Left and Right Agree: Feds Using Brute Force to Destroy Press Freedom in America

In yet another shocking case of the feds using brute, tyrannical power against protesters, law enforcement arrested radio-host Pete Santilli at the Oregon federal refuge several weeks ago and a federal judge just ruled again that he must stay behind bars. Why? Because the journalist is a “real threat” to federal officers.

Many civil libertarians on both sides of the political aisle are disgusted by this latest strong arm tactic with both the conservative Rutherford Institute and now the leftist ACLU of Oregon complaining that federal agencies are increasingly acting without regard to the Constitution.

No matter what you may think of Pete Santilli or his “shock jock” approach to conservative journalism, looking at the criminal complaint against him reflects that before his arrest he was practicing his rights to free speech and assembly in protest against the government. Throughout the federal complaint are Santilli’s quotes, including one where he asked that 100,000 unarmed people come together to protest government actions. Somehow, this was construed by the feds as a criminal act meant to impede their duties rather than a constitutionally-protected gathering of protesters.

Santilli’s past association with the Oath Keepers and the III% Patriots group seems to be a big factor for the U.S. attorneys involved in the case. The feds view such groups as “anti-government” patriot groups, almost on the level of terrorists. Perhaps as a warning to any patriot-protestor, Washington has demonstrated that mere association with the wrong type of groups or saying anything against the government could result in your incarceration.

To some, more disturbing than the Santilli arrest and incarceration themselves are the tactics that were used by the government before the talk show host was even arrested. First, in a clear act of intimidation, he and his girlfriend Deborah Jordan (and co-producer of his radio show) were detained for about an hour in Newtown, Ohio for being suspects on a Terror Watch list. Unsurprisingly, they were not on the list and were released. Some believe that this detention, occurring just a couple of weeks before Santilli’s arrival in Oregon was meant to bully or intimidate him from joining the protest.

Then, on February 9, the rental vehicle driven by Santilli’s girlfriend was seized because it was reported as “stolen.” She called the rental company for more information and discovered that the FBI had made the report that resulted in seizure. The FBI’s explanation? The agency contended the rental car might be used in a crime at the federal refuge. As she had been planning to travel there the next day, this suggests the FBI had been monitoring her activities and that the false report on the car was intended to interfere or harass her.

The Rutherford Institute is raising concerns not just about Santilli’s case but also other protests in which the government has targeted journalists (such as in Ferguson). The conservative legal group contends this reflects a highly disturbing trend of government silencing members of the press. Combine that with what we’ve seen of other anti-press actions of the feds – such as the hacking of journalist Sharyl Attkisson’s computer – and you can’t escape the conclusion that we have a real problem on our hands.

Please contact your elected leaders and pressure them to hold these federal agencies and prosecutors accountable for their unconstitutional approach to press freedom. This is critical: if federal agencies don’t stop their attacks on freedom, you can kiss the American democratic experiment goodbye.

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Early Voting Is Dumb and Unconstitutional

You might have missed it, but voting has already begun. No, I’m not referring to the South Carolina primary; I’m referring to the Texas primary … scheduled for March 1. You heard that right. Voting for the March 1 primary has begun two weeks early, even before the South Carolina primary. Other Super Tuesday primary states, such as Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Arkansas, have early voting as well.

Art. II §1 cl. 4 of the Constitution states: “The Congress may determine the Time of chusing the Electors, and the Day on which they shall give their Votes; which Day shall be the same throughout the United States.”

In 1845, Congress designated that day as “the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.” For some states to allow voting on multiple days prior to the one set by Congress and have more than half their votes cast before Election Day is incontrovertibly unconstitutional.

Common sense also dictates that we should have a single national election day. The notion that, over the course of a volatile campaign, different people would vote at different times is absurd because there are so many events that could alter the public perception about a candidate. It makes sense that everyone should observe the same campaign for the same duration and render their verdict on a uniform set of information when the entire campaign is completed.

That some states hold voting open for an entire month before the general election in November is clearly against the spirit of the Constitution and the foundation of democratic elections. There is already a remedy for those who can’t show up at the polls on the designated Election Day — the absentee ballot. Now we have an entire month of early voting in some states, the turnout of which often influences the outcome of the legitimate Election Day.

Obviously, the Constitution is silent on the question of primaries because that is a party election, not a constitutionally mandated election. Political parties, in cooperation with the states, can do what they please. And clearly, primaries were designed to be staggered over the period of a few months to allow new candidates to slowly gain traction. But the notion that individual voters within the same state would vote at different times definitely violates the same spirit of free democratic elections.

In some ways early voting during the primaries is even worse than during the general election. For the most part, people voting in the same primary share similar values and priorities but are unsure as to which candidate best represents those values. This is why primaries are so volatile. We see candidates rise and tumble within a few days based on one statement, revelation, or debate performance. Who knows which candidates will be seriously competing by March 1? Who knows what will be revealed about any number of candidates. It’s simply absurd to begin voting two weeks ahead of time during a presidential primary with such a large field.

The bottom line is that we already have enough low-information voters casting ballots that will affect the future of the republic. There is no need for a protracted “election month” just for the purposes of boosting turnout. Anyone who is incapable of voting in person on Election Day or casting an absentee ballot shouldn’t participate in the process anyway. (For more from the author of “Early Voting Is Dumb and Unconstitutional” please click HERE)

Watch a recent interview with the author below:

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Honor Justice Scalia by Keeping His Court Seat Empty — for Years, If Necessary

Saturday was a tough day for America. We lost the leading champion of our Constitution, Justice Antonin Scalia, a great-souled scholar who with learning, wit and principle defended the actual words, sentences and paragraphs of our precious founding document. Without men like him, it will surely become so much scrap paper for liberal elites to fill with their latest fetishes. His death affected me like the passing of Richard John Neuhaus and the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI: One by one, the lights are winking out, and the darkness grows ever deeper.

All the more reason to start a fire. For too long, Republican and Democratic senators have played by radically different rules when it came to approving Supreme Court (and other federal court) appointments by the other party’s presidents. Republicans have mostly toed the old civics-class line that every judge should be evaluated by his or her professional qualifications, and not subjected to “litmus tests” on particular issues, since the courts are not meant to be activist. (Jeb Bush is still repeating that talking point.) So in theory, a judge’s personal politics ought not to be at issue.

[Listen to this recent interview with the author:]

And liberals have nodded and smiled, as Republican senators were voting to confirm ideologues like Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor. But when a Republican president appointed principled conservatives such as Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas, Democrats threw that fine pretense aside and acted as if the Court were a crucial power center in the struggle for America, because in fact it does legislate, and aggressively so, on issues of critical importance to life, liberty and happiness.

And the Democrats were right. Not on the kinds of judges they wanted, nor even on what the Court should do, but on what it does, and how we should respond. Ronald Reagan once quipped that in the arms race with the Soviet Union, “only one side is running.” And that is the problem with our courts, the reason that Democratic appointees are absolutely lockstep predictable in how they will vote on crucial social issues, while Republican picks are open questions.

Some of the Republican appointees, such as the late Justice Scalia, and Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas, hew closely to Constitutional principles. But George W. Bush appointee John Roberts and especially Reagan appointee Anthony Kennedy are unreliable, subject some observers say to the press of public opinion, and even political pressure. And don’t forget President George H. Bush’s now infamous David Souter appointment. Souter was a somewhat unknown quantity at the time and sailed through the confirmation process, but he became a reliably liberal vote during his tenure on the high court, and even waited out George W. Bush’s eight years in the White House in order to retire when Bush’s Democratic successor had moved into the Oval Office, thus allowing President Obama to appoint Souter’s successor, the liberal Sonya Sotomayor.

As Ted Cruz rightly observed in the first GOP debate, the reason for this pattern of Republican presidents appointing unreliable candidates for the high court is that those justices were chosen to sail through a Senate that might not confirm conservatives, by White Houses that weren’t willing to fight.

Can you imagine the outrage that would flame across America among the left if a Clinton or Obama appointee started voting with Justice Thomas? Democratic donors and activists would be on the warpath. There would be agonized “listening sessions” at Harvard and Oberlin College, and future judges would be vetted by retired East German Stasi agents. But when GOP appointees betray the voters who elected the presidents in question, and collude in the use of the Constitution to impose leftist agendas that Americans rejected at the voting booth — from legal abortion to same sex “marriage” and beyond — we mostly shrug. We are used to it. Our party’s elites are unreliable, and this is the price we pay.

This year’s primary season is showing those party elites the price of those and other betrayals. The voters don’t trust the leaders of the party or even the conservative movement, and are toying with the idea of giving the nomination to an untested, crass, unprincipled demagogue, by way of teaching the GOP a lesson. Such populism could be defined as “the dumb thing you do when elites have foreclosed all the smart options.”

But we do have smart options. There is more than one potential GOP nominee who has credibly pledged to appoint solid, pro-life conservatives to our courts. The question is whether they’d have the spine to do it, to face the firestorm of elite and media abuse that would accompany such an appointment, and be prepared to stand their ground. This is what a conservative president would need to do to overcome the fanatical opposition that a real conservative nominee would face in the Senate:

1. Choose a solid, Constitutional conservative with a long track record.

2. Make it clear that he will put all his political muscle behind winning his confirmation, and will punish any senator who opposes him.

3. Broadcast the fact that if this nominee is rejected, the next one will be as conservative or more conservative, as will the next one after that — because that president would rather leave a vacant seat on the court for the rest of his term in office than be responsible for turning over our fragile, complex Constitutional order to political perversion.

There are two pro-life senators among the presidential candidates. Each of them could show his mettle by leading the fight right now to stop the Senate from even considering any appointee by Barack Obama to fill Justice Scalia’s seat on the court. Ideally, senators Rubio and Cruz should hold a joint press conference to this effect this very week, putting aside their differences to form a common front in defense of the Constitution, religious liberty and unborn life. They should gather as many of their colleagues as they can in such an effort, with a pledge to block by any and every legal means any Obama appointment.

But they should go further. As long as Republicans control the Senate, there is no excuse for any pro-choice, anti-gun rights, anti-marriage justices to be confirmed to our highest court. If, God forbid, Bernie Sanders or Hillary Clinton is elected, they should face a Republican Senate — or even a GOP minority — that will obstruct their every judicial appointment, even if it means leaving key seats on national benches empty, for years at a time. As justices retire or die, the court will simply grow smaller. Big deal. America will muddle through. This is the kind of implacable determination that defeated the solidly conservative Justice Bork and got us the muddled Anthony Kennedy — and Casey v. Planned Parenthood and Obergefell. It is time for that worm to turn.

Conservatives must drop the facade of high-minded bipartisanship, which only ever cuts to the left. The courts have staggering power to change our lives, and damage our country. They can kill our nation’s unborn babies, seize our guns and punish our churches. If GOP senators aren’t willing to fight long, hard and relentlessly to stop that from happening, we should find other senators who can, back them in the next primary election, and cripple the re-election of squishy moderate turncoats. A presidential candidate who appreciates all this will get my vote. And I think he’ll earn yours.

In the meantime, of Justice Scalia, I feel sure that he is enjoying his reward, and I hope that the Catholic Church recognizes him soon. As they said of John Paul II, santo subito! Antonin Scalia, pray for us. (For more from the author of “Honor Justice Scalia by Keeping His Court Seat Empty — for Years, If Necessary” please click HERE)

Watch a recent interview with the author below:

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

Same-Sex Marriage Is Constitutionally Illegitimate, the Result of an Anti-Democratic Litigation Campaign

Legal marriage is a public institution, created by law to promote public policy and to further social interests including especially the well-being of members of society. – particularly of children, mothers and families. Marriage has great significance for many important private interests, as well, such as for religion, for family ties, family history, and especially for personal identity.

What is deemed a marriage for purposes of the law may differ from what is deemed marriage for other purposes, such as for a specific academic discipline (such as sociology or ancient history, for example), or for a particular religious faith, private association, ethnic community, or for a specific set of cultural elites, etc. Just because a union is or is not deemed a legal marriage, this does not prevent any social subgroups from considering it a marriage (or a non-marriage) for their own (extra-legal) purposes.

The battle of what marriage means in the law can be seen from one important perspective as a battle among special interest groups each seeking to have their preferred understanding of marriage endorsed by the law and implemented in the law. Behind the marriage debate are political-economic interests.

Obsolescence is relevant. That is, if a huge gap opens up between the law and the moral order of society, one or the other must change or law risks becoming irrelevant. This “gap” also has profound significance for the legitimacy of the law. The very legitimacy of the law and even possibly the legitimacy of the legal system and its institutions (e.g., the courts, the legislature, the government) will be undermined if the law becomes obsolete. Thus, if legal marriage deviates profoundly from social understanding of marriage, both the institution of marriage and society in general are harmed. (Read more from “Same-Sex Marriage Is Constitutionally Illegitimate, the Result of an Anti-Democratic Litigation Campaign” HERE)

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Donald Trump the Candidate: Fact-Checking Supporter and Media Misinformation [+videos]

Let me make my position on Donald Trump perfectly clear (now stick with me, Trump supporters, because you may appreciate at least two of the bullet points!): I think he’s a demagogue who’ll say and do anything to get himself elected. I think he’s tapped into a very real anger in America, but it’s an anger he’s exploiting, not one he truly understands. I think he flip-flops on his positions more often then he changes wives. I think he has precisely zero core values. And I think he’s a big government guy, not a conservative. Why? Because he cannot articulate what conservatism is, which is an easy pop-quiz for those of us who truly are. So, with that said, I’ll get to the point of this article: Some Trump supporters, and especially the media, have engaged in misinformation about Donald Trump the Candidate. Here are [some] of the most noteworthy:

HEALTHCARE

Last week Trump blamed Ted Cruz for saddling America with ObamaCare. Ted. Cruz. The man who stood willing to shut down the federal government to rid us of that albatross. I think Trump would like us all to forget his support for Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi, two of the nation’s most destructive politicians, who are directly responsible for shoving that turkey down our throats. So no, Donald, you are far more responsible for the ObamaCare monstrosity than just about any of the other candidates.

Trump supporters argue that Trump is not for socialized medicine. In his own words, as recently as during last Saturday’s GOP Debate: . . .

Trump likes to tout his support for eminent domain. And yes, it has been used for the greater good of the nation with the construction of railroads, bridges, and highways, for example. But that’s not how Trump tried to employ it on at least one occasion: He attempted to force an elderly woman to sell her home, so that he could build a parking structure on her land. And at last week’s GOP debate, Jeb! finally called him on it:

(Read more from “Donald Trump the Candidate: Fact-Checking Supporter and Media Misinformation” HERE)

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Trump’s Not Going Away – so Now What Do Conservatives Do?

I am watching the presidential race this year with horrified fascination. And a glimmer of hope — at the failure of the GOP donor class to line up the voters behind its preferences. Let me be up front with you: I think we need an anti-establishment candidate, and I am neither thrilled nor panicked by the thought of Trump in the White House.

Understand, I believe that Trump could win a general election against either Bernie Sanders or Hillary Clinton, and become a thoroughly mediocre, unprincipled president: one who grows the government, enriches his friends and punishes his enemies — just like Richard Nixon, whose conservative talk was belied by his statist, cynical policies. Trump also would probably appoint unreliable people to the U.S. Supreme Court, since his pro-life promise isn’t worth the pre-nup it’s printed on, and he even said as recently as late August that his sister Maryanne Trump Barry — a U.S. circuit court judge who has advocated aggressively for late-term partial birth abortions — would make a “phenomenal” Supreme Court Justice, “one of the best.”

However, I have far less confidence than some that Rubio, Bush or Kasich would wage a tough fight in the Senate to get real conservatives confirmed. That’s not part of the establishment playbook, as Ted Cruz pointed out in the first GOP debate.

And I do agree with Trump, and with the much more principled, disciplined, and civic-minded Cruz, that the Republican establishment has run the party into a quagmire. The three “respectable” candidates still with a chance at the nomination are hard to distinguish from Bernie Sanders on the most critical issue facing voters: the irreversible transformation of America via mass, low-skill immigration.

Mark Kirkorian of National Review is right that lax immigration policies should be a deal-killing litmus test for any conservative candidate. If a president supports bad policies on eminent domain, or imposes stupid tariffs that raise the price of Androids, or is “too soft” on Putin’s Russia, such policies can be reversed, if not by him then by his successor.

But allowing in many thousands of orthodox Sunni Muslims, and millions of Latin Americans with no experience of honest democracy or the free market, and a cultural fondness for free-spending big government … that can’t be easily reversed. That changes the country, in a more fundamental way even than Barack Obama’s policies.

I once burned many bridges to nowhere in 2011 by writing that “Amnesty Equals Abortion,” since newly amnestied voters were very likely to follow the political preferences of their civic leaders, cousins and “community organizers” by voting for pro-abortion Democrats — whatever their personal opinions about abortion. So if you supported amnesty, for whatever high-minded abstract reasons, you were also supporting legal abortion and a long list of other left-wing causes in cold, political fact. I stand by that assessment.

You would also be supporting big government. We have a higher percentage of foreign-born residents in our country than we have since the 1890s. What we don’t have that we did have back then is large, empty states looking for homesteaders, exploding industries hungry for unskilled workers and a brashly self-confident culture that demands they assimilate. We do have a welfare state ready and eager to turn migrants into clients. As late as the 1920s, up to one-third of immigrants from places like Southern Italy found the sink-or-swim, free market system in America too uncongenial, and went back home.

That will not happen now, in an America with HUD housing, food stamps and affirmative action programs that privilege amnestied illegals over white male Gulf War veterans. A welfare check in America will be more attractive than a grunt job in Guatemala or Syria, so under the current system a lot of those folks aren’t going back. Ever. Do you want 5 or 10 percent of the electorate to favor sharia, while another 20 percent are enamored of Latin American socialism? If so, then support policies and candidates who have long supported loose immigration policy and even amnesty. There are plenty of options, from both of our major parties. Indeed, Donald Trump himself supports a “touchback” amnesty that rewards illegal immigrants and lets them cut the line to gain citizenship.

Meanwhile, I hope the field stays crowded with establishment candidates, splitting the establishment vote long enough to give voters time to weigh and compare anti-establishment Donald Trump to anti-establishment Ted Cruz, and consider which one is really in accord with timeless, truthful conservative principles, which one adheres to our Constitution and is sincerely public-spirited.

And while the commentariat watch and wait, in a year of insurgent politics, it is probably best not to dismiss as rubes, bigots or fools the large plurality of voters, in both parties, who are rejecting the status quo. In 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, and 2012, the Republican party nominated “safe” establishment choices. The GOP lost all but two of those races — and its leaders learned from that experience … absolutely nothing.

This year, thanks to social media and freer political speech (in the wake of Citizens United), the peasants have found their pitchforks. Republicans had better stop posting memes from Idiocracy and laughing off Trump’s voters, whose anger is real and legitimate, if tragically misdirected. We need to understand and answer it, respectfully and responsibly. (For more from the author of “Trump’s Not Going Away – so Now What Do Conservatives Do?” please click HERE)

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Why Gun Control Is a Loser for the Democrats

There is nothing so comforting as a closely held prejudice, even when it repeatedly harms you. The white-hot passion of Democratic politicians to restrict and even strip Americans of their constitutionally guaranteed right to buy, own, keep, shoot and carry firearms continues as a monument to self-abuse.

Simply put, the gun control issue is a loser. It doesn’t matter that the paid consultants, the lobbyists from the gun-prohibition industry, or the East Coast media all assure candidates that it’s now safe to come out of hiding and proclaim their open hatred of the very concept of self-defense and protecting your family. The history of Democrats who push to rip away the rights of millions of Americans constitutes a list of “whatever happened to” candidates. From dozens of Democrats who lost their seats in Congress because of their gun-ban vote in 1994 to Al Gore’s anti-rights position, which has been credited with costing him the presidency, the party of “trust the government for your personal safety” keeps having to relearn the lesson. In point of fact, their own party put out a paper some years ago warning candidates to not talk about gun control, calling it a loser issue . . .

Now Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders fight to establish who is the strongest anti-Constitution candidate. It’s a clear indication neither they nor their advisers actually talk to real people outside the Washington cocktail circuit.

For more than 20 years I’ve hosted a national radio talk show about guns, and through that I’ve talked with thousands of people across the country — people who have owned guns all their lives, people who only recently bought a gun, and people who have never owned a gun but now want to. Typically, I’ll ask why they are thinking of buying their first gun, and the answer always is that they want to protect themselves and their families. They have looked at the news, studied the events, watched the videos of attacks on the streets, and they have concluded that no one else will be on the scene to protect them. Oh, and fully a third of first-time handgun buyers these days are women, so put aside that mental image of a demographic which can be ignored. (Read more from “Why Gun Control Is a Loser for the Democrats” HERE)

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Dr. Alveda King: Any True Conservatives Left?

As the presidential primaries are under way, Dr. Alveda King is concerned that “conservative” voters are more caught up with personalities than they are in supporting the U.S. Constitution based on godly principles.

King asserts voters are less concerned about candidates’ stances on issues than they are about appearances.

“We are dealing with a reality show mentality,” King told OneNewsNow. “Too many people are saying ‘I like,’ rather than ‘I think;’ thus voting with emotions rather than brains.”

When asked what she believes is the most important topic to be addressed at the conservative presidential debates, the former Representative of the Georgia State House categorically replied.

“[It’s] the failure to uphold the Constitution,” King stressed to OneNewsnow. (Read more from “Dr. Alveda King: Any True Conservatives Left?” HERE)

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Cruz Demonstrates Why Senators Hate Him: A Bad Thing?

The biggest attack on Ted Cruz lodged by his detractors is that he is loathed inside Washington, especially in the Senate. One often hears this refrain from mainstream media: We understand you are looking for an anti-establishment figure, but this man is absolutely detested by everyone. There must be something legitimate to this universal hatred for Cruz.

In reality there is no enigma as to why Cruz is so hated. There is a quintessential example from yesterday that perfectly demonstrates why he is held in such low esteem by his colleagues. Judge for yourself whether this is a good thing or a bad thing.

Despite being embroiled in the heat of the most important weeks of this presidential campaign, Cruz sent word to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell that he was placing a hold on all State Department nominees until Obama comes clean on the Iran deal. Consequently, McConnell was obliged to block the unanimous consent request from Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) to confirm Obama’s choices for ambassadorships to Norway and Sweden. Cruz has placed a blockade on all State Department nominees and has been enforcing it throughout the past few months.

Now ask yourself this question: What do you think Sen. Klobuchar and her colleagues think of Ted Cruz?

We all know that every Republican runs as an intrepid conservative:

“I’m pro-life.”

“I’m for traditional marriage.”

“We need to secure the border.”

“Government is too large.”

“Isn’t the Iran deal terrible?”

These are the platitudes you will hear from every Republican. But with a belligerent Democrat Party that will fight to the death in defense of their positions on those issues, what good is it to “align” with the conservative side if you will not do what it takes to advance the cause?

Think of it this way: Is it possible for an intellectually conservative member to be liked by fellow senators? Of course. As long as he stays in the corner and keeps his conservatism to himself. He can even vote his conscience as long as it doesn’t alter the outcome. They might even allow him to hold some policy briefings and draft some white papers about reform conservatism. That is where the conservatism of most elected conservatives ends; but it’s where Ted Cruz’s begins. Cruz understood from day one that as a senator you are not just a vote but a voice for a cause and can use legitimate tools to leverage against harmful policies.

In the case of the Iran deal, Republicans passed the Corker-Cardin bill signing off on it and then declined to defund it in the budget bill. The only tool left in the Article I arsenal of Congress is to hold up confirmation of executive and judicial nominees. Unfortunately, the other senators refused to join Cruz in enforcing the blockade and extracting concessions from Obama after he violated the conditions of his own deal. And that’s the way they like it. Unlike Cruz, they want to be respected, smart, serious, and productive conservatives. “Productive” in the sense that their principles are never actually converted into action — at least not enough to derail liberal policies in a meaningful way.

A president doesn’t vote at all. A president is only a voice for a cause. Much like a senator has tools in his arsenal to protect the Constitution and play legislative hardball against the powers that be, a president can use his Article II leverage to defend the Constitution as well. A president’s personal views on the issues are meaningless if he is unwilling to play hardball using all legal channels to enact and defend his agenda.

There are those in the conservative intelligentsia who say they personally like Ted Cruz but desire a nominee who will push conservatism in a way that does not elicit such hatred from others in Washington. These people need to learn there is no such thing as lukewarm hell. Modern-day Democrats are not willing to compromise on anything. As such, the only way to move forward and restore our republic is with brute force, harnessing the power of the outside against the inside, not working with the insiders who got us into this mess in the first place.

Sadly, we’ve reached a point where congeniality works inversely with effectiveness. That is not the fault of Ted Cruz. It’s the fault of years of complacency from other conservatives who have legitimized anti-constitutional policies of the Democrat Party and emboldened them to take nothing less than a full loaf of bread. (For more from the author of “Cruz Demonstrates Why Senators Hate Him: A Bad Thing?” please click HERE)

Watch a recent interview with the author below:

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This Year’s Super Bowl: A Pro-Life Tipping Point?

It is rare for the wise and powerful to admit that they are ignorant. But that is what the majority of Supreme Court justices did in Roe v. Wade, claiming that science offered no answer to the fundamental question of when human life began. Citing debates among biologists and physicians, the justices said that there had never been a consensus about the moral and legal status of unborn children. So the justices stepped in to fill this alleged gap with an invention of its own: a “right of privacy” spun from subtle inferences they found between the lines of the actual words in the Constitution.

From that legal fiction, they and subsequent majorities wove the seamless shroud of abortion on demand, in 50 states for nine months of pregnancy, and in practice, for any reason at all — among the laxest, most ethically vacuous abortion laws in the world, outside of Communist China.

But the veil of ignorance has been lifted. Forty years of advancing medical technology have answered the factual question, if it ever really existed: A human being is genetically distinct and explosively alive from the moment of conception. Its DNA is human, and it reproduces independently of its mother, upon whom it relies only for nutrients and protection. It meets every test that scientists regularly use for determining whether something is a) alive and b) human.

We can watch tiny unborn children move around and adjust themselves in the womb to get more comfortable. We know that they feel pain. Doctors can take them on as patients and perform subtle surgeries inside the womb. We have witnessed on ultrasounds something our ancestors never could have: unborn twins engaged in horseplay. And now thanks to Doritos, we have seen that unborn boys crave some of their dads’ tortilla chips.

I can’t tell you how delighted I was to see, in the middle of the Super Bowl, a snack-chip company buy one of the most expensive ad slots available on television to show us a goofy, glorious spectacle like this one:

Of course, abortion lobbyists reacted with outrage:

The misanthropes at NARAL were outraged for a reason. Doritos was calling them on the lie that butters their bread. How dare a maker of tortilla chips engage in “humanizing” human fetuses, which we all know are really… what, exactly? Clumps of cells? Parasites? Tadpoles?

Too many couples have taken those grainy ultrasounds and pasted them on their fridges and Facebook profiles for such crude lies to last much longer. But this year’s Super Bowl was the gift that kept on giving, because the NFL itself offered us another commercial with a clear pro-life message. This one wasn’t funny, but genuinely uplifting:

The message of this ad was straightforward and delightful: loving couples who watch their teams win the Superbowl take to bed and celebrate, and the result is … human life. These human lives, who are singing now in front of us on the television. And the invitation is clear, in the ad that ends with the slogan “Football Is Family”: Go ye therefore and do likewise.

Of course not everyone was inspired. Here’s a sampling of the blowback from people who don’t necessarily like being reminded where babies come from:

What these ads and other recent events tell me is that we’re winning. In fact, if we keep pushing forward, we are about to win. In the most recent Republican debate, every single candidate on stage was someone who takes a pro-life stance—from the insurgent voice of the GOP base, Ted Cruz, to the angry populist Donald Trump. In fact, the candidate whom the party establishment regards as most electable, Marco Rubio. took a brave and principled stand favoring protection for every unborn child, even those fathered in the appalling crime of rape — insisting that he would rather lose an election than be wrong about human life.

Keep in mind this is the same party which before Ronald Reagan was loudly neutral about abortion — an issue which party mandarins claimed put Reagan outside the American mainstream.

Where’s your mainstream flowing now? Popular music stars like Justin Bieber are outspokenly pro-life. On the hit show The Blacklist, the hard-bitten female FBI agent is agonizing over a pregnancy — over whether to raise the child or put it up for adoption. Pop films depicting the abortion issue honestly keep getting made and making money, from Bella to Knocked Up to Juno. People are plainly tired of pretending not to know the plainest facts of human life: We are woven inside our mothers, and alive from the beginning. Whether or not we were conceived after the Super Bowl, or craved our dad’s Doritos, we were us, real human beings, not protoplasm or euphemisms (such as the “products of conception”).

Even the tragic facts of the Planned Parenthood videos are leaking through the media’s shoddy filters: Before Congress and on TV, defenders of that organization are being forced to insist that their traffic in eyes and lungs and livers was technically legal. Just think how many Americans are hearing about that on the news and thinking: “Eyes, lungs, and livers? I thought they were blobs of tissue….” Those facts, which the Supreme Court didn’t want to hear and NARAL doesn’t want you to learn, will take on a life of their own. They’ll divide, and reproduce, and sooner than we expect they will emerge with an ear-splitting cry.

It’s the cry of life, for life, and no one will be able to silence it. (For more from the author of “This Year’s Super Bowl: A Pro-Life Tipping Point?” please click HERE)

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