertilized human eggs?
Her reply was: What are you talking about? There is no connection between the two! He replied, In both cases an egg is destroyed, and in the case of the abortion, the egg is fertilized. The pediatrician replied, In reference to the fertilized human egg: It’s not a human being, so don’t even go there. And you’re a male, so you don’t get a say in the matter.
5) “How And Why Southern Baptists Are Losing Confidence In The ERLC” (Elle Purnell, Federalist)
From the article — Criticisms of the ERLC mostly fall into two categories: allegations that the commission is useless and ineffective on the right political issues, and that it actively devotes resources to the wrong ones…
“They’ve been completely absent on the big fights over big issues,” Sen. Mike Lee told Basham earlier this year. As Basham noted, Lee has been at the forefront of several legislative battles over the issues the ERLC purports to focus on. Rachel Bovard, a Federalist contributor and Hill veteran, told Basham a similar story. “In 12 years on the Hill I don’t ever remember hearing from the ERLC,” she said. “They really are not viewed as being actively helpful on advancing conservative politics on the Hill,” added Mike Whitehead, the ERLC’s former general counsel.