Republican Senator Tom Cotton ‘Endorses’ 2016 Presidential Candidate – I Doubt Anyone Would’ve Expected This

High-profile endorsements can sometimes help candidates, but Bernie Sanders recently received one that might not do him any good.

Speaking on an episode of “Arkansas Week: Special Edition” that aired on January 1, Republican Sen. Tom Cotton, offered tongue-in-cheek support for the Vermont senator in the Democratic presidential contest.

“For many months, I’ve been strongly in favor of Bernie Sanders in the Democratic primary,” Cotton said.

Cotton’s support would mark the first senator to back Sanders — 38 of his 46 Democratic colleagues have announced their support for front-runner Hillary Clinton. The remaining Democrats have yet to weigh in. (Read more from “Republican Senator Tom Cotton ‘Endorses’ 2016 Presidential Candidate – I Doubt Anyone Would’ve Expected This” HERE)

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The Gun Debate Illuminates the Broader Constitutional Crisis

We live in an era when one entire political party believes that what is in the Constitution is not in it and what’s not in the Constitution is really enshrined in the ever-evolving elastic document. What’s worse, the federal judges who align with this party, yet are sworn to uphold the Constitution, believe in the same backwards vision.

Consider the following: The Constitution doesn’t mention a word about gay marriage (or marriage at all), yet liberals believe it does. At the same time, the right to keep and bear arms is enshrined into our Bill of Rights in the most unambiguous language (“… shall not be infringed …”), yet they believe it can and should be infringed upon. Put another way, while states are now precluded from denying a positive privilege to gay couples — a privilege over which they had plenary power since the founding of our country — they have the power to take negative action against someone who peacefully bears arms.

The relevant clause of the Second Amendment assures “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

There are three observations that should automatically jump out at any student of the Constitution.

1. The Second Amendment was not merely expressed in a positive sense — “there shall be a right to keep and bear arms.” Were that the case, one could conceivably make the case for Congress or a state legislature limiting a number of options and conditions for gun rights as long as there were enough remaining lawful opportunities to fulfill those rights. Rather, it was expressed in the strongest negative terms directed at the government — that the right “shall not be infringed.” The notion that states can categorically ban numerous popular firearms and ammo and place substantial burdens on even purchasing and owning any firearm is preempted by the most unequivocal language afforded to any fundamental right at the federal level. Yet, it took 200 years for the Court to “discover” the most foundational of unalienable rights in the Heller and McDonald decisions to overturn full gun bans. [1] Even since those cases, however, the lower courts are upholding anything short of complete categorical bans and the Supreme Court is casually denying review of these precedents. [2]

I’m not one of those who believe we should rely on the courts to protect our rights, or that this was even the core objective of creating a judiciary. If, however, courts are going to discover all sorts of new super rights that are alien or antithetical to our founding values, and impose them upon the states, how can they sit idly while states violate the one right that is explicitly walled off with the impervious language of “shall not be infringed”?

2. The fact that the text of the amendment uses the words keep and bear arms demonstrates incontrovertibly that the authors’ intent was to protect the right to carry on one’s person at all times, not just in one’s home. This language was taken directly from the Virginia recommendation for a bill of rights, proposed by George Wythe, the first American law professor, at the ratifying convention in June 1788. In a letter to John Cartwright, Thomas Jefferson was unequivocal that “it is their right and duty to be at all times armed.” He advised Americans that a “gun therefore be the constant companion of your walks.” It is appalling that so many states either prohibit or place a substantial burden on carrying a firearm or that people are restricted from carrying across state lines. It wasn’t until 2012 that a district judge in Maryland agreed to strike down the state’s anti-carry laws, but in Woollard v. Gallagher the 4th Circuit upheld the unconstitutional laws and the Supreme Court obnoxiously denied cert to the petitioners. [3]

3. The Second Amendment refers to gun rights as “the” right. This language was reserved for all of the fundamental, unalienable rights granted by God — the same language used for the freedom of speech, religion, and assembly. This is why many conservatives don’t like using the term “Second Amendment right” when referring to the right to bear arms. The Second Amendment didn’t’ create the right; it is God given and self-evident. It is for this reason that many of the Federalists, including James Madison, at least initially, were opposed to adding fundamental rights into the Bill of Rights. They feared it would give off the impression that A) these rights were granted by the Constitution and not God and B) these were the only rights reserved to the people. [4]

The right to self-defense is ranked among the most unalienable rights and is indispensable to protecting the foundational rights of life, liberty, and property. While most conservative originalists believe that not all clauses of the Bill of Rights necessarily applied to the states and that the 14th Amendment did not “incorporate” the states into the Bill of Rights, even a state government cannot harm a God-given right (as I noted last week with regards to religious liberty). Judge Timothy Farrar, who wrote the first and most respected post-14th Amendment constitutional treatise, seamlessly listed the right to bear arms among the unalienable rights that states cannot violate. [5] St. George Tucker, one of the earliest respected commentators on the Constitution, referred to gun rights as “the true palladium of liberty.” [6] The self-evident nature of the complete right to bear arms was such a given that there was virtually no debate on this part of the Bill of Rights when Madison introduced it in the House of Representatives. All of the debate centered on the phrase about the militia and whether Quakers could be drafted into such a force. [7]

Madison [in Federalist no. 46] referred to the right to bear arms as a right that “Americans possess over the people of almost every other nation.” It is why, until recently, we have done a better job preserving fundamental rights than any other nation. Not even a state government can infringe upon this right, yet we now have a president who thinks he can do so unilaterally without Congress at a federal level. The only question that remains is if we will let him. (For more from the author of “The Gun Debate Illuminates the Broader Constitutional Crisis” please click HERE)

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[1] District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U. S. 570 (2008), McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U. S. 742, 780 (2010)

[2] Espanola Jackson, et al. v. City and County of San Francisco, California, Et al, No. 14-704 (9th Cir. June. 8, 2015); 76 U. S. ____ (2015) (cert. denied, Thomas, J., dissenting). Arie S. Friedman, et al. v. City of Highland Park, Illinois, No. 15-133 (7th Cir. Dec. 7, 2015); 577 U. S. ____ (2015) 577 (cert. denied, Thomas, J., dissenting)

[3] Woollard v. Gallagher, 712 F.3d 865, 874 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 134 S. Ct. 422 (2013)

[4] James Wilson said at the Pennsylvania ratifying convention, “If we attempt an enumeration, every thing that is not enumerated is presumed to be given. The consequence is, that an imperfect enumeration would throw all implied power into the scale of the government, and the rights of the people would be rendered incomplete.”

[5] T Farrar, “Manual of the Constitution of the United States of America” (Boston 1867) p. 145 § 118 [“The States are recognized as governments, and, when their own constitutions permit, may do as they please; provided they do not interfere with the Constitution and laws of the United States, or with the civil or natural rights of the people recognized thereby, and held in conformity to them. The right of every person to “life, liberty, and property,” to “keep and bear arms,” to the “writ of habeas corpus” to “trial by jury,” and divers others, are recognized by, and held under, the Constitution of the United States, and cannot be infringed by individuals or or even by the government itself.”]

[6] Tucker, St. George. Blackstone’s Commentaries: With Notes of Reference to the Constitution and Laws of the Federal Government of the United States and of the Commonwealth of Virginia. 5 vols. Philadelphia, 1803. Reprint. South Hackensack, N.J.: Rothman Reprints, 1969. [“This may be considered as the true palladium of liberty … The right of self defence is the first law of nature: in most governments it has been the study of rulers to confine this right within the narrowest limits possible. Wherever standing armies are kept up, and the right of the people to keep and bear arms is, under any colour or pretext whatsoever, prohibited, liberty, if not already annihilated, is on the brink of destruction. In England, the people have been disarmed, generally, under the specious pretext of preserving the game: a never failing lure to bring over the landed aristocracy to support any measure, under that mask, though calculated for very different purposes.”]

[7] Annals of Congress. The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States. “History of Congress.” 42 vols. Washington, D.C.: Gales & Seaton, 1834–56.

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Watch: Santorum Slams Cruz for ‘Promoting Himself,’ Working for ‘Own Personal Aggrandizement’

GOP presidential hopeful Rick Santorum had strong words for Iowa frontrunner Ted Cruz Tuesday, defending a controversial ad he released accusing the Texas senator of working for his own “personal aggrandizement.”

In his remarks, Santorum further criticized Cruz, grouping him with Trump as a “divisive figure” and suggesting he was someone with “literally no experience in national security.”

Santorum was responding to questions from TheBlaze about his ad entitled “fairytale” which contained clips of Cruz reading the children’s classic “Green Eggs and Ham” from the Senate floor during an hours-long speech against Obamacare.

That speech “is emblematic of someone who is out promoting himself as opposed actually accomplishing something for the conservative cause that is positive,” Santorum said.

Despite the fact that Cruz’s reading of the children’s book was during a filibuster in an effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act, Santorum said it was fair game for criticism because the filibuster strategy ultimately failed. (Read more from “Santorum Slams Cruz for ‘Promoting Himself,’ Working for ‘Own Personal Aggrandizement'” HERE)

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Hillary Clinton Diving Low for the UFO Vote, Claims She’ll Investigate, Solve the Mystery

Yes, in yet another Clinton scam, Hillary claims that she’ll get to the bottom of the questions regarding Area 51 and aliens. This is despite the fact that her serial sex-offender husband already had eight years to investigate the unknown with unlimited access to classified files. And he has no answers.

In an interview in 2014, Bill stated he was unclear on alien life, suggesting that he “wouldn’t be surprised” if it were proven we’d been visited by aliens. Perhaps now, sixteen years later, Hillary is convinced her keener intellectual curiosity and access to higher-tech tools will allow her to get to the bottom of the flying saucer mystery.

NOT. She’s simply following a handful of ufologist votes and the lead of Bill Clinton’s ex-chief of staff John Podesta, who now happens to be Hillary’s campaign chair.

What drives Podesta? He’s always had a fascination with ET, maybe driven by popular culture, maybe by the alien hunters who started hijacking NASA during the first Clinton administration. Podesta’s fixation with UFO’s apparently started years ago.

That begs the question of what other quirks he’ll drive Hillary to pursue if elected. Ouija Boards over national security? Séances over the national debt?

Another indicator that we can NOT survive another eight years of Clinton-crazy.

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DHS Says Sweep of Illegals Has Begun

Moving to belatedly counter another surge of illegal immigrants from Central America, the Department of Homeland Security has launched a series of raids to kick out some of the arrivals, Secretary Jeh Johnson said Monday, defending his move to enraged immigrant rights activists who say the Obama administration is being inhumane.

All told, 121 people were rounded up — a tiny fraction of the more than 110,000 Central American family members that sneaked into the country over the past year and a half, putting strains on the immigration system and on schools and authorities who have to educate and police the newcomers.

Mr. Johnson, who thought he had ended the surge in 2014 only to be stunned by another wave beginning last spring, said in a statement that enforcing the law in this case is the best way to send a message that the U.S. is serious about defending its borders.

He said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement focused the first round of raids on Georgia, Texas and North Carolina. Those they have caught are being prepared for flights back to their home countries.

“I know there are many who loudly condemn our enforcement efforts as far too harsh, while there will be others who say these actions don’t go far enough. I also recognize the reality of the pain that deportations do in fact cause,” he said. “But, we must enforce the law consistent with our priorities. At all times, we endeavor to do this consistent with American values, and basic principles of decency, fairness, and humanity.” (Read more from “DHS Says Sweep of Illegals Has Begun” HERE)

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Declassified Emails Show Hillary Met at State Department With Sidney Blumenthal

During the fallout from her use of a personal email account, Hillary Clinton has attempted to downplay her working relationship with Sidney Blumenthal, but emails released last week show that the two met at her State Department office in 2012.

Blumenthal has proved a thorn in the Democratic presidential candidate’s side. The former journalist, who worked as an aide in the Bill Clinton White House, frequently emailed Clinton intelligence that he had gleaned from undisclosed sources. In many cases, Blumenthal was advancing the business interests of companies for which he was working. In other emails, Blumenthal would email Clinton political gossip — some of which was critical of President Obama and the White House.

In distancing herself from Blumenthal, Clinton has claimed that his emails were “unsolicited.”

“I have many, many old friends, and I always think it’s important, when you get into politics to have friends you had before you were in politics,” Clinton said in May, adding that “I’m going to keep talking to my old friends whoever they are.”

Despite her claim that she did not seek Blumenthal’s advice and insight, numerous emails contained in the Clinton trove show that the then-secretary of state frequently asked her friend for follow-up information and gossip. (Read more from “Declassified Emails Show Hillary Met at State Department With Sidney Blumenthal” HERE)

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Trey Gowdy Trying to Recover From His Unpopular Rubio Endorsement, Says This About Trump

Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.) on Monday pledged that he will support the GOP’s presidential nominee in 2016, including if it’s Donald Trump.

“I’m going to vote for the Republican nominee, period,” the chairman of the House Select Committee on Benghazi said on “The Mike Gallagher Show.”

“I’m going to vote for the Republican nominee because anyone on our side is better than anyone on their side.”

“I am so tired of having [Democrats] control the executive branch that I am going to vote for whoever is the Republican nominee.”

Gowdy’s remarks follow his endorsement last week of Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) for the White House. He said Republicans need to focus on the larger goal in 2016, even if they disagree over who their nominee should be. (Read more from “Trey Gowdy Just Revealed Who He Is Voting for in 2016” HERE)

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Texas Gov Hits Back at Obama’s Executive Gun Plan — ‘Come and Take It’

Last week, President Barack Obama stated that he will proceed with an executive action to take guns out of the hands of American citizens, but at least one state leader is planning to put up a fight.

Following Obama’s announcement, Texas Governor Greg Abbot tweeted a simple message at POTUS: “COME & TAKE IT.”

(Read more from “Texas Gov Hits Back at Obama’s Executive Gun Plan — ‘Come and Take It'” HERE)

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Major Poll Admits How American’s Really Feel About Gun Control

As President Obama announced new executive actions on gun control Monday, a newly released Gallup Poll shows that “guns/gun control” ranked near the bottom of Americans’ most pressing concerns in 2015 . . .

According to Gallup, only one percent of respondents mentioned guns/gun control as a concern for most of the months in 2015, although mentions spiked to 7 percent in October and December following mass shootings in those months that dominated the news. (The overall average for the year was 2 percent.)

Americans were most likely to mention some aspect of the federal government in 2015 when asked to name the country’s top problem.

Sixteen percent of those responding listed Government/Congress/Politicians, and 13 percent chose the “Economy in general.” Eight percent said unemployment is the nation’s top problem, and for the first time since 2007, immigration was among the top four most frequently cited problems, mentioned by 8 percent of respondents . . .

Gallup noted that 2015 marks only the second time since 2001 that no single issue averaged 20% or more for the year. However, 34% of Americans named at least one of several specific economic issues — including the economy, unemployment, the budget deficit, inflation and others. (Read more from “Major Poll Admits How American’s Really Feel About Gun Control” HERE)

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Meet Ben Carson’s New Campaign Chairman – He May Actually Resurrect The Surgeon’s Campaign

Ben Carson’s new campaign chairman, retired Major Gen. Robert F. Dees, says it’s time for the U.S. to reevaluate military policies like letting women serve in combat positions and allowing openly gay troops to serve.

Carson is debuting his “reinvigorated” campaign after a holiday shakeup that included the departure of a handful of top advisers and new leadership, including the recently promoted Dees, who sat down with Carson for an interview Monday with CNN’s Jake Tapper at his Alexandria campaign headquarters.

The retired Army major general has in the past been outspoken about the nation’s military, blasting “social engineering” he contends is degrading the national defense.

Under President Barack Obama, the military has allowed gays and lesbians to openly serve in the military and opened up all combat positions to women — who were previously banned from serving in certain roles.

Dees stood by his criticism Monday, saying “the military is designed to provide for the common defense of our nation.” (Read more from “Meet Ben Carson’s New Campaign Chairman” HERE)

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