The American people are sending a message loud and clear to the political elites: America is not a dumping ground.
Nothing embodies the rationale behind this outrage more than the recent surge in Cuban migrants both at the Florida coast and through the Texas border via Central America.
In addition to the surge in Central American migrants crossing the border, there has been a torrent of Cuban nationals entering our country at levels not seen in years. During FY 2015, roughly 43,000 Cubans entered the U.S., double the level of the previous year; and according to a new report, 7,000 Cubans are expected to come through the Texas border in the coming days. So far, 86,000 migrants have already arrived this year. But unlike Mexicans and Central Americans, Cubans cannot be deemed as illegal aliens. Pursuant to the Cuban Adjustment Act of 1966 (and a subsequent act in 1976), any Cuban who finds his way to our shores is essentially granted a green card immediately. And unlike other immigrants, they are eligible for welfare from day one.
By definition, a sovereign country means a nation that is not controlled by any external power. Yet, thousands of individuals from all countries, but from Cuba in particular, have the ability to unilaterally declare residency here, obtain a green card and path to voting rights, and secure immediate access to welfare. After travelling to Costa Rica and Nicaragua, Cuban migrants enter Mexico and come through our southern border whereby they surrender themselves to border agents. At that point, under existing law, they are eligible for the panoply of welfare programs immediately.
Last year, the Florida Sun Sentinel did an exposé on this racket and found that it costs taxpayers $680 million a year. Welfare costs in Florida alone have increased 23% between 2011 and 2014, before the explosion of recent arrivals. Among other things, the Sentinel reported the following:
Fed-up Floridians are reporting their neighbors and relatives for accepting government aid while shuttling back and forth to the island, selling goods in Cuba, and leaving their benefit cards in the U.S. for others to use while they are away.
Some don’t come back at all. The U.S. has continued to deposit welfare checks for as long as two years after the recipients moved back to Cuba for good, federal officials confirmed.
Count this among the growing list of travesties of which we should all be asking: How can Congress tolerate this for even one day?
In many ways the Cuban migration reflects what we are broadly seeing in our out-of-control immigration system. Once upon a time, the 1966 law made sense as a Cold War-era toll against communism to invite in those who were fleeing despotism and came here to assimilate and embrace American values. But much like the rest of our immigration, which has to a large degree become a magnet for economic opportunists who fleece this country and dilute our constitutional values, the Cuban law is being abused against the consent of the citizenry.
It is not surprising, therefore, that Cubans, the one immigrant group that’s long voted Republican, are not shifting to the Left. As Pew Research notes, more than half of Cuban immigrants arrived after 1990 and are more inclined to vote Democrat. This trend is quite obviously reflective of the shift in attitudes of the immigrants – from patriotic assimilation and affinity for our republican form of government to the embrace of welfare and multiculturalism.
As the Sun Sentinel observed, “[T]he sense of entitlement is so ingrained that Cubans routinely complained to their local congressman about the challenge of accessing U.S. aid — from Cuba.”
Moreover, we have come full circle in which the law is now being used as a weapon by Raul Castro against America, not the other way around. As Maria Werlau wrote in the Miami Herald, Castro is taking advantage of Obama’s alliance and is spawning this migration crisis in order to pressure him to drop all remaining sanctions. And in case you think that open borders is a prudent form of humanitarianism, this growing phenomena not only fleeces American citizens – the first priority of our government – it further represses those who remain in Cuba. As Werlau observes, the $5 billion in annual remittances from the million Cubans in this country “represents a mammoth cash cow allowing Cuba’s military dictatorship to continue repressing and avoiding true reform.”
We must stop this scam in its tracks. Congress must immediately repeal the 1966 law, which has become counterintuitive to its original objectives. Rep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ) has introduced H.R. 3818, which would repeal that outdated law. It also defunds the Cuban Family Reunification Parole Program of 2007, which allows U.S. citizens and even immigrants to bring in more family members outside of existing channels. A mixture of re-imposing sanctions on Cuba and shutting down the unconditional open door and open welfare to any Cuban migrant will not only protect our sovereignty and economy, it will isolate Castro and bring brighter prospects to all Cuban people in the long-run. (For more from the author of “Time to Stop the Cuban Immigration Welfare Scam” please click HERE)
In a strongly worded editorial on Thursday, The Des Moines Register called on the Iowa Democratic Party to move quickly to prove that Monday’s results are correct.
The piece titled “Editorial: Something smells in the Democratic Party,” starts out: “Once again the world is laughing at Iowa.”
It gets sharper from there. “What happened Monday night at the Democratic caucuses was a debacle, period. Democracy, particularly at the local party level, can be slow, messy and obscure. But the refusal to undergo scrutiny or allow for an appeal reeks of autocracy,” the DMR reads. “The Iowa Democratic Party must act quickly to assure the accuracy of the caucus results, beyond a shadow of a doubt” . . .
“Too many accounts have arisen of inconsistent counts, untrained and overwhelmed volunteers, confused voters, cramped precinct locations, a lack of voter registration forms and other problems,” the editorial reads. “Too many of us, including members of the Register editorial board who were observing caucuses, saw opportunities for error amid Monday night’s chaos.” (Read more from “Des Moines Register Calls for Audit of Iowa Results: ‘Something Smells in the Democratic Party'” HERE)
https://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/Hillary_Clinton_Testimony_to_House_Select_Committee_on_Benghazi-1.png485797Joe Millerhttps://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/logotext.pngJoe Miller2016-02-05 00:14:542016-04-11 10:53:04Des Moines Register Calls for Audit of Iowa Results: ‘Something Smells in the Democratic Party’
Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. said late Wednesday that partisan extremism is damaging the public’s perception of the role of the Supreme Court, recasting the justices as players in the political process rather than its referees.
Divisive battles over confirmations and mischaracterization of the merits of the court’s decisions worry him, Roberts told a ballroom crowd of about 1,000 people at a celebration of Law Day at New England Law-Boston, a private law school.
Criticism of the court “doesn’t bother me at all,” Roberts said, as long as it is not based on a misunderstanding of how the court differs from the political branches . . .
The court is under heavy criticism from all sides in the presidential campaigns, with Republican Donald Trump suggesting he would appoint justices who would overturn the court’s 5-to-4 decision saying gay couples have a constitutional right to marry and Democrats Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders making a rejection of the court’s Citizen United campaign finance decision a litmus test for their potential nominees. (Read more from “The Political Wars Damage Public Perception of Supreme Court, Chief Justice Roberts Says” HERE)
https://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/hqdefault-16.jpg360480Joe Millerhttps://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/logotext.pngJoe Miller2016-02-05 00:12:332016-04-11 10:53:04The Political Wars Damage Public Perception of Supreme Court, Chief Justice Roberts Says
In a shocking reversal of policy, U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents are being told to release illegal immigrants and no longer order them to appear at deportation hearings, essentially a license to stay in the United States, a key agent testified Thursday . . .
“We might as well abolish our immigration laws altogether,” suggested agent Brandon Judd, president of the National Border Patrol Council.
Testifying on the two-year border surge of immigrant youths, Judd said the policy shift was prompted by Obama administration “embarrassment” that just over half of illegals ordered to appear in court actually do.
“The willful failure to show up for court appearances by persons that were arrested and released by the Border Patrol has become an extreme embarrassment for the Department of Homeland Security. It has been so embarrassing that DHS and the U.S. attorney’s office has come up with a new policy,” he testified before the immigration subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee.
The biggest change: Undocumented immigrants are no longer given a “notice to appear” order, because they simply ignore them. Judd said that border agents jokingly refer to the NTAs as “notices to disappear.” (Read more from “Border Agent: ‘We Might as Well Abolish Our Immigration Laws Altogether'” HERE)
Scientists have discovered an insect that went extinct for more than 120 million years and featured many of the traits associated with modern butterflies including markings on the wing called eye spots.
Known as Kalligrammatid lacewings, paleobotanists for the past century have known they lived in Eurasia during the Mesozoic. But it’s taken recent discoveries of well-preserved fossils from two sites in northeastern China to demonstrate how similar they were to modern butterflies. Thanks to extensive lakes that limited oxygen exposure in these areas during mid-Jurassic through early Cretaceous time, paleontologists have been able to recover exquisitely preserved fossils that retain much of their original structure.
“Poor preservation of lacewing fossils had always stymied attempts to conduct a detailed morphological and ecological examination of the kalligrammatid,” Indiana University’s David Dilcher, who was part of the team that made the discovery published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, said in a statement. “Upon examining these new fossils, however, we’ve unraveled a surprisingly wide array of physical and ecological similarities between the fossil species and modern butterflies, which shared a common ancestor 320 million years ago.”
Dilcher, who also discovered the first flower last year, found that this insect from the Jurassic period survived in a manner similar their modern sister insects by visiting plants with “flower-like” reproductive organs producing nectar and pollen. They probably used their long tongues to probe nectar deep within the plant and also possessed hairy legs that allowed for carrying pollen from the male flower-like reproductive organs of one plant to the flower-like female reproductive organs of another. (Read more from “Scientists Discover Prehistoric ‘Jurassic Butterfly'” HERE)
Photo Credit: Corpus Christi Cross ProjectThe largest cross in the US is coming to the “Body of Christ,” also known as Corpus Christi, Texas.
The Corpus Christi Cross Project broke ground at the Abundant Life Fellowship campus off Interstate 37 on Sunday. Pastor Rick Milby says the massive cross will eventually stretch 95 feet wide and 210 feet high, making it the biggest in the Western Hemisphere, reports the Houston Chronicle.
The idea for the project came to Milby after he first spotted a huge cross in Houston and heard about “lives that were changed, suicides that were aborted, relationships that were restored because of the influence of the cross,” he writes on the project’s website . . .
The Corpus Christi cross will be so big that the design allows for “a two-foot deflection at the top — it will actually sway in the wind two feet back and forth,” Milby tells KRIS TV.
And as for whether such winds can topple it, Milby says the concrete foundation’s 24 piers will be anchored 48 feet deep, “so if it were to blow over, it would pull up about three acres of land with it.” (Read more from “Texas-Sized! America’s Largest Cross to Be Built” HERE)
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In a quest to reinvent its image, McDonald’s is on a health kick. But some of its nutrient-enhanced meals are actually comparable to junk food, say some health experts.
One of McDonald’s new kale salads has more calories, fat, and sodium than a Double Big Mac.
Kale, a leafy green vegetable chock-full of vitamins, has become a trendy superfood. In Canada, the global fast food chain recently tossed the green into a breakfast wrap and a line of salads.
McDonald’s boasts on its site that the “Keep Calm, Caesar On” chicken salad contains “real parmesan petals” and “a nutrient-rich lettuce blend with baby kale.”
But once you plop the accompanying Asiago Caesar dressing on the “crispy chicken” version, the salad’s nutritional profile doesn’t look so good. According to McDonald’s own numbers, the salad tops up at 730 calories, 53 grams of fat, and 1,400 milligrams of salt. (Read more from “Healthy Fast Food? McDonald’s Kale Salad Has More Calories Than a Double Big Mac” HERE)
https://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/New_McDonalds_restaurant_in_Mount_Pleasant_Iowa.jpg7441024Joe Millerhttps://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/logotext.pngJoe Miller2016-02-05 00:10:052016-04-11 10:53:04Healthy Fast Food? McDonald’s Kale Salad Has More Calories Than a Double Big Mac
By Neetzan Zimmerman. Donald Trump is accusing Republican presidential rival Ted Cruz of committing fraud ahead of Monday night’s Iowa caucuses, and he is calling for a “new election.”
“Based on the fraud committed by Senator Ted Cruz during the Iowa Caucus, either a new election should take place or Cruz results nullified,” Trump tweeted on Wednesday.
During primetime of the Iowa Caucus, Cruz put out a release that @RealBenCarson was quitting the race, and to caucus (or vote) for Cruz.
Earlier in the day, the real estate mogul tweeted, then quickly deleted, a claim that Cruz didn’t earn a fair victory in Iowa, saying he “illegally stole it.”
“Ted Cruz didn’t win Iowa, he illegally stole it. That is why all of the polls were so wrong any [sic] why he got more votes than anticipated. Bad!” the GOP front-runner tweeted.
Ted Cruz didn't win Iowa, he stole it. That is why all of the polls were so wrong and why he got far more votes than anticipated. Bad!
(Read more from “Trump Makes Huge Accusation Against Cruz, Calls for ‘New Election'” HERE)
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Donald Trump Tells Crowd in Arkansas, ‘I Think I Came in First’ in Iowa
By Katharine Q. Seelye. Donald J. Trump, back in fighting form, told a record crowd here Wednesday night that he believes he won the Iowa caucuses.
“Actually, I think I came in first,” he told a cheering crowd of more than 11,500 people who packed into Barton Coliseum to hear him.
Mr. Trump, who placed second in Iowa, was continuing a theme he had been unspooling over the previous 24 hours — that in his view, Senator Ted Cruz, who won Monday’s caucuses, had in fact stolen the election.
Mr. Cruz was declared the winner, with 27.6 percent of the vote; Mr. Trump came in second, with 24.3 percent. (Read more from “Donald Trump Tells Crowd in Arkansas, ‘I Think I Came in First’ in Iowa” HERE)
https://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/5440392565_25abd8a695_o-1.jpg31684752Joe Millerhttps://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/logotext.pngJoe Miller2016-02-04 02:29:012016-04-11 10:53:05Trump Calls for ‘New Election’, Makes Fraud Accusation Against Cruz
Gov. Greg Abbott and U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, a Laredo Democrat, pressed the U.S. Department of Homeland Security on Monday to explain why the agency plans to reduce its aerial surveillance on the Texas-Mexico border.
In a letter to DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson, the lawmakers said the cut to a requested 3,850 hours of aerial detection and monitoring in 2016 amounts to 50 percent less coverage than recent years.
“Given the recent surge of migrants from Central America and Cuba along the southern border, we believe DHS should request more surveillance and security resources, not fewer,” Abbott and Cuellar wrote in a letter.
The pair also reminded Johnson that in September, Abbott’s office asked the DHS for more aerial resources and U.S. Border Patrol agents but that the request was never acknowledged . . .
Monday’s request comes as CBP is reporting a new surge in the number of undocumented immigrants crossing the Rio Grande. From October to December of 2015, about 10,560 unaccompanied minors entered Texas illegally through the Rio Grande Valley sector of the U.S. Border Patrol. That marks a 115 percent increase over the same time frame in 2014. The amount of family units, defined as at least one child and adult guardian or parent, has increased by 170 percent to 14,336 in the Rio Grande Valley. (Read more from “Feds Dramatically Reduce Border Surveillance as Number of Illegal Crossings Climb” HERE)
https://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/Border_Mexico_USA.jpg24753600Joe Millerhttps://joemiller.us/wp-content/uploads/logotext.pngJoe Miller2016-02-04 02:26:252016-04-11 10:53:05Feds Dramatically Reduce Border Surveillance as Number of Illegal Crossings Climb
One of the most stunning results that came out of the Iowa caucuses was the overwhelming support a 74-year-old socialist received from young people. Among voters between the ages of 17 and 29, Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders won 84 percent of the vote.
This support is in keeping with a Pew study that shows 42 percent of Millennials favor socialism. In a country built on free markets, personal responsibility, political liberty, and private property rights, this is a disturbing trend.
Why all the newfound love for socialism? There are several reasons that have caused young people to turn a critical eye toward capitalism.
Bad Economy
One of the major reasons they’re open to socialism is the struggling economy, which still hasn’t rebounded from the recession that propelled Obama into office in 2008. Millennials are facing a tougher job market and stagnant wages. They’re not making as much money as their parents did at the same age, and while they’re more educated than previous generations, their education isn’t translating into high incomes and stable employment. They’re also burdened by student debt (47%), credit cards (31%), and auto loans (26%).
Young people want to make money as much as anyone else, but they see their opportunities diminished. They graduate from college and find themselves at home working at a retail store or waiting tables. Some of that has to do with their choice of degree, but even those in the science and technology fields are finding it difficult to get a job.
They’re frustrated because they see businesses going overseas, and they interpret this as greedy corporations wanting to make more money off of cheap labor. Their conclusion is the capitalist system is broken. They sympathize with Occupy Wall Street in feeling like big banks and big businesses are in control of everything, and the “little guy” is being edged out. Little do they understand that many of the problems in today’s economy are rooted in big government, over-regulation, and cronyism. The answer to these problems isn’t socialism but actually freeing the markets to compete in a way that will spur economic growth, which leads me to my next point.
Poor Education
Millennials are poorly educated when it comes to capitalism and the history of socialism and communism. They didn’t live through the Cold War. They’ve benefited from the capitalist system that they are now rejecting, failing to understand the devastating consequences of government imposing its will on the economy. They haven’t been taught the value of private property and how it is essential to liberty.
In history class, they’ve been reading anti-American Marxist Howard Zinn instead of Paul Johnson or David McCullough. As Zinn himself once remarked:
Objectivity is impossible and it is also undesirable. That is, if it were possible it would be undesirable, because if you have any kind of a social aim, if you think history should serve society in some way; should serve the progress of the human race; should serve justice in some way, then it requires that you make your selection on the basis of what you think will advance causes of humanity.
This is the bilge our younger generation has been learning, so is it any wonder they would turn out in droves for Sanders? The fact that he’s an old white guy doesn’t matter to these tattooed, Birkenstock-clad kids sporting pricy graphic T’s from Urban Outfitters and typing away on their iPhones (a great gift of capitalism). They hear his message, and they’re inspired by his call to break up the evil banks, increase regulations on businesses to protect the environment, provide universal healthcare, and make college available to all.
He reminds them of their silver-haired Boomer college professor waxing eloquent about humanity’s progression toward some great utopia. They haven’t benefited from the instruction of Milton Friedman or Friedrich Hayek. They haven’t learned one of the great lessons from history that economic freedom is a necessary condition for political freedom. They haven’t taken an honest look at how the democratic societies in Europe are unraveling, and how, as Margaret Thatcher said, the problem with socialism is you eventually run out of other people’s money.
This ghastly mix of economic stagnancy and mal-education, which pushes young people in a socialist direction, is reinforced by a youthful idealism and a love of equality and “fairness” over freedom.
Youthful Idealism
There is a German phrase that translates to “One who isn’t a socialist at twenty has no heart. One who is a socialist at forty has no brain.” It is often the case that younger people lead with their hearts and run after fanciful idealism because this is simply part of being young.
There are good and bad aspects to this. The good is that we should have a heart for our world, especially those who are suffering the most—the poor and downtrodden. Many young people today are inspired to make a difference in this world and to help those who are not as privileged as they are. This is a noble thing, and more should be done to help the poor.
The problem is many think capitalism and its focus on profit undermines and stands opposed to generosity and compassion. But this is simply not the case. If there is greed and selfishness in the capitalist system, it’s not because of the system itself (which is morally neutral), it is because people are selfish and immoral. This fact won’t change under a socialist system. Compelling people to care for the poor doesn’t change their hearts.
This desire to help others, however, and to be socially responsible is a noble trait among young people. The goal is not to let go of that compassion but to direct it in a healthy way and align it with an economic system that actually promotes liberty so people are free to use their resources in a way that helps others—not only in an altruistic way but in a self-interested way that is rightly understood.
“Self-interest rightly understood” means that we can pursue profit and our own interests but still do so in a way that helps others. People might not always be motivated out of the goodness of their hearts or because of some righteous utopian calling, but that doesn’t mean they won’t help people. Montaigne once wisely said, “When I do not follow the right path for the sake of righteousness, I follow it for having found by experience that all things considered it is commonly the happiest and most useful.”
So few young people, however, have figured this out. Instead of letting people (and markets) be free, they want a higher power (the government) to come in and force people to be generous and compassionate through the redistribution of their property and by regulating what they do with their businesses and their lives. They haven’t learned that this kind of compulsory morality doesn’t work.
The Lure of Equality
This leads me to my next point: the longing for equality. While their desire to make a difference and to show compassion is good, their sense of “fairness” isn’t driven purely by a concern to help others. They’re also driven by an ardent desire for equality. This is an important point in understanding the 84 percent who support Sanders as well as many others in America who demand wealth redistribution and advocate some form of egalitarianism.
We have raised a generation of young people who have been hovered over by helicopter parents making sure everything in their lives is fair. They’ve received participation trophies and participated in sporting events where no one scores. Some have even been in classes where no grades are given. Those who succeed are made to feel guilty, and those who have failed are told it’s not their fault (it’s the teacher, the coach, their parents, the “system”). This is the Rainbow Fish generation in which all the beautiful glittering scales must be equally shared.
It is no surprise then that a generation so fixated on equality instead of being instructed in the hard, messy lessons of freedom favor a system that promises equality of outcomes and is managed by government and its mechanisms of force. This focus on extreme equality is something Americans should have been on guard against since its inception, but we have failed to remain watchful. We have assumed that everyone loves liberty and therefore Americans will do whatever it takes to keep it—politically, socially, and economically.
That has not been the case. Alexis de Tocqueville observed when he came to America in the 19th century that democratic peoples have a “natural taste for freedom.” They seek it and they love it. But they love equality even more.
For equality they have an ardent, insatiable, eternal, invincible passion; they want equality in freedom, and, if they cannot get it, they still want it in slavery. They will tolerate poverty, enslavement, barbarism, but they will not tolerate aristocracy.
Tocqueville said this is true in all times, but it is especially true in America where equality for all is the foundation of our society. He called this desire for equality an “irresistible power,” and any effort to defy it will be overturned and destroyed by it. “In our day, freedom cannot be established without its support, and despotism itself cannot reign without it.”
Just as Tocqueville said, Millennials today—and not just Millennials, but anyone who wants big government to “equalize” everything—are driven by a desire for equality. This desire has been fostered in three ways: by a natural (and good) propensity toward equality, by increased inequality in our country because of the growth of government and crony corporatism, and by an overly indulged sense of equality due to being raised by authority figures promising equal outcomes.
Equality and Freedom
These three strands woven together are creating a demand for equality that overshadows liberty. One would think young people would see how their freedoms are being lost in their desire for equality at all costs (even to the point of giving more power to the government in every aspect of their lives), but as Tocqueville observed, the loss of liberty is not so immediately apparent in our lives because the negative impact of that loss happens slowly over time.
The loss of equality, however, hits us like a ton of bricks. It’s right in our faces. We immediately see that someone has more money than us. We see whole groups unable to gain traction in a failing economy. We see the one percent getting richer and the middle class shrinking. We see laws favoring those with money while those without power or money struggle. In a sense, a class system—and an aristocracy of sorts—has developed.
This breeds discontent, and if that discontent is justified by a wrong or nonexistent understanding of economics and free markets, if that discontent is supported by religious systems that denounce the West and its capitalist system as being evil as Pope Francis has done, and if that discontent is reinforced by a pop culture in which music and film denigrate the “greedy rich” and romanticize the “working people,” then we have what we see today: a younger generation that favors socialism.
We can take some comfort in the fact Millennials that don’t really understand socialism or that their political views are incoherent and contradictory. We can also look forward to them growing up and developing a more conservative mindset as many of us have done. But some of these core problems remain, and the issue of equality over freedom will continue.
The only way to right that ship is by bringing more equality to our society by freeing up opportunities and putting an end to cronyism, which favors the rich on Wall Street and empowers Washington; by reforming our education system and teaching our children the truth about economic liberty; by raising children with the hard lessons of competition and freedom instead of pampering them with distorted notions of fairness and equality; and by fostering a true love for one another so we care for the poor and show compassion, giving out of the goodness of our hearts and even a right sense of self-interest instead of being compelled by the heavy hand of big brother.
If we make progress in all these areas, then maybe we can stop the drift toward socialism. If we don’t, like Tocqueville said, equality will be pursued even if it means the enslavement of us all. (For more from the author of “Why Are so Many Millennials Feeling the Bern?” please click HERE)
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