Protectionism or Trade Freedom: What Do the Experts Say?

The recent presidential election has sparked a debate about international trade. Many politicians, policymakers, and media outlets seem to be unsure about whether trade is good or bad. It seems everyone has an opinion about trade.

But what do the experts say?

N. Gregory Mankiw, the Robert M. Beren Professor of Economics at Harvard University, observed: “Economists are famous for disagreeing with one another … But economists reach near unanimity on some topics, including international trade.”

Earlier this month, a panel of 51 leading economists of differing ideological views were asked to respond to this statement: “Adding new or higher import duties on products such as air conditioners, cars, and cookies—to encourage producers to make them in the U.S.—would be a good idea.”

Of those economists, 100 percent said they disagreed with the statement. Economists understand that trade provides a great benefit to Americans.

Trade means lower prices for products ranging from T-shirts to televisions, increasing families’ disposable incomes. Trade also results in the creation of new, better jobs for U.S. workers. This results in a boost in overall well-being and quality of life.

The realization that people benefit from free trade is not new. Adam Smith, the father of modern economic thought, explained that “it is the maxim of every prudent master of a family never to attempt to make at home what it will cost him more to make than to buy.”

Looking around the world, there is a striking correlation between the freedom to trade and economic prosperity. The Index of Economic Freedom, published by The Heritage Foundation, provides data that continue to show a strong correlation between trade freedom and economic prosperity.

Americans win when the government removes barriers to all kinds of freedom—including the freedom to trade. (For more from the author of “Protectionism or Trade Freedom: What Do the Experts Say?” please click HERE)

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Trump Picks Retired Marine General as Homeland Security Secretary

President-elect Donald Trump has chosen retired Marine Gen. John F. Kelly to lead the Department of Homeland Security, news organizations reported Wednesday.

If nominated and confirmed, Kelly would join a Cabinet that already promises to be well represented by military figures.

Trump has announced his selections of retired Marine Gen. James N. Mattis for secretary of defense and retired Army Lt. Gen. Michael T. Flynn for national security adviser.

“That would be the third general in the top echelon of the emerging Trump administration, indicating his preference for military experience, expertise, and accountability,” Major Garrett, chief White House correspondent for CBS News, said in discussing Trump’s choice of Kelly.

Kelly has served for over 40 years in the military and recently retired from his role as commander of U.S. Southern Command, or Southcom.

U.S. Southern Command, according to the Department of Defense, oversees “all Defense Department security cooperation in the 45 nations and territories of Central and South America and the Caribbean Sea, an area of 16 million square miles.”

In this role, Kelly acknowledged the widespread issue of drug trafficking and said he believes in continuing a partnership with Colombia to end drug trafficking, a debate he will likely have to revisit during confirmation hearings for the Department of Homeland Security job.

“Let’s not throw away a success story,” Kelly said during a Pentagon news conference in January, speaking about Colombia’s partnership with the U.S. in fighting drug trafficking, according to an article published by the Defense Department. “We have to stand and continue Plan Colombia, in my opinion, for another 10 years.”

Plan Colombia, established by Congress in 2000, is a cooperative alliance with Colombia that works to combat drugs, guerrilla violence, and social issues.

Kelly also says that he is devoted to fighting terrorism, and that attacks similar to 9/11 are likely to happen again.

“Given the opportunity to do another 9/11, our vicious enemy would do it today, tomorrow, and every day thereafter,” Kelly said in 2013 during a Memorial Day address, according to a tweet by a Washington Post reporter.

“I don’t know why they hate us, and frankly I don’t care, but they do hate us and are driven irrationally to our destruction,” Kelly said.

Kelly’s dedication to the military has not come without sacrifices, however.

Kelly’s son, Marine 1st Lt. Robert Michael Kelly, died after he stepped on a concealed bomb in Afghanistan in 2010, making the senior Kelly “the highest-ranking military officer to lose a son or daughter in Iraq or Afghanistan,” according to The New York Times.

During his son’s funeral, Kelly said that terrorism is “an enemy that is as savage as any that ever walked the earth,” the Los Angeles Times reported.

Kelly reaffirmed his commitment to fighting terrorism during a speech he gave in 2013 at the 5th Marine Regiment Operation Enduring Freedom Memorial dedication ceremony at Camp San Mateo Memorial Garden in Camp Pendleton, California. The memorial honors those who died while serving with 3rd Battalion and 5th Marines in Afghanistan, including Kelly’s son.

“Our nation is still at war, and I think will be for years, if not decades to come,” Kelly said. “It may be inconvenient to some, but I think it is reality. It is not in our power to end it but simply to fight it until our murderous enemy who hates us with visceral disgust for everything we stand for either gives up or we kill them.” (For more from the author of “Trump Picks Retired Marine General as Homeland Security Secretary” please click HERE)

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OOPS: Michigan Recount Appears to Expose Industrial-Scale Democrat Vote Fraud

Over half of Detroit’s 662 voting precincts may be ineligible for the ongoing Michigan recount, since the number of ballots in precinct poll books do not match those from voting machine printout reports.

More than a third of precincts in Wayne County, Michigan’s largest county and home to Detroit, could be disqualified from the statewide recount because county officials, “couldn’t reconcile vote totals for 610 of 1,680 precincts during a countywide canvass of vote results late last month,” according to the Detroit News.

Wayne County has over 1.7 million residents and voted overwhelmingly for former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, at 95 percent. Krista Haroutunian, chair of the Wayne County Board of Canvassers, told the Detroit Free Press that the discrepancies could make 610 precincts across the county (including the 392 in Detroit), ineligible for recount. A final decision has not yet been made.

The Michigan Republican Party, President-elect Donald Trump and the state’s Republican attorney general all filed notice that they plan to appeal a U.S. District Court decision to start the recount Monday, arguing the effort should not be decided by the federal courts system. (RELATED: Michigan GOP Files Appeal To Stop Recount)

“This is a Michigan issue, and should be handled by the Michigan court system,” Michigan Republican Party Chairman Ronna Romney McDaniel said in a press release. (Read more from “OOPS: Michigan Recount Appears to Expose Industrial-Scale Democrat Vote Fraud” HERE)

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Pence Defends Trump’s Call with President of Taiwan, Says American People ‘Encouraged’ by Engagement

In an interview Sunday on ABC’s This Week, host George Stephanopoulos pressed Vice President-elect Mike Pence on the topic of President-elect Donald Trump’s phone conversation Friday with Tsai Ing-wen, the leader of Taiwan.

Since 1979, the United States has recognized a “One China” policy and had no formal diplomatic relations with Taiwan, which China considers a renegade province.

“Let’s get right to China, that call with the leader of Taiwan,” began Stephanopoulos. “As far as we know, no president or president-elect has spoken with Taiwan’s leader in nearly four decades.”

“Why did Mr. Trump choose to break that precedent?” he asked.

“Well, I’ll tell you what,” Pence replied, “from the morning after the election we’ve seen the president-elect engaging the world. He’s spoken to more than 50 world leaders. I’ve spoken to several dozen myself. And he received a courtesy call from the democratically elected president of Taiwan to congratulate him.”

When asked about China’s unfavorable reaction to the call, Pence directed the focus back to what Trump’s outreach with foreign leaders says about his impending presidency.

“Did he intend to send the kind of signal it sent?” Stephanopoulos asked. “Because the Chinese government has already complained about this. How did you guys respond to that?”

“Well, I understand some of the controversy in the media about this, but I –” began Pence.

Stephanopoulos interrupted to say it wasn’t just an issue in the media, but that the Chinese government had registered its displeasure with the call.

“Well, yes, of course,” answered Pence. “But I would tell you that I think the American people find it very refreshing, the energy that our president-elect is bringing to this whole transition.”

The vice president-elect added, “He’s not only bringing together a Cabinet at a historic pace for the last 40 years, he’s not only assembling a legislative agenda to move forward this country at home and abroad, but he’s also been engaging the world.”

“I think the American people are encouraged … to see that President-elect Trump is taking calls from the world, speaking to the world. They know he’s going to be out there advancing America’s interests first with that broad-shouldered leadership that’s characterized his entire life,” he continued.

Stephanopoulos then inquired as to whether Trump’s call would have implications for the “One China” policy

“Well, we’ll deal with policy after Jan. 20,” Pence responded. “This was a courtesy call.”

Pence then drew a comparison with the current president and his talks with the late Cuban dictator Fidel Castro.

“It’s a little mystifying to me that President Obama can reach out to a murdering dictator in Cuba in the last year and be hailed as a hero for doing it, and President-elect Donald Trump takes a courtesy call from the democratically elected leader in Taiwan and it’s become something of a controversy,” he said.

Some say Trump’s call was a calculated move designed to send a message to China.

Marc A. Thiessen, writing in The Washington Post, said it “wasn’t a blunder by an inexperienced president-elect unschooled in the niceties of cross-straits diplomacy. It was a deliberate move — and a brilliant one at that.”

“Trump knew precisely what he was doing in taking the call,” he wrote. “He was serving notice on Beijing that it is dealing with a different kind of president — an outsider who will not be encumbered by the same Lilliputian diplomatic threads that tied down previous administrations. The message, as John Bolton correctly put it, was that ‘the president of the United States [will] talk to whomever he wants if he thinks it’s in the interest of the United States, and nobody in Beijing gets to dictate who we talk to.’” (For more from the author of “Pence Defends Trump’s Call with President of Taiwan, Says American People ‘Encouraged’ by Engagement” please click HERE)

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Obama’s IRS Commissioner Escapes Impeachment Vote in Congress

The GOP-led House voted Tuesday against impeaching IRS Commissioner John Koskinen, delaying indefinitely the conservative effort to hold President Barack Obama’s top taxman accountable for the targeting of tea party groups.

Koskinen “would have been the first appointed executive-branch official to meet that fate in 140 years.,” had the resolution succeeded, according to Politico.

Conservative lawmakers on Capitol Hill, however, had been pushing for Koskinen’s impeachment.

“We think Mr. Koskinen has to go,” Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, told The Daily Signal.

Jordan, who has repeatedly called for Koskinen’s impeachment, said the targeting of conservative groups by the IRS is unacceptable. He said Koskinen’s role in the scandal warrants impeachment proceedings.

“Koskinen [was] brought in to clean up the mess, and he has done, in my judgement, just the opposite,” said Jordan, who previously led the House Freedom Caucus.

In the interview, Jordan outlined the corruption he said has occurred on Koskinen’s watch, including “allowing backup tapes to be destroyed that were under subpoena to be given to Congress, not telling [Congress] about Lois Lerner’s missing emails, making statements to Congress that turn out later to be not true.”

Jordan also highlighted a story from a tea party organization in Albuquerque, New Mexico, which has been waiting seven years for the IRS to approve its tax-exempt status.

All of this activity, according to Jordan, is sufficient grounds for Congress to impeach Koskinen.

“When all that happens, and you’re the head of this agency, we think you’ve got to go. So we plan to make a motion [Tuesday] afternoon on the House floor that says that we should bring up impeachment proceedings and an impeachment vote against Mr. Koskinen,” Jordan said.

By filing a motion Tuesday, the conservative lawmakers attempted to force the House to vote before Congress adjourns for the year.

Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., agrees, saying that if that resolution passed, the next Congress would “take it up and judge it on the merits of the argument.”

Meadows, who recently became chairman of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, said this call for impeachment is all about holding government officials accountable for their actions.

President Barack Obama has described efforts to impeach Koskinen “crazy” and Koskinen believes that allegations calling for his impeachment “lack merit.” (For more from the author of “Obama’s IRS Commissioner Escapes Impeachment Vote in Congress” please click HERE)

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Obama Sent Someone to Castro’s Funeral, but Not Thatcher’s. Why It Sends the Wrong Message.

President Barack Obama sent high-level administration officials to Cuban dictator Fidel Castro’s funeral procession last week, a gesture of respect he did not offer for former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s funeral.

After Castro’s death, Obama released a statement saying: “History will record and judge the enormous impact of this singular figure on the people and the world around him.”

The carefully guarded words made no reference to the legacy of tyranny and destruction Castro left for the Cuban people, nor did it explain how much Castro’s communist ideology played a role in the half-century of humanitarian catastrophes during his regime.

As reported in Conservative Review, “Ben Rhodes, the White House deputy national security adviser and one of the president’s closest aides,” was sent to attend Castro’s funeral service along with the U.S. ambassador to Cuba, Jeffrey DeLaurentis.

Rhodes became notorious this spring when he boasted of selling a “narrative” about the U.S.-Iran nuclear deal to journalists to push the president’s agenda through Congress.

He was also a key player in opening up relations between the U.S. and Cuba in 2015, ending a long-standing American policy to isolate the communist nation.

The Obama administration failed to send high-level members to Thatcher’s funeral in 2013, which many British saw as a “snub” of their famous leader. Nor was that the first sharp elbow thrown at legendary British leaders by the Obama administration.

The words and actions of an administration, such as who a president chooses to send to a funeral, have a heightened influence on the global stage without the chief executive ever having to act officially.

As historian Richard Neustadt wrote, paraphrasing President Harry Truman, “presidential power is the power to persuade.” And as Neustadt noted, this power to persuade leads to the more tangible power to negotiate—perhaps the most important presidential role in foreign relations.

That the president seems so willing to symbolically and concretely abandon the “special relationship” the U.S. has had with Britain while going out of the way to tiptoe around the sore spots of the Cuban regime is a reversal of priorities for a nation that stood as a beacon for the free world.

Of course, Castro and Thatcher stood at opposite ends of the Cold War in the ultimate test of freedom against authoritarianism—Castro was a revolutionary communist who battled with the United States for decades and Thatcher was a legendary Cold Warrior who stood shoulder to shoulder with President Ronald Reagan against international communism in the 1980s.

When Thatcher was elected prime minister in 1979, she, along with Reagan, pursued a more confrontational approach to the Soviet Union, which she viewed as a primary global threat to human liberty.

She saw the difference between free countries like the United States and Great Britain and authoritarian regimes like under the Soviet Union and Cuba as fundamental.

Like Reagan, who called the Soviet Union an “evil empire” in a famous 1983 speech, Thatcher rhetorically undermined the tyrannical regimes and indicated that a mere détente with them was unacceptable.

When negotiating with the Soviet Union at the end of the Cold War, Reagan and Thatcher came from a position of strength.

In a 1983 television appearance, the Iron Lady, as Thatcher came to be called, explained the radically different outcomes for people living under these nearly opposite systems of government:

[Nations] that have gone for equality, like communism, have neither freedom nor justice nor equality, they’ve the greatest inequalities of all, the privileges of the politicians are far greater compared with the ordinary folk than in any other country. The nations that have gone for freedom, justice, and independence of people have still freedom and justice, and they have far more equality between their people, far more respect for each individual than the other nations.

Castro’s Cuba has been the very picture of this despotism based on a false “equality,” as Thatcher described.

“Castro’s communism has not just left Cubans economically pauperized, but politically bereft, a situation that Obama’s unilateral concessions to Castro’s little brother, the 85-year-old Raul, Cuba’s present leader, has only made worse,” Heritage Foundation senior fellow Mike Gonzalez wrote for The Daily Signal.

Cuba’s pursuit of communism under Castro crippled the island nation and pushed hundreds of thousands to risk their lives to escape. Thatcher and Reagan’s rhetorical stands against autocracy helped break the power of communism as an international threat as they pushed the Soviet Union to collapse.

But the Obama administration now has sent high-ranking officials to the funeral service of the man who pleaded with Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev to wage nuclear war against the United States during the 1962 Cuban missile crisis. The system the now-deceased Castro created still exists after his death and continues under his brother.

The simple act of administration officials attending or not attending a state leader’s funeral service communicates a great deal to the world about what a president’s intentions are.

Signaling that free countries like the United States will back off in their condemnation of oppressive, communist regimes like the one propped up by the Castro brothers helps breathe new life into their failed ideology. (For more from the author of “Obama Sent Someone to Castro’s Funeral, but Not Thatcher’s. Why It Sends the Wrong Message.” please click HERE)

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This Filmmaking Couple Doesn’t Want to Be Punished for Not Promoting Same-Sex Marriage

A Minnesota couple is suing state officials to allow their film production company to celebrate marriage as a man-woman union without being forced, against their biblical beliefs, to promote same-sex marriage.

Carl and Angel Larsen, of St. Cloud, Minnesota, say they run Telescope Media Group as a way to deploy their storytelling ability and production services to glorify God.

“The Larsens desire to counteract the current cultural narrative undermining the historic, biblically orthodox definition of marriage by using their media production and filmmaking talents to tell stories of marriages between one man and one woman that magnify and honor God’s design and purpose for marriage,” the lawsuit filed Tuesday in the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota says.

Alliance Defending Freedom, a Christian legal organization, filed the lawsuit on behalf of the Larsens and Telescope Media Group, which they own.

“Because of their religious beliefs, and their belief in the power of film and media production to change hearts and minds, the Larsens want to use their talents and the expressive platform of [Telescope Media Group] to celebrate and promote God’s design for marriage as a lifelong union of one man and one woman,” the suit says.

Minnesota government officials argue that private businesses face criminal penalties if they promote a marriage between a man and woman but refuse to promote a same-sex marriage, the Larsens’ lawyers at the Christian legal group Alliance Defending Freedom say.

“Filmmakers shouldn’t be threatened with fines and jail simply for disagreeing with the government,” Jeremy Tedesco, senior counsel at Alliance Defending Freedom, said in a formal statement.

If convicted after criminal prosecution under the Minnesota Human Rights Act, the Larsens face a fine of $1,000 and up to 90 days in jail, according to the lawsuit. They also could be ordered to pay compensatory and punitive damages up to $25,000.

The Larsens, who are in their mid-30s and have been married for 14 years, are challenging the law before Minnesota officials take any action against them and their company.

The law in question is the Minnesota Human Rights Act.

“The law does not exempt individuals, businesses, nonprofits, or the secular business activities of religious entities from nondiscrimination laws based on religious beliefs regarding same-sex marriage,” the Minnesota Department of Human Rights website says.

The Larsens’ lawyers filed a pre-enforcement challenge against Kevin Lindsey in his official capacity as commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Human Rights and against Lori Swanson in her official capacity as attorney general of Minnesota. According to the suit:

The Larsens simply desire to use their unique storytelling and promotional talents to convey messages that promote aspects of their sincerely held religious beliefs, or that at least are not inconsistent with them. It is standard practice for the owners of video and film production companies to decline to produce videos that contain or promote messages that the owners do not want to support or that violate or compromise their beliefs in some way.

The Daily Signal sought comment from both the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office and the Department of Human Rights, but neither had responded by publication.

Telescope Media Group’s services include web-streaming and video recording of live events as well as producing short films.

“Telescope Media Group exists to glorify God through top-quality media production,” the company’s website says.

The company has created content for clients such as the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and LifeLight, an annual Christian music festival held near Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

“Every American—including creative professionals—should be free to peacefully live and work according to their faith without fear of punishment,” Tedesco said in a release from Alliance Defending Freedom. He added:

For example, a fashion designer recently cited her ‘artistic freedom’ as a ‘family-owned company’ to announce that she won’t design clothes for Melania Trump because she doesn’t want to use her company and creative talents to promote political views she disagrees with. Even though the law in D.C. prohibits ‘political affiliation’ discrimination, do any of us really think the designer should be threatened with fines and jail time?

French fashion designer Sophie Theallet published an open letter Nov. 17 saying she would not dress President-elect Donald Trump’s wife, the future first lady, because of disagreements with him and urged other fashion designers to do the same.

Last week, American fashion designer Tom Ford said on TV’s “The View” that he would not dress Melania Trump, in part because “she’s not necessarily my image.”

“The Larsens simply seek to exercise these same freedoms, and that’s why they filed this lawsuit to challenge Minnesota’s law,” Tedesco said. (For more from the author of “This Filmmaking Couple Doesn’t Want to Be Punished for Not Promoting Same-Sex Marriage” please click HERE)

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Trump’s First 100 Days: His Supreme Court Choice Could Have a Lifetime Impact

President Thomas Jefferson long ago offered a salient if sour lament about members of the Supreme Court: “They never retire, and they rarely die.”

So a vacancy in Washington’s most exclusive club is a time for political opportunity and obstacle. It is also something President-elect Donald Trump must confront in his first 100 days in office as he works to replace the late conservative icon Justice Antonin Scalia.

Sources close to the process say the president-elect is getting close to naming a nominee. He said on Fox News’ “Hannity” last week that he was “down to probably three or four” candidates and an announcement would come “pretty soon.”

“They are terrific people,” he added.” “Highly respected, brilliant people.”

A formal nomination would come after the inauguration. But how successfully Trump and his GOP allies can navigate the confirmation process in the first hectic days of his presidency will depend on how much political air it sucks up, amid other pressing personnel and legislative priorities. (Read more from “Trump’s First 100 Days: His Supreme Court Choice Could Have a Lifetime Impact” HERE)

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The Problem with Amy Schumer Playing Barbie Is NOT Her Thick Body. It’s Her Thick Head

Last week, several entertainments outlets reported that comedian-actress Amy Schumer is poised to star as Barbie in a new live-action comedy based on the iconic Mattel doll leftists can’t seem to leave alone. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the film’s creators hope it will “put a contemporary spin on beauty, feminism and identity.”

The story begins when Barbie is banished from Barbieland for not being “perfect enough,” Entertainment Tonight reported. This upsetting incident launches her into an adventure-filled journey in the “real world,” where Barbie discovers that being different is beautiful. Truly inspiring.

Liberal outlets reacted to Schumer’s anticipated new role with glee, calling it a triumph for feminism and a slap in the face for body-shaming misogynist pigs everywhere. Why, exactly? Apparently because Schumer doesn’t fit the mold of the tall, thin, hourglass-shaped toy (though I can’t think of any human being who does).

But not everyone was a fan. Despite the widespread support for Schumer, a handful of stupid internet trolls did what stupid internet trolls do and tweeted nasty comments about Schumer’s chubbier build . . .

Amy Schumer would make a terrible Barbie, but her physical appearance has nothing to do with it.

It’s not Schumer’s weight (which seems pretty average, if not for leftist Hollywood standards) that disqualifies her. The fact that she is unfeminine and crass disqualifies her.

The Barbie character wasn’t originally created to be a political statement. She was supposed to be an outlet for little girls to make-believe about their future as real, grownup women. She was, in her own way, a role model.

Schumer’s foul mouth and sexually lewd standup comedy routines are the last thing I think of when I hear the term “role model.”

Schumer manages to be self-deprecatory and self-indulgent all at once. She calls herself a “slut” and expects the world to applaud her for being some champion of women’s equality. Also, she’s BFFs with Hollywood’s favorite “nasty woman,” Lena Dunham.

The past doesn’t necessarily define a person, and actors are free to branch out and try new things. But don’t expect everyone to rally behind a woman who represents many of the things we hope our daughters will never become.

And liberal media: Don’t expect to not get called out for suggesting that anyone who criticizes Schumer is just a fat-shaming misogynist. Contrary to what Tinseltown liberals believe, you don’t have to be a hateful bigot to believe that their ideas are garbage. (For more from “The Problem with Amy Schumer Playing Barbie Is NOT Her Thick Body. It’s Her Thick Head” please click HERE)

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Michelle Malkin Calls BS on the Mainstream Media’s Fake News on ‘Hannity’

Following the official premier of “Michelle Malkin Investigates” on CRTV, Conservative Review Senior Editor Michelle Malkin appeared on “Hannity” Monday night to dive into the mainstream media’s bias and this faux fake news hysteria. Malkin exposed why the liberal media hates Donald Trump so much: because he uses social media to get around them and he doesn’t need the media. Steven Laboe of rightsitings.com captured the segment:

Malkin also joined Hannity on the radio Monday afternoon, to discuss her new show and President-elect Donald Trump.

Take a listen:

If you want to hear more from Michell Malkin, the best way is to check out her show “Michelle Malkin Investigates,” now available with a CRTV subscription. (For more from the author of “Michelle Malkin Calls BS on the Mainstream Media’s Fake News on ‘Hannity'” please click HERE)

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