GOP Leaders Stall Muslim Brotherhood Terrorist Act

Eighty members of Congress, including two Democrats, now support the Muslim Brotherhood Terrorist Designation Act, with one more congressman and a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee signing up since the last update. There’s only one problem: The Republican leadership is stalling it, even though the House version passed the Judiciary Committee.

The two new cosponsors are Senator David Perdue (R-GA) and Rep. Tom Marino (R-PA). The former is especially significant because he is a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee where it is held up. A list of cosponsors and opponents is available at the bottom of this article.

Terrorism expert Patrick Poole writes that the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Bob Corker (R-TN), has not even held hearings on the bill, much less arranged for it to be voted on. Corker is reportedly being vetted as a potential running mate for Donald Trump.

The story is even more discouraging in the House, where support for the bill was proven when it passed the Judiciary Committee. Yet, Speaker Paul Ryan and House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy have not given any public indication that he’ll have the House vote on it. (Read more from “GOP Leaders Stall Muslim Brotherhood Terrorist Act” HERE)

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‘IRS Agents’ Involved in Menacing but Lucrative Scam

It may be an old scam, but apparently it’s still a very live and effective one, as at least three WND staff members have been targeted with it in recent weeks.

The potential victim receives a message from a computerized voice to call the IRS immediately about his “case file.”

The worried caller then is informed by an “agent” that a criminal case has been filed against him for defrauding the IRS, and if he doesn’t immediately make a payment, police will show up at his door.

The taxpayer then is instructed to go to the nearest drug story to purchase a pre-paid credit card through which a payment can be made to satisfy authorities.

The IRS is trying to warn Americans that its officers would never makes such a telephone call, but many terrified citizens are taking the bait. (Read more from “‘IRS Agents’ Involved in Menacing but Lucrative Scam” HERE)

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Wall Street Oligarchs for Hillary!

Why am I not surprised?

Henry Paulson, a Republican who was U.S. Treasury secretary during the 2008 financial meltdown, on Friday called a Donald Trump presidency “unthinkable” and said he will vote for Democrat Hillary Clinton.

Yeah, it’s unthinkable because if Paulson’s former firm (Goldman Sachs) got into debt trouble Trump would probably do what he did with his firms that also did so — tell them to file bankruptcy instead of bailing them out.

He might also prosecute the firm and the executives for fraud, particularly if (as was the case in the bailout in 08) the firm was on tape calling things they were selling to clients as “good investments” by such descriptive monikers as “vomit” and “dogsqueeze.”

“I can’t help but think what would have happened if a divisive character such as Trump were president during the 2008 financial crisis, at a time when leadership, compromise and careful analysis were critical,” he said.

He sure as hell wouldn’t have his Treasury Secretary try to ram through a two-page bill that gave him plenary power to blow the taxpayer’s money without any check, balance, review or ability to prosecute even if the conduct was later shown to be utterly fraudulent!

But that’s exactly what Hank Paulson did, and in addition he intentionally misled Congress in that his original proposal which was voted on the second time was to buy “toxic assets” but by the time it reached the floor of Congress he had already decided not to buy assets but rather to provide direct funds via various other mechanisms to the firms in question and did not inform Congress of his “changed” intentions.

In other words he actively and passively misled Congress.

Trump probably wouldn’t have allowed that and if the Statute of Limitations had not already run on this conduct (I believe it has) he might even prosecute and jail that rat bastard. (For more from the author of “Wall Street Oligarchs for Hillary!” please click HERE)

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McConnell Can’t Follow His Own Guidelines for Fighting and Winning

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-K.Y., (F, 44%) represents the worst attitude of D.C. politics. His recent book encapsulates all that is wrong with Washington and his attitude is one of elitism, putting his ascent to power and his control of detractors ahead of the people.

But putting aside all of his obtuse treatment of the American citizen, there is a point in his book where McConnell reveals a powerful truth that conservatives should not only embrace, but patent, mass produce, package, and market.

As McConnell winds about his book, describing the great things he has done which basically center on getting reelected, he throws in a lightening rod of truth.

While describing his growth of influence as a second term senator backbencher, he recalled how his elementary school principal would keep boxing gloves for when boys would have disputes and tell them to don the gloves and fight it out. McConnell noted that it wasn’t the one who swung the most, but the one who stood the firmest that typically won those fights. He said that he applied that concept to his strategy in the Senate, as well as to learning the rules of the Senate, holding solid principles of the Constitution, and making tough decisions your friends don’t like.

Now, unlike conservatives, McConnell fakes an adherence to constitutional principles if he thinks he can label the other guy with being worse on these principles than he is. Also, unlike conservatives, the decisions his friends don’t like are described as tough because his friends are in the D.C. Cesspool Club and any friction might mean his growth to power might be hindered. However, the strategy of whoever stands the firmest the longest wins, understanding the rules of engagement, standing for the constitution at every turn, and making decisions the powers that be do not like, are the winning applications for conservatives, and upon engagement of the strategy, will show how people like McConnell are complete frauds.

McConnell’s memoir was written because he finally attained his lifetime goal of Senate Majority Leader. He proudly announces that the best way to become a great senator is to remain one. Correct me if I’m wrong, but I have never heard a solitary American who is stifled under an oppressive, obese federal government scream out for great senators. Instead, we prefer to champion and reward men who will take on the federal leviathan in any capacity and turn it on its ear.

With the goal of shutting down the influence of government in our lives, conservatives ought to remember to stand firm, because McConnell is not wrong when it comes to who ultimately wins. Even though his life was wasted standing firm against limited government, you cannot claim his strategy has not worked beautifully.

Understanding the rules of the body conservatives serve in is imperative, and though Senator Ted Cruz has understood them completely, and worked within them to defund Obamacare, McConnell continues to claim that the strategy promised more than could be achieved, after he voted in favor of cloture, no less. It would seem that understanding how to use the public ignorance of the rules is really what McConnell is more inclined to do.

Standing for the Constitution is a no-brainer, however, giving lip-service to it like McConnell does will get increasingly difficult to do once more than just a handful of constitutional conservatives reintroduce its brilliance. The 30-plus years of standing firm for the status quo that McConnell wants to be praised for will be forgotten soon enough, but the decisions conservatives make to threaten centralized power and return the power taken by McConnell and his Cesspool Club back to the industrious, ingenious, creative and talented hands of the American citizen will be worth it. (For more from the author of “McConnell Can’t Follow His Own Guidelines for Fighting and Winning” please click HERE)

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Antonin Scalia’s Gay Marriage Dissent Turns One Year Old

On June 26, 2015, the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia wrote one of the most prescient and troubling legal opinions of his career. A year later, it is time for the American people to act on its warnings.

Obergefell v. Hodges, the watershed ruling that stripped the rights of states to legally define marriage solely as the union of a man and a woman, was decided exactly one year ago today. The case was regarded by many not only as a death omen for the family unit in the United States, but also for the freedom to express and profess a truth that had been accepted by every civilization in human history until just a few years before Justice Kennedy’s majority opinion.

In the year since the ruling was issued, we’ve seen Kim Davis go to jail following a denial of religious accommodation regarding marriage licenses. We’ve seen governors bullied into vetoing basic First Amendment protections for their citizens, and, as Travis Weber indicates in an op-ed at the Daily Signal, we have seen not the only forced compliance of states and citizens with the opinion of the razor-thin majority, but the demand for public approval for same sex unions.

But even more alarming than these developments are the broader warnings offered by Scalia’s dissent in the case, first among them is the Court’s overriding “threat to American democracy.”

“Today’s decree says that my Ruler, and the Ruler of 320 million Americans coast-to-coast, is a majority of the nine lawyers on the Supreme Court,” Scalia wrote last June. “This practice of Constitutional revision by an unelected committee of nine, always accompanied … by extravagant praise of liberty, robs the People of the most important liberty they asserted in the Declaration of Independence.”

Scalia then points to the period leading up to the court’s ruling as the true triumph of liberty, rather than the decision itself.

“Individuals on both sides of the issue passionately, but respectfully, attempted to persuade ther fellow citizens to accept their views,” he wrote. “Americans considered the arguments and put the question to a vote. The electorates of 11 states, either directly or through their representatives, chose to expand the traditional definition of marriage. Many more decided not to.”

“Win or lose, advocates for both sides continued pressing their cases, secure in the knowledge that an electoral loss can be negated by a later electoral win.”

What Justice Scalia described was a true republic in action, at least until the judiciary put a stop to it. The greater problem is that, as devastating as the decision may yet prove to be for the religious liberty of people and institutions who still affirm a traditional, organic and conjugal understanding of marriage, the precedent set in this case and others by the federal judiciary point to a truth antithetical to our political and historical identity as Americans: we are being governed less and less by our own consent.

While conservatives and constitutionalists lauded the court’s decision in U.S. v. Texas earlier in the week, they would do well to remember two things:

1. The ruling itself was extremely narrow, meaning that similar cases, like Arizona Dream Act Coalition v. Brewer, in other circuits will likely still stand.

2. “Victories” like this are becoming fewer and further-between.

One such instance of judicial usurpation from January involves a case wherein the Supreme Court struck down sentencing laws that were debated and passed by several of the states, and up until the retroactive application of a separate case left the citizens of those states deprived of their right to decide upon the application of criminal sentences.

Another such case involves an illegal alien whose deportation was blocked after a ruling of the Federal Ninth Circuit Court redefined the term “good moral character,” thereby allowing for leniency and allowing him to stay. The United States Congress passed immigration laws which would have sent the offender home, until the federal judiciary simply re-interpreted the law, and invalidated the congressionally passed statute, despite its clear constitutionality.

But the primary issue that we see before us stems both philosophically and legally from the Obergefell decision itself. In April of this year, the City Council of Charlotte, North Carolina passed a restroom ordinance that the democratically elected governor and state legislature saw to be a potential threat to the freedom of private businesses and the security of vulnerable citizens. In response, the legislature passed and governor signed into law a measure that would have prohibited local governments in the state from infringing upon the rights and privacy of private citizens.

Cue the executive branch. In what must have been a land-speed record for such an issue, not only did a pack of cultural cronies descend upon the state with calls of discrimination, but the Department of Justice and the State simultaneously threw the issue to the courts for adjudication.

A few weeks later, in response to a related public school fiat issued by the Obama administration effectively mandating schools to adopt the kinds of policies that the duly elected officials were trying to avoid, 11 states filed lawsuits against the administration over the matter.

What this means is that, a year after the American people were robbed of the ability to discuss and pass corresponding legislation regarding the institution of marriage, they now stand to be stripped of the right to deliberate the very nature of man and woman, or of the protection of privacy and safety.

As disappointing as this is for anyone who wonders if we can still keep this republic, following Dr. Benjamin Franklin’s warning, it should come as little surprise to anyone who has been paying attention. In Stolen Sovereignty, CR Senior Editor Daniel Horowitz outlines in detail just the right of the American electorate to decide matters of vast importance like basic biology, immigration, criminal justice has already started eroding before our eyes, thanks to an out of control and activist-ridden judiciary.

While Obergefell was far from the cause of the greater disease in effect, it remains the most recent and visible symptom.

But there is a little-known constitutional trap door to escape the dungeon of judicial oligarchy. Congress has the power to strip the federal courts of their jurisdiction, relegate such issues to state courts, and break up the federal influence on these matters. Our cousins across the Atlantic made a similar move Thursday when they voted to reclaim the power of their vote from a bureaucratic oligarchy in Belgium. After decades of having laws dictated by a largely unaccountable body they decided it was time to demand their own self-rule. With Scalia’s prescient dissent fresh in mind, it is high time that Congress reclaim its authority and that the American electorate take back its own sovereignty. (For more from the author of “Antonin Scalia’s Gay Marriage Dissent Turns One Year Old” please click HERE)

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Trump Makes Promise to the British After They ‘Declared Their Independence’

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump on Friday applauded Britain’s vote to leave the European Union and vowed to work closely with the United Kingdom in the future.

“The people of the United Kingdom have exercised the sacred right of all free peoples,” Trump said in a statement posted on Facebook. “They have declared their independence from the European Union and have voted to reassert control over their own politics, borders and economy.”

“A Trump Administration pledges to strengthen our ties with a free and independent Britain, deepening our bonds in commerce, culture and mutual defense. The whole world is more peaceful and stable when our two countries – and our two peoples – are united together, as they will be under a Trump Administration,” Trump’s statement said.

“Come November, the American people will have the chance to re-declare their independence. Americans will have a chance to vote for trade, immigration and foreign policies that put our citizens first. They will have the chance to reject today’s rule by the global elite, and to embrace real change that delivers a government of, by and for the people. I hope America is watching, it will soon be time to believe in America again,” Trump’s statement said.

On Twitter, Trump issued three tweets about the vote.

Trump, who was in Scotland Friday for the reopening of his Turnberry golf resort, called Britain’s vote to leave the European Union “a great thing.” He added, “People are angry, all over the world, they’re angry. They’re angry over borders, they’re angry over people coming into the country and taking over. Nobody even knows who they are. They’re angry about many, many things.”

(For more from the author of “Trump Makes Promise to the British After They ‘Declared Their Independence'” please click HERE)

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Ban on Transgender Troops to Be Lifted July 1

The Pentagon plans to announce the repeal of its ban on transgender service members July 1, a controversial decision that would end nearly a year of internal wrangling among the services on how to allow those troops to serve openly, according to Defense officials.

Top personnel officials plan to meet as early as Monday to finalize details of the plan, and Deputy Defense Secretary Bob Work could sign off on it by Wednesday, according to a Defense official familiar with the timetable but who spoke on condition of anonymity because officials were not authorized to speak publicly about it. Final approval would come from Defense Secretary Ash Carter, and the announcement will be on the eve of the Fourth of July weekend.

The plan would direct each branch of the armed services over a one-year period to implement new policies affecting recruiting, housing and uniforms for transgender troops, one official said.

Carter announced last year that the ban, which affects a fraction of the military’s 1.3 million active duty members, would be lifted unless a review showed that doing so would have “adverse impact on military effectiveness and readiness.”

That phrase raised concerns on Capitol Hill where a key lawmaker questioned whether an “honest and balanced assessment” could be made of the effects on “military readiness, morale and good order and discipline” under Carter’s guidelines for the review. (Read more from “Ban on Transgender Troops to Be Lifted July 1” HERE)

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How McConnell Botched the Senate’s Response to Orlando

Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s, R-K.Y. (F, 44%) handling of the fallout from the Orlando terrorist attack in recent weeks has been an unprecedented disaster. Here’s why.

The floor of each chamber can be a powerful tool, just ask Senators Rand Paul, R-K.Y. (A, 95%) and Ted Cruz, R-K.Y. (A, 97%) who through epic speeches captivated the attention of the country. Just last week Democrat Senator Chris Murphy, D-C.T. (F, 8%) was able to draw the attention of the national media to his cause of gun control by commanding the Senate floor in a 15-hour-long filibuster.

The goal of competent Republican Senate leadership after the Orlando attack should have been to respond by controlling the debate and defining the narrative on its terms. After all, Republicans control the Senate floor and thus the agenda.

The preferred way of Republicans defining the narrative on their terms would have been for McConnell to announce that because of the threat of radical Islamic terrorism in the United States the Senate would immediately move to consideration of the appropriations bill that funds the Department of Defense. A bill that literally funds the troops who will take the fight to radical jihadists.

Doing so would have unified Republicans and split Democrats. Democrats would have been left with the choice between funding our nation’s troops or filibuster their funding in an effort to push forward a radical gun control agenda — an agenda that would have done absolutely nothing to stop the Orlando attack. Instead, McConnell divided Republicans on the issue of guns and allowed Democrats to have the upper hand in controlling the narrative and legislative agenda.

If Republicans had successfully moved the Department of Defense funding bill, they would have been able to offer a series of amendments that deal directly with radical Islamic terrorism and would have defined the debate on their terms. Media coverage would be about amendments intended to address ISIS, domestic terrorism, and an immigration system that is arguably one of our nation’s biggest national security threats, instead of the gun control theatrics we’re seeing today.

As a byproduct of moving to the Department of Defense funding bill, Rule XVI in the Senate would have precluded Democrats from bringing up any of the gun control amendments, which Republicans are currently being forced to vote on. Thereby protecting any vulnerable GOP members in tough general election races.

Instead, to show that Republicans can “govern” McConnell opted to stay on the Commerce, Justice, Science (CJS) funding bill. A huge tactical blunder.

Because spending bills must originate in the House, the House version of the CJS funding bill is used to determine what amendments can be offered in the Senate. And the House CJS funding bill has provisions that have allowed Democrats to successfully achieve their goal of gun control votes and pushing their message of more gun control.

Committed to his course of seeing through the CJS funding bill to prove Republicans can “govern,” McConnell on Monday agreed to allow two votes on Democrat gun control proposals, along with two Republican side-by-sides. Significantly, these side-by-sides are not pro-gun designed to highlight the GOP standing up for Second Amendment rights. Rather, they are gun control lite proposals.

But Thursday, things got even worse as McConnell stumbled into his biggest blunder yet, forcing a vote on a motion to kill the latest gun control proposal from fellow Republican Senator Susan Collins, R-M.E. (F, 12%).

Collins’ gun control proposal survived the motion as 54 senators voted to keep the proposal alive, but the vote also demonstrated Collins proposal did not have the 60 votes needed to overcome a filibuster.

Therefore, not having 51 votes to table the proposal or 60 votes to pass the Collins proposal, the Senate is effectively stuck.

And stuck on a debate of gun control, not terrorism, or protecting the Second Amendment, but gun control. The exact topic and terrain that Democrats want to discuss. The result? A divided Republican party in the Senate and forcing vulnerable Senators in general election races to take high profile gun control votes. Meanwhile the media runs with the preferred Democrat narrative that their proposal has bipartisan support.

The overall narrative on display to the Republican base plays into the critique and reality that Washington Republicans are not principled, they will do anything to show they can “govern”, and absolutely incapable of standing on principle.

The sad truth is that this entire scenario was absolutely avoidable if Republicans in the Senate had competent leadership. (For more from the author of “How McConnell Botched the Senate’s Response to Orlando” please click HERE)

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Obama Changes His Stance on US-UK Relationship After Brexit Vote

After telling the people of Britain in April that everything might change if Britain left the European Union, President Barack Obama said Friday that the United Kingdom’s vote to leave the EU will not impact the “special relationship” between the United States and Britain.

“The people of the United Kingdom have spoken, and we respect their decision,” Obama said in a statement. “The special relationship between the United States and the United Kingdom is enduring, and the United Kingdom’s membership in NATO remains a vital cornerstone of U.S. foreign, security and economic policy.”

Friday’s conciliatory words were a far cry from those Obama delivered in April during a visit to Britain he urged voters there to remain in the EU.

“I think it’s fair to say that maybe some point down the line there might be a U.K.-U.S. trade agreement, but it’s not going to happen any time soon because our focus is in negotiating with a big bloc, the European Union, to get a trade agreement done,” Obama said then.

“The UK is going to be in the back of the queue,” he said.

On Friday, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump suggested that Obama’s support of the EU might have contributed to the voters’ decision to leave the EU. Democratic president candidate Hillary Clinton had also supported Britain remaining in the EU.

On Friday, Obama said that the United States will maintain good working relationships with Britain and the EU.

“The United Kingdom and the European Union will remain indispensable partners of the United States even as they begin negotiating their ongoing relationship to ensure continued stability, security and prosperity for Europe, Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and the world,” he said. (For more from the author of “Obama Changes His Stance on US-UK Relationship After Brexit Vote” please click HERE)

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This State Becomes the First to Require All Gun Owners Be Entered Into Federal Database

Hawaii became the first state in the nation to enact legislation requiring gun owners to be entered into an FBI database.

The measure, signed into law on Friday by Democratic Gov. David Ige, will automatically notify police if an island resident is arrested anywhere in the country through what is known as the “Rap Back” system.

Fox News reports that the database is already in place in the FBI and used to keep track of people in “positions of trust” such as schoolteachers or bus drivers. Hawaii becomes the first state to use the system to keep track of all gun owners.

Critics says that gun owners should not have to be entered into a database simply for exercising their constitutional right to bear arms.

The National Rifle Association and the Hawaii Rifle Association opposed the legislation.

“This is an extremely dangerous bill. Exercising a constitutional right is not inherently suspicious,” Amy Hunter of the National Rifle Association said in May. “Hawaii will now be treating firearms as suspect and subject to constant monitoring.”

“I don’t like the idea of us being entered into a database. It basically tells us that they know where the guns are, they can go grab them” Jerry Ilo, a firearm and hunting instructor for the state, told the Associated Press last month. “We get the feeling that Big Brother is watching us.”

The law was one of three gun control measures Ige signed on Friday. State law now also bars those convicted of stalking or sexual assault from gun ownership and gives the police the authority to seize firearms from any deemed disqualified due to mental illness.

State Sen. Will Espero, the Democrat who introduced the FBI database registration requirement for gun owners, hopes it will be a model for other states. (For more from the author of “This State Becomes the First to Require All Gun Owners Be Entered Into Federal Database” please click HERE)

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