The Establishment’s Lies Are Catching Up

John BoehnerThey had it all. The GOP party bosses appeared to be winning every legislative and electoral battle with conservatives. After beating back almost every primary challenge in 2014 and after passing one liberal bill after another with the support of Democrats, the elite technocrats and cronies within the party were high-fiving and slapping each other’s backs over their successfully crushing of the tea party.

Except – they never won anything. It was all an illusion. And in fact, their temporary victories set the stage for an irrevocable defeat in the long-run.

Last cycle, in my previous job, I was heavily involved in recruiting primary candidates to run against the phony Republican political class. The most striking lesson throughout the election season was that not a single establishment Republican would run on the veracity of their views – the ones they espouse and pursue in Washington. They co-opted all of our talking points on the core issues while often accusing the conservative candidates of being ideologically impure. In addition, they used their superior money, resources, and talent to bury the upstart candidates – most of whom had only rudimentary campaign resources and novice staff – before the candidates could even define themselves.

The bravado from the GOP establishment was only emboldened by the smashing victory over the Democrats in the general election.

At the time, verses from Psalms (10: 5-6, 10) came to mind:

His ways prosper at all times; Your judgments are far removed from him. All his adversaries-he blows at them. He says to himself, “I will not fall; for all generations I will not be in adversity.” He crouches, he bows down, and an army of broken people shall fall by his signals.

Blinded by their pomposity and a false sense of security, the oligarchs in the Washington Cartel – as Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) refers to them – overlooked two points:

1) They didn’t win anything. They actually won on a mandate to pursue the priorities of the very enemies they thought they vanquished – conservative Middle America. They wanted possession of the ball, and now they had it. But the voters did not plan for them to march the ball into the K Street or Obama’s end zone; they elected these politicians as one last opportunity to put them first. There were no more excuses and this was their last chance.

2) They forgot about Obama. They overlooked the fact that Obama is not your run-of-the-mill Democrat president who would fade away in his final two years after suffering a humiliating defeat in the midterm elections. The GOP elites projected their own impassivity to Obama’s radical transformation on Middle America voters as well, wagering that they won’t care about Obama’s dastardly deeds enough to demand action.

The establishment had planned to “clear the decks” of any contentious issue by giving Democrats whatever they desired, freeing them to focus on trivial items and payback for their donors. They would then ride a controversy-free year into the presidential election with Jeb Bush (or someone similar), raise a ton of money from day one, and crush the conservative base in the primary. After all, this formula had always worked auspiciously in their favor for the past few election cycles.

However, just two weeks after the November elections, Obama announced the nullification of all immigration laws and the suspension of enforcement of our borders and sovereignty. The GOP treated it like another day in the political playground and failed to see that this was a revolutionary act in the eyes of Middle America. And as 2015 came upon us, it was one issue after another and one broken promise after another. Between the fallout from amnesty and the release of criminal aliens, ObamaTrade, the Planned Parenthood videos, the fomenting of insurrection and dismantling of law enforcement, allying with Iran, the courts remaking the Constitution and redefining marriage while preserving Obamacare – there was a bursting sense of disquiet among the people. It became painfully clear that the GOP had no plans to lift a finger to stop Obama and his allies on a single important issue, and that he had a free lane to remake the country in his final months.

All it took was a man with money, pomp, and fame to burst onto the scene and strike the match on the lighter fluid that had long been marinating in the electoral wood pile. Trump’s official stances on a lot of critical issues are being overlooked because, for the most part, this is not even about Donald Trump. This is about a party that had long been disenfranchised but lacked any national vehicle through which to express its despair. And with a Democrat Party controlled by a Hillary Clinton/Bernie Sanders/Martin O’Malley freak show, many Middle America Democrats and Independents feel the same way.

The tables have been turned. It is now the Washington Cartel that is completely helpless and hopeless in controlling its destiny. Their candidates are polling below Martin O’Malley’s numbers in the Democrat primary, even though they are flush with cash, consultants, and pollsters. All because they “won” the inside game, but lost the people – most likely, for good.

It’s very likely Donald Trump could still gradually flame out over time, but that won’t change the equation because it was never about Trump. Ted Cruz has quietly positioned himself to win the hearts and minds of the people, and for once, he is beating the establishment in their own money game. Ben Carson is polling well just on his outsiders appeal alone. It’s not that Trump is sucking out all of the oxygen in the room; it’s that the establishment has run out of any oxygen to survive in this environment, irrespective of who else is in the room. Every candidate could drop out tomorrow leaving Bush as the de facto nominee and he still will still lack support outside of a few zip codes.

They forgot the old adage, “you can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time.” (Re-posted with permission from the author, “The Establishment’s Lies Are Catching Up” originally appeared HERE)

Watch a recent interview with the author below:

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

Planned Parenthood and the Gift of Death

Adam-and-Eve-Banished-from-Garden-of-Eden_compressed_croppedYesterday I was privileged to attend a summit of the Watchmen, a national group of civic-minded pastors organized by that warrior for truth Tony Perkins. Then this morning I turned on my computer to find a fresh glimpse into hell — in the form of a new video exposing the sale of baby human organs for profit in America. So I faced both options from Moses’ offer to the Hebrews: “I set before you this day a blessing and a curse.” (Deut. 11:26)

As Al Perrotta laid out in his news report on the Watchmen meeting, there were many powerful voices proclaiming the urgency of the hour. One speaker after another rose to warn the assembled church leaders of just how thin the margin now is for religious freedom in America, to point out how cruel our nation is becoming, with the crass trade in human organs from aborted children now common knowlege — and shrugged off by our president and the whole Democratic party. The Watchmen spoke of faith grown lukewarm, of pastors now weary of swimming against the culture, who shrug and fall silent as their flocks wander off to the slaughter. Others spoke of the hope for revival, of the power of God to answer our prayers with a Great Awakening that could wash over America, smashing its structures of sin into damp piles of splinters.

But for some reason one speaker touched me more than the others, a messenger from the distant Christian past — indeed from our pre-history, from the covenant with Israel. Rabbi Jonathan Cahn addressed the Watchmen via recorded video message. Perhaps his speech had extra force because of his own people’s history, which was so intertwined with promises from God that were conditioned on its faithfulness — promises which, when flouted, transformed themselves into ferocious temporal punishments. Just as America has seemed in so many ways, for two long centuries, uniquely blessed, it’s impossible not to wonder what will become of us should those blessings be withdrawn. We have seen some ominous hints.

As Rabbi Cahn explained, we have allowed ourselves to drift far from the truths that the West once knew about human nature, truths that we learned from the Jews. Indeed, we have embarked on a strange and perilous project: to transform ourselves into entirely new creatures, not bound by the rules of mortal, biological life or by the God who created us. We have no gender but what we choose, no morals but those we embrace, no debt that we owe to the future in repayment for all the gifts we got from the past. Our “choices” are sacrosanct and beyond any criticism. But life is cheap. It can be measured out in tiny livers and severed limbs, and sold piecemeal by Planned Parenthood to labs such as StemExpress.

The Sin of Adam

We have in our own way re-enacted the sin of Adam, whose desire to “be like God” cast away the blessings that came with creation. We often forget the second part of that story, a section which always puzzled me until I read the way C.S. Lewis explained it. Remember that there were two trees in Eden: The Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, and beside it the Tree of Life. Once Adam and Eve had sinned, they were expelled from the Garden immediately, lest they eat of the Tree of Life.

What would have happened if they had managed to munch on those golden apples? As Lewis writes, when God prevented that, He was protecting us from ourselves. Unlike the demons, we die. We have what Tolkien called in The Lord of the Rings the “gift” of death. We have at least that limit to the evil that we can do, and a merciful, ugly reminder of our limitations and neediness. A race of fallen men become immortal would be a generation of monsters, growing not older or wiser, but simply more sophisticated and wicked. And that seems to be our goal now, as one nation after another gives up on having children, while scientists work furiously in search of immortality formulas. Our collective goal seems to be clear: A world full of ageless, sterile consumers who only mix their chromosomes when they need a fresh batch of baby organs for transplant.

It is natural for us to try to mitigate the sufferings in this life, and to fight off disease and death. Unlike the animals, we feel somewhere deep within that we were not made for the grave. We are not like salmon who spawn, then instantly lie down and die. Instead, we cling to life, and to hope for eternal life — and see in our children not copies of ourselves, or extensions of our egos, but fresh new creations, each of them just like us in one essential way: They too are made for eternity. We are sad that we cannot remain in this place, so we mourn for ourselves, even as we celebrate the growth and life of those whom we have brought up to replace us. That is why we cry at weddings.

This truth came home forcefully on the day that I sat, in the hospital where I was born, to watch my father die. He looked at me, then looked up, then looked no more. As I worked through my grief, and wandered my neighborhood bleary-eyed, I saw a young mother pushing a carriage that held a squirming, giggling infant. And the thought was given to me: No death, no babies. Men like my father (and someday, like me) must step aside to make room for the new folks, as others had made room for us. And God seeks to gather us all to Himself, each at our own proper moment.

At least, this is how things are meant to work, when we are humble enough to accept our place in creation, and treasure some hope for redemption.

What happens when we push ourselves out of place, when we throw back in our ancestors’ teeth all the lessons they passed on to us, including the truths of natural reason, and the flashes of divine insight that we used to call Revelation?

We become unhinged. Our halves cease to function in harmony. We cannot make sense of our compound nature as amalgams of body and spirit. Our desires grow ever more limitless and disconnected from our needs, while the bodies that contain us begin to feel like prisons, battered dinghies that gradually take on water, which someday will sink us to drown in bottomless darkness. We feel more than ever the urge to be as gods, but reject the knowledge that tells us we are anything more than animals — brainy beasts made to breed, then die, with no hope of eternity. That enrages us. It mocks us. It’s the skull poking out through the skin. So we look for scapegoats, for victims.

Who better than the little ones who are shoving forth to replace us? Sure, we might accept one or two, if they happen to come exactly when we want them, and match our specifications. But those who arrive unexpectedly, or whose genes prove them “inferior,” will find no welcome here. Some 54 million so far have we mowed down. We have forgotten that we are guests on this earth, whom others have suffered to raise from birth, sojourners en route to someplace utterly different. Instead we act like squatters, who have seized a home from its owner and claimed it as our own.

The rage of the pro-choice protester is nothing more than this: the ferocity of a thief defending his pile of stolen goods. It’s the terrified fury that Macbeth felt as he guarded his stolen crown.

And our Lady Macbeth, Planned Parenthood, counts her jewels with bloody hands. (Re-posted with permission, “Planned Parenthood and the Gift of Death” originally appeared HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

Our Military Is Not a Social Experiment

ObamaAtThePentagonOne of the biggest casualties of this presidency – one that requires more immediate attention – is the deterioration of our military and the plummeting morale of our service members. Whether it’s the endless social experimentation, the politicized generals, the lack of a defined mission, the tepid rules of engagement, the war on religious liberty in the service, or the depleting resources, there are likely a number of factors behind the demoralizing of our troops.

In what can only be described as pouring lighter fluid on the problem, Obama’s Pentagon is announcing the entry of transgendered soldiers into the military beginning next May. This sounds like a great panacea to a dejected military.

Last year, the Military Times published a riveting report, “A Force Adrift,” in which they surveyed several thousand soldiers, revealing a precipitous drop in morale just from 2009. Here are some key findings:

When Obama came into office in 2009, over 90% of those surveyed rated their overall quality of life as good or excellent. In 2014, that number plunged to 56%.

In 2009, 53% agreed that the “senior military leadership” had the best interests of the soldiers at heart. In 2014, just 27% had that confidence in their leadership.

The number of enlisted soldiers who rated their officers as excellent or good dropped from 78% to 49%.

Clearly, the military has been under stress with the mounting casualties and endless tepid war efforts of the past decade, and that is not all Obama’s fault. But for the most part, the morale held together during the Bush presidency. That has all come unglued during the Obama-era social experimentations. It’s hard to imagine anyone with a lick of common sense agreeing that female commandoes and transgendered individuals in close quarters in the barracks is what the doctor ordered.

Yesterday, USA Today obtained a memo from the Defense Department stating their intention to enact a pilot program integrating transgendered troops into the military. They absurdly estimate there are as many as 12,000 transgendered individuals in the military and plan to offer them time off for hormone therapy.

Take that, Iran and ISIS! We’ll send the new transgendered brigade after you…as soon as we get them squared away with hormone therapy.

One need not be a military expert to understand the nightmare that will ensue in terms of logistics in barracks, showers, and in close quarters. The endless gratuitous distraction of this nonsense, which defies any semblance of sanity or common sense, will invariably ensnare commanding officers in impossible situations, exposing them to accusations of discrimination and immediate threats to their religious liberty.

And most importantly, is this what we need during a time of existential threat from Islamic terror?

It’s time for the presidential candidates to step up to the plate and use their bully pulpit to restore hope to the military and speak out against their abuse at the hands of this decedent administration. They need to boldly address these issues and put forth a specific plan to restore the morale, integrity, and core mission of the military.

Concurrently, it’s time for congressional Republicans, including so-called conservatives, to finally show a willingness to combat Obama’s social engineering after six years of giving him a complete pass. Next month, the House and Senate conferees will complete their work on the FY 2016 NDAA (National Defense Authorization Act), which authorizes all military programs.

What better vehicle than the NDAA, which is viewed as a must-pass bill, to restore a sense of sanity in the military?

At a minimum, Republicans should demand the following:

A provision requiring that any reversal of the ban on transgendered persons in the military must be done with the consent and approval of Congress

A prohibition on lowering any standards for women in training and testing in order to serve in direct ground combat positions

Attach a provision allowing base commanders to grant enlisted soldiers permission to carry guns on military bases

Attach a provision banning the dismissal of any service-member for expressing his or her religious beliefs

Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Rep. Mac Thornberry (R-TX) are the GOP point men on the conference committee. [The other conferees include: J. Randy Forbes of Virginia, Jeff Miller of Florida, Joe Wilson of South Carolina, Frank A. LoBiondo of New Jersey, Rob Bishop of Utah, Michael R. Turner of Ohio, John Kline of Minnesota, Mike D. Rogers of Alabama, Bill Shuster of Pennsylvania, K. Michael Conaway of Texas, Doug Lamborn of Colorado, Rob Wittman of Virginia, Duncan Hunter of California, Vicky Hartzler of Missouri, Joe Heck of Nevada, Brad Wenstrup of Ohio and Elise Stefanik of New York.]

It is their responsibility to exercise oversight over Obama’s inane policies and anti-religious bigotry within the military. Unfortunately, if they sign off on a conference report for the NDAA without any of these reforms, there is no way for rank-and-file members to propose amendments because a conference bill requires an up-or-down vote.

Understandably, many members are leery about voting against a defense authorization bill. But they must remember, rubber-stamping the status quo in the military is not being supportive of the troops. We can’t afford to wait until 2017 to address the urgent problem of a demoralized military. (Re-posted with permission from the author, “Our Military Is Not a Social Experiment” originally appeared HERE)

Watch a recent interview with the author below:

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

Surrender Caucus Strikes Again in Pending Budget Fight

BoehnerMcConnellIt defies logic that the elected leadership in the House and Senate for the Republican Party can be so lame.

Politico reports today that “House GOP leaders desperate to avoid shutdown.” This headline speaks volumes why presidential candidates like billionaire Donald Trump, Dr. Ben Carson and Carly Fiorina are doing so well in the polls. Republican voters have lost confidence in their own leadership and they don’t want to fall in behind traditional politicians.

Politico reports:

An explosive confrontation brewing between the House Republican leadership and conservatives over Planned Parenthood is threatening to shut down the government for the second time in three years. And House GOP leaders have yet to settle on a strategy to avert it.

The leaders in the House and Senate know that this Planned Parenthood issue is burning hot, yet they don’t have a strategy to avoid it.

They have come up with an idea that inside the beltway geeks love. It is the “Let’s Have Hearings and Study the Issue Strategy.” The easiest way to slow walk an issue and avoid a fight is to study it. They argue that a series of hearings would build an “overwhelming case” against the group. Hearings are a classic shiny object for politicians because they think they can use a hearing to avoid doing their real job – legislating.

Politico reports “desperate to avoid another closure, Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) and his team would prefer to build bipartisan opposition to funding the group through a series of high-profile Congressional investigations. But, at this point, that seems unlikely to cut it with a bloc of House conservatives who have said they simply won’t vote for a large-scale spending plan that funds Planned Parenthood.”

The House Freedom Caucus and a handful of Tea Party-minded senators are expected to oppose the idea of funding Planned Parenthood while Congress holds toothless hearings that are set up for the sole purpose of avoiding a fight.

Over the next few weeks you are going to see a parade of Senate and House members of the surrender caucus – those who believe that the strategy of surrender is helpful, because if they don’t fight then they will be blameless when Republicans fail – say the following: “I have been rated one of the most pro-life members of Congress and I get an A+ rating from all pro-life groups. Nobody takes a back seat to me on pro-life issues, but…”. These squishy members will cry about a filibuster in the Senate and President Obama’s promised veto of any appropriations bill that does not fully fund Planned Parenthood. You can never win if you don’t fight. Pre-emptive surrender (#8 of the Rules for RINOs) is never a good strategy.

It defies logic that these so-called leaders are going to march right up to a government shutdown on September 30 and try to bully members into passing a continuing resolution that punts the tough funding decisions on Planned Parenthood to the end of the year. This leadership seems incapable of coming up with any strategy to defund Planned Parenthood, yet they will try to blame conservatives if the government shuts down because they never came up with a plan.

The broken promises of this leadership team are important. Why?

First, the leadership publicly promised regular order and a process where both chambers would take up individual appropriations bills and work to fine tune them to provide a better policy outcome for conservatives. At least that would have provided a way for conservatives to force vote after vote to defund Obamacare, Planned Parenthood, and Obama’s array of executive amnesties. Regular order never happened in the Senate.

Both GOP leaders promised t they were going to use the budget process to send a bill to fully repeal Obamacare that would avoid a senate filibuster because of the budget reconciliation special rules. That is not going to happen.

As I wrote in Human Events months ago when Supreme Court Justice John Roberts issued another Supreme Court decision saving Obamacare that said, in essence, “Congress is America’s last hope to repeal Obamacare.”

Take a look at the House Budget Committee’s one-pager where they promised that the congressionally passed budget “Repeals Obamacare.” The document’s first bullet point relating to health care swore that the budget “Repeals Obamacare in full – including all of its taxes, regulations and mandates.” The Senate Budget Committee posted a press release where they made a similar promise, that the budget “provides for Repeal of Obamacare to Start Over with Patient-Centered Reforms.” The House and Senate Budget Committees are set to break those promises.

The government is going to shut down over this issue and hearings are not going to save leadership from a fight. The idea that Republicans can run a strategy that consists of doing nothing and hoping that Democrats make a mistake and give away the next election doomed Romney and will doom the Republican presidential nominee next fall if these so-called leaders don’t change course quickly.

The time to dig in and fight is now. (Re-posted with permission, “Surrender Caucus Strikes Again in Pending Budget Fight” originally appeared HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

The Originalist Case Against Birthright Citizenship

court RoomThe American people are being told by the political class that there is nothing they can do to prevent future waves of illegal immigrants from coming here, unilaterally declaring political and legal jurisdiction, and securing citizenship for their children. We are told that there is no recourse through our elected representatives to prevent illegal immigrants from gaining a legal foothold in this country all because of a footnote from the most radical anti-originalist justice of this century, William Brennan Jr.

If you are scratching your head wondering how our own Constitution can be used as a suicide pact against us by foreign countries, you are not missing anything. This irrational sentiment expressed by a number of conservative and liberal pundits alike, in fact, undermines the very fabric of the social contract, popular sovereignty, and the republican form of government established by the preamble of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.

Mandated Birthright Citizenship Even for Legal Immigrants is a Big Stretch

Let’s put aside everything we believe as conservatives for a moment and take the activist ruling of Wong Kim Ark [169 U.S. 649 (1898)] as impregnable constitutional law. As such, the 14th Amendment would compel Congress and the Executive agencies to grant citizenship to all children of legal immigrants. Although we all agree as a matter of policy that it is a good idea to grant children born to legal permanent residents citizenship, by accepting the 1898 court decision as settled law, thereby enshrining birthright citizenship into our Constitution, we’d have to swallow the following ridiculous notions:

We’d be adopting one-directional stare decisis of an activist court that overturned two previous court decisions: the 1873 Slaughterhouse Cases and Elk v. Wilkins (1884). In those cases, the Supreme Court made it clear that the original intent of the 14th Amendment was primarily to grant equal rights to freed black slaves and that the phrase “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” required that the petitioner for citizenship be “completely subject to their political jurisdiction, and owing them direct and immediate allegiance.” These cases excluded children born to foreign diplomats and Native American Indians and were quite clear that the meaning of the 14th Amendment would not include all children of immigrants – most of whom would have been covered by less political jurisdiction than even those born on Indian reservations, which were partially under U.S. jurisdiction. [See more from Prof. John Eastman at NRO on defining jurisdiction]

We’d be overturning the most logical meaning of the text of the Citizenship Clause, rendering the second phrase all but superfluous.

We’d be ignoring the intent of the drafters of this amendment who clearly had no intention to mandate birthright citizenship for all immigrants [see more in the Eastman article]. While originalists like to focus on text, in this case the text fits in exactly with the intent of the drafters, as demonstrated by the Senate floor debate.

We’d be adopting the revolutionary-era feudal system of English Common law rooted in the fact that men are subjects of the state by virtue of being born on the soil. This is antithetical to the consent-based notion of citizenship expressed by our Founders. Although many of our laws are built upon common law, this certainly was not one of them, and this segregation-era court was incorporating it into American law, ironically, at a time when England was abandoning feudalism. As Thomas Jefferson wrote precisely in a discussion on immigration in Notes on the State of Virginia [Query 8, 211], our Constitution is a composition of the “freest principles of the English constitution.”

By adopting jus soli as a constitutional mandate (not just policy) for automatic citizenship based on soil, and not jus sanguinis – right of blood – all children born to American citizens abroad would not automatically be citizens, as noted by then-Chief Justice Fuller in his dissent in Wong Kim Ark.

Fuller further noted in his masterful dissent that by mandating automatic citizenship for all children of immigrants – no matter the circumstances – the Fourteenth Amendment would have the power “to cut off the legislative power from dealing with the subject.” Article 1 Section 8 of the Constitution grants Congress plenary power over naturalizations. Fuller observes that, “the right of a nation to expel or deport foreigners who have not been naturalized or taken any steps toward becoming citizens of a country is as absolute and unqualified as the right to prohibit and prevent their entrance into the country.” Unless there would be no other way to read the plain language of the 14th Amendment other than a mandate granting territorial jurisdiction instead of political jurisdiction (before 1898 nobody read it this way), it is simply imprudent to interpret it in the most stringent way – having the effect of almost completely voiding out an enumerated power of the people’s representatives governing the most vital aspect of a society.

Extrapolating Birthright to Illegals Countermands the Social Contract and all Semblance of Sovereignty

Freeze frame at this point.

Accepting the notion of automatic birthright citizenship for legal immigrants as a constitutional mandate is hard enough to swallow. Yet, the conservative pundits in the political class want to extrapolate this terrible decision to children of illegal immigrants. As if it wasn’t enough to accept the activist 1898 court case from the segregationist justices, proponents of anchor citizenship for illegal immigrants rely on footnote 10 in William Brennan’s Plylor v. Doe (1982) opinion – a decision that absurdly forced taxpayers to fund K-12 education for illegal immigrants.

In that footnote, which is nothing more than dicta (non-binding comments not relevant to the case), Brennan quotes “one early commentator” noting that “given the historical emphasis on geographic territoriality, bounded only, if at all, by principles of sovereignty and allegiance, no plausible distinction with respect to Fourteenth Amendment ‘jurisdiction’ can be drawn between resident aliens whose entry into the United States was lawful, and resident aliens whose entry was unlawful.”

There you have it, until the end of time, American citizens – through their elected representatives – have no recourse to prevent future illegal immigrants from obtaining citizenship against the will of the people – because of the non-binding footnote of the most radical justice of the 20th century, which in itself, relied on a decision reversing precedent and relying on the English feudal system.

In reality, there is a huge difference between the legal permanent resident who was the subject of the 1898 court case and the illegal immigrants of today, even if we were to fully accept the concept of birthright citizenship based on nothing more than geographical jurisdiction. The justices in Wong awarded the child citizenship because his Chinese immigrant parents were “domiciled” in America (legally, before the ban on Chinese immigration). As Prof. Eastman notes, “Domicile” is a legal term of art; it means “a person’s legal home,” according to Black’s law dictionary, and is often used synonymously with “citizenship.” Undoubtedly, those here in contravention to our laws, unlike Wong Kim Ark’s parents, cannot unilaterally declare domicile in our country.

And this all leads to a much more fundamental and vital discussion about sovereignty. There is simply no way our Constitution can prohibit our elected representatives from preventing illegal immigrants from driving their pregnant wives to the border, and assuming the border patrol fails to catch the speeding vehicle in time – poof! – that baby is a citizen.

First, as noted before, Article 1 Section 8 grants Congress plenary power over naturalization. By mandating automatic citizenship to babies born in the aforementioned case, that would completely strip the ability of Congress to exercise the most basic regulation over naturalization – keeping out those they affirmatively do not want in the country. Certainly, we can say that Section 5 of the 14th Amendment, which grants Congress the power to enforce the other sections of the amendment, would allow them to clarify the Citizenship Clause to the extent that it would not completely countermand their Article 1 power as it relates to illegal aliens who force their will on their constituents – for goodness sakes!

But more fundamentally, the notion that illegal immigrants can unilaterally declare citizenship for their kids against the will of people and the laws duly passed by the people’s representatives, and that those representatives would lack a single recourse to stop it even prospectively, violates the very essence of consent-based citizenship. The notion of consent-based citizenship serves as the bedrock of popular sovereignty, territorial sovereignty, and Republicanism – all built on the social contract. The preamble of the Declaration of Independence was built upon the principle that in order to protect natural rights people are entitled to popular sovereignty – to form a government that derives its powers “from the consent of the governed.”

Professor Edward Erler has been the leading voice observing how birthright citizenship for illegal immigrants, and indeed the entire phenomenon of illegal immigration and their securing of rights and benefits, violates the social contract in the most foundational way. In his book, The Founders on Citizenship and Immigration, Erler writes the following with regards to citizenship and the social contract:

“[T]he social contract requires reciprocal consent. Not only must the individual consent to be governed, but he must also be accepted by the community as a whole. If all persons born within the geographical limits of the United States are to be counted citizens-even those whose parents are in the United States illegally- then this would be tantamount to the conferral of citizenship without the consent of “the whole people.”

Drawing on the writings of our Founders, Erler notes that they clearly envisioned that “new members can be added only with the consent of those who already constitute civil society.” He cites Madison who wrote that, “in the case of naturalization a new member is added to the social compact, not only without a unanimous consent of the members, but by a majority of the governing body, deriving its powers from a majority of the individual parties to the social compact.”

Even Wong Kim Ark Court Would Never Mandate Citizenship for Illegal Aliens

Clearly, even the authors of the Wong decision, unlike William Brennan, understood the basic concept of consent-based citizenship, at least as it relates to those who came here illegally. While some intellectuals contend that because there was no real concept of illegal immigration in those days the decision would apply to all aliens, the writings of that very court prove otherwise.

In fact, by that point, pursuant to the immigration laws passed in 1882 and 1891, Congress had already denied admission to the following categories of aliens: “idiots,” the insane, paupers, and polygamists; persons liable to become a public charge; those convicted of a felony or other crime or misdemeanor involving moral depravity; and sufferers “from a loathsome or dangerous” contagious disease. They also passed the Chinese Exclusion Act banning all new immigration from China. The Immigration Act of 1891 created a new office, the Commissioner of Immigration within the Treasury Department, vested with the power to inspect new immigrants and potentially deny them entry if they were deemed inadmissible under one of the criteria.

In Nishimura Ekiu v. United States (1892), a Japanese woman sued immigration officials for denying her entry on account of her being a supposed public charge. She claimed that her due process was violated because she was not afforded the opportunity to present her case. And no, she was not even asserting the dubious modern substantive due process violation in pursuit of new fundamental rights; she was merely alleging a procedural due process violation. Yet, Justice Gray – the same author of the Wong decision – not only rejected her claim, he noted that the courts shouldn’t even have the jurisdiction to second guess legislative and executive decisions on immigration. Here are the relevant quotes with my emphasis added:

“It is an accepted maxim of international law that every sovereign nation has the power, as inherent in sovereignty, and essential to self-preservation, to forbid the entrance of foreigners within its dominions, or to admit them only in such cases and upon such conditions as it may see fit to prescribe. Vat. Law Nat. lib. 2, §§ 94, 100; 1 Phillim. Int. Law, (3d Ed.) c. 10, § 220. In the United States this power is vested in the national government, to which the constitution has committed the entire control of international relations, in peace as well as in war. It belongs to the political department of the government, and may be exercised either through treaties made by the president and senate, or through statutes enacted by congress, upon whom the constitution has conferred power to regulate commerce with foreign nations, including the entrance of ships, the importation of goods, and the bringing of persons into the ports of the United States; to establish a uniform rule of naturalization; to declare war, and to provide and maintain armies and navies; and to make all laws which may be necessary and proper for carrying into effect these powers and all other powers vested by the constitution in the government of the United States, or in any department or officer thereof. […]

“It is not within the province of the judiciary to order that foreigners who have never been naturalized, nor acquired any domicile or residence within the United States, nor even been admitted into the country pursuant to law, shall be permitted to enter, in opposition to the constitutional and lawful measures of the legislative and executive branches of the national government. As to such persons, the decisions of executive or administrative officers, acting within powers expressly conferred by congress, are due process of law.

Here we have the very activist author of the decision used as the foundation for the birthright argument clearly expressing the basic concept that Congress has the ability to control the nation’s sovereignty. It would require preposterous mental gymnastics to assume that, had this Japanese woman given birth at the port the day she was interviewed by the immigration officer, Justice Gray would have conferred citizenship on that baby – against the will of the people’s representatives.

Where is the Voice of the people on immigration?

The reason the birthright discussion is so important is because it sheds so much light on the transmogrification of the judicial system as it relates to popular sovereignty and the social contract. Not only do we have judges like Brennan bestowing citizenship and education rights on illegal immigrants from the high perches of the bench, they have invalidated almost every attempt by the states and federal government to keep out illegal immigrants. A California judge recently invalidated detention for all illegal immigrants with children, essentially mandating their irrevocable disappearance into the American population.

In addition to the courts, we have unelected bureaucrats and the U.N. transforming entire communities through refugee resettlements without the consent of the people. And although our current immigration system was formed by the Hart-Cellar Act (“Kennedy bill”) in 1965, the supporters of the bill lied to the American people and publicly ruled out the transformational outcome that indeed took place. For decades, illegal aliens have been counted in the census and have now permanently distorted the very representation the civil society needs to fight on behalf of their sovereignty.

What ever happened to the voice of the people?

Immigration transformation pursued outside of the democratic process is even worse than having courts decide societal issues, such as abortion and gay marriage, in what Justice Scalia calls “societal transformation without representation.” The courts have now empowered themselves to unilaterally and immutably change civil society itself – without any recourse from those the Constitution vested with making such decisions. How far we have deviated from the Founders’ vision that even so-called conservatives support the idea of changing the civil society without the consent of its citizens.

Indeed, the issue of birthright citizenship for illegal immigrants is not just a tangential topic within immigration. It cuts to the very core of how illegal immigrants are able to coerce their will on the American citizenry and the broader issue of sovereignty. This runs much deeper than the 14th Amendment. The question for policy-makers has moved beyond whether we will survive as a nation as our Founder’s envisioned. We have already deviated so far from that vision. It’s a question of whether we are a nation at all. (Re-posted with permission, “The Originalist Case Against Birthright Citizenship” originally appeared HERE)

Watch a recent interview with the author below:

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

Cruz, Jindal, Huckabee Have No Problem Naming Evil, Why Does Carly?

AFP 536265175 A GOV USA DCHow does anyone who claims to have a “personal relationship with Jesus Christ” two weeks after 9/11 praise an Islamic Civilization that has historically– and continues– to institutionalize violence against women, children, Christians, Jews, and slavery of Blacks, non-Muslims, and children over the last 1400 years?

Fox News recently highlighted Carly Fiorina’s comments, “It was my personal relationship with Jesus Christ that saved me” and “no one needs to question or tell me about my faith.”

Contrary to Scripture, Christians are in fact instructed to use Biblical discernment to correct error and advocate righteousness first and foremost among self-identifying Christians. Carly provides an excellent non-answer and continues to not take responsibility for her remarks in which two weeks after 9/11 she praised the very Islamic Civilization that caused 8 Crusades and instituted the sex slave trade and abuse of women and girls, which continues today. Not to mention the greatest terrorist attacks to ever occur on American soil.

I’ve challenged Carly Fiorina, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and many others who claim to be Christians while also advocating falsehoods about Islam.

Christians should be well aware that throughout the Bible, God commands his people to name, fight, and warn of evil. If they don’t– the blood of the innocent and martyrs is on their hands. (Ezekiel 33: 7-9). He says:

“So hear the word I speak and give them warning from me. When I say to the wicked, ‘You wicked person, you will surely die,’ and you do not speak out to dissuade them from their ways, that wicked person will die for their sin, and I will hold you accountable for their blood. But if you do warn the wicked person to turn from their ways and they do not do so, they will die for their sin, though you yourself will be saved.”

Consequences, both punishment and redemption, exist for those who heed or reject His warning:

“If someone who is righteous disobeys, that person’s former righteousness will count for nothing. And if someone who is wicked repents, that person’s former wickedness will not bring condemnation. The righteous person who sins will not be allowed to live even though they were formerly righteous.’

“If I tell a righteous person that they will surely live, but then they trust in their righteousness and do evil, none of the righteous things that person has done will be remembered; they will die for the evil they have done. And if I say to a wicked person, ‘You will surely die,’ but they then turn away from their sin and do what is just and right— if they give back what they took in pledge for a loan, return what they have stolen, follow the decrees that give life, and do no evil—that person will surely live; they will not die. None of the sins that person has committed will be remembered against them. They have done what is just and right; they will surely live.”

Christians are commanded to provide for and protect widows and orphans (the majority of whom exist in 57 Islamic-majority countries.) James, Jesus’s half-brother, remarked, “Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world.” (James 1:27).

Further still, Timothy warned, “Anyone who does not provide for their relatives, and especially for their own household, has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.” (1 Tim. 5:8).

The primary contribution of all Islamic civilizations, past and present, is death and destruction.

Since the mid-late 600s, Islamic military invasions spanned from North Africa, to Spain, France, the Mediterranean, Balkan, Asian and East Asian and former Russian and Mongol territories. No Muslims existed in Jerusalem until their final and successful invasion in 1244. The Dome of the Rock was specifically built on top of Israel’s holiest site, the Temple Mount.

Yet, the God of the Bible pleads for his people to choose life. He said,

“This day I call the heavens and the earth as witnesses against you that I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your children may liveand that you may love the Lord your God, listen to his voice, and hold fast to him. For the Lord is your life.” (Deut. 30:19, 20).

It is to life that Christian Governors Mike Huckabee and Bobby Jindal, and Senator Ted Cruz consistently point.

Cruz recently pointed to the Ninth Commandment, “’Thou shalt not bear false witness,’ when clarifying that, “When we call evil by its name, it has a clarifying power that has never been more needed than it is this instant, right now.”

Last fall, standing outside of the Auschwitz Concentration Camp, Huckabee remarked,“The very people who created the death industry and ‘scientifically’ and medically experimented on prisoners … went home every day, ate dinner with their families, played with their children, went to concerts, and lived normal lives, knowing all the while those under their authority were living in horror.”

As political leaders, they are required to name and fight evil. Elected officials have taken oaths to defend American citizens and the U.S. Constitution from threats both foreign and domestic. Article VI of the Constitution requires federal officials to swear, “to support this Constitution.” The U.S. statute 5 U.S.C. 3331 specifies officials to “solemnly swear [or affirm]” that they “will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic” and “will bear true faith and allegiance to the same.”

These leaders have not hesitated to name evil. But more importantly, they continue to promote that which is good, which best contributes to human flourishing.

Leadership and Christianity both require what Andrew Breitbart admonished, “No matter what the threat, no matter what the peril, stand up, speak the truth. Speak truth to power and call evil by its name.”

Praising a civilization that caused death and destruction both during the 800 years Carly cites, and today, bears false witness. Worse still, condoning institutionalized violence against women and children opposes everything Biblical and the nature of Christianity itself. (Re-posted with permission, “Cruz, Jindal, Huckabee Have No Problem Naming Evil, Why Does Carly?” originally appeared HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

What Trump Must Do to Win the Presidency

ABC_donald_trump_this_week_jt_130811_16x9_992Donald Trump has catapulted to the lead in the race for the Republican presidential nomination by focusing on two popular issues:

*Proposing the building of a wall along the Mexican border to stem the overwhelming influx of illegal immigration,

*Attacking the Stalinesque doctrine of “political correctness” that increasingly inhibits freedom of expression in the U.S.

His approach has been very effective so far.

But it’s time for Trump to open up a new offensive front.

If I had his ear, as I have once or twice in the past, I would advise Trump to say, as the future president, he would refuse to raise the debt limit to force Washington to live within its means like every American family and business is forced to do. He should say that $18 trillion is too much, and that continued borrowing by the federal government is completely unsustainable. The only way to dig out of this hole is to stop borrowing, and, as president, he will not request or approve any future hike in the debt limit.

He should also allay fears on Wall Street that such an action will result in a default by ensuring that Washington, under his leadership, will continue to service the existing debt.

And, lastly, he should characterize this action as a great opportunity to return to constitutionally limited government by cutting government spending and programs that never should have been started in the first place. (Read more from “What Trump Must Do to Win the Presidency” HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

Ferguson and Forgiveness

images (74)The people of Ferguson, Missouri are sitting on a powder keg.

As the nation waits to learn whether or not a grand jury will indict Officer Darren Wilson for the death of Michael Brown, we also are holding our collective breath to see what the effect of the decision, regardless of what it is, will have on that community. If history is any indication, the city is likely to again explode in a hailstorm of hatred, violence and vengeance.

We can do better.

To be sure, the problem extends far beyond the boundaries of Ferguson. All of America has become a vengeful society in many respects. Politicians attack each other mercilessly, not just during bitterly-fought campaigns, but in the very halls of Congress. The corporate world, religious institutions, communities, personal relationships – all have become examples of our growing culture of vengeance.

The specter of vengeance in our cultural relationships is particularly disturbing because it is a part of our history and our national fabric that we should have gotten past by now, and yet the deep wounds of yesteryear – slavery, civil rights, inequality – remain unhealed and vivid in our minds.

Nowhere is this more evident than in the tragic situation that has evolved from the death of Michael Brown. My heart hurts when I think of the life that was snuffed out before it really began, and I also hurt for Officer Wilson, whose life has been forever changed regardless of the eventual legal outcome.

And of course I think of Michael’s parents, whose wounds are still fresh. Like any parents who have lost a child, they are desperate to ease the pain they feel, and I’m sure they have friends and family members who want that for them as well.

The people of Ferguson also have wounds, but I’m gravely concerned that the way many are choosing to address them is not only counterproductive, but actively feeding into our growing culture of vengeance. Each night, the evening news shows footage of agitated citizens who are preparing to take to the streets the moment the grand jury’s decision is revealed, no matter what that decision is. We also see law enforcement officers who are strapping on riot gear in order to respond.

Further riots and disturbances will do nothing to ease the pain of the Brown family, the city of Ferguson and the nation. The only thing that has any hope of doing that is forgiveness.

The people of Ferguson have a tremendous opportunity to follow the wisdom of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who many in that community claim to hold in the highest esteem and yet they refuse to follow either his teachings or his example. He wrote these words while imprisoned for committing civil disobedience during the Montgomery bus boycott and delivered them at a 1957 Christmas service at Montgomery’s Dexter Avenue Baptist Church:

“First, we must develop and maintain the capacity to forgive. He who is devoid of the power to forgive is devoid of the power to love. It is impossible even to begin the act of loving one’s enemies without the prior acceptance of the necessity, over and over again, of forgiving those who inflict evil and injury upon us. It is also necessary to realize that the forgiving act must always be initiated by the person who has been wronged, the victim of some great hurt, the recipient of some tortuous injustice, and the absorber of some terrible act of oppression.”

As always, Dr. King took his inspiration from the Word of God. No matter how many times he was jailed or beaten or had his family’s safety threatened, he refused to seek vengeance but instead forgave.

Ferguson can forgive too.

It seems clear that some so-called “advisors” have attached themselves to the Brown family and are attempting to exert influence over them. That alone is concerning, but it is especially distressing to see that some of those who are pushing the family toward vengeance and away from forgiveness are church leaders. It saddens me to see that at a time when our religious institutions are critically needed, many of our nation’s pulpits have become affected by this trend.

Dr. King used his pulpit not to advocate a culture of vengeance and hatred, but rather one of forgiveness and reconciliation. Let us join him in his jail cell and peek over his shoulder as he writes these words:

“The words ‘I will forgive you, but I’ll never forget what you’ve done’ never explain the real nature of forgiveness. Certainly one can never forget, if that means erasing it totally from his mind. But when we forgive, we forget in the sense that the evil deed is no longer a mental block impeding a new relationship. Likewise, we can never say, ‘I will forgive you, but I won’t have anything further to do with you.’ Forgiveness means reconciliation, a coming together again.”

The people of Ferguson have an opportunity to make history. They can break the cycle of vengeance in America and become a beacon of light, beginning a new demonstration of God’s love through acts of forgiveness. After all, our lives are not measured in the number of years we live; they are measured by the amount of grace and love that we give.

Forgiveness must extend to everyone, even those whose acts we find completely reprehensible. It must extend even to groups like ISIS, whose cruelty is beyond comprehension. Witnessing the evil they commit gives those of us within the Christian community an opportunity to demonstrate the real God by allowing their deeds to provoke not vengeance, but forgiveness.

As Christians, we are compelled to go beyond merely giving lip service to the concept of forgiveness and take bold action according to God’s narrative. That’s why I have committed to a bike trek of more than 2,600 miles – from Jacksonville Beach, Florida to San Diego, California – beginning on December 17. During my 90-day Race to Reconcile journey, I will visit churches, orphanages, veterans’ homes, schools – any place where I can share the message that our only true salvation will come through the essential acts of forgiveness and reconciliation. At various stops during the journey, beginning with the launch in Jacksonville, we will organize day-long Celebration of Forgiveness events, including a free breakfast, panel discussions, luncheons for supporters, and evening programs featuring music and other performances, testimonials, guest speakers and more.

As we wait for the grand jury’s decision, I see the anguish in the faces of Michael Brown’s parents and in the streets of Ferguson, and it is not the result of what transpired on August 9 or the manner in which the police responded to it. It is the result of our country’s culture of vengeance and our seeming incapacity to forgive. This is true among both blacks and whites, and it extends far beyond the boundaries of Ferguson, Missouri into every community in this nation.

That’s why I implore the people of Ferguson to lead the charge away from vengeance and toward forgiveness and reconciliation. I urge the Brown family to imagine what Dr, King would advise if he was in their living room; to stop listening to those who are using them to further their own agendas and instead allow their son’s tragic death to usher in a new wave of forgiveness, love and grace.

Jesus Christ said it on the cross: “Forgive them, for they know not what they do.”

It’s time for us to do the same.

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

Trump and the Sharknadoing of American Politics

Donald TrumpThere is no way you were fully prepared for it.

Not even if you had been rooting for it for years.

That’s what happens when the status quo gets burned to the ground, as it appears may now be happening in America. Today’s depth of support for the likes of Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders, while legacy candidates like Jeb Bush and Hillary Clinton flounder, has everyone at least a little breathless – myself included.

I never anticipated the public’s rage to be this acute so early in the search for a new president. And it’s been nothing short of fun to watch it all play out. Someone refill my tub-o-corn before the next episode — stat!

These are the days of Sharknado politics, when the deadly seriousness of cultural decline is being met in force by the sometimes farcical anti-heroes of its own creation. It will often feel bizarre and unsettling, but that is as it should be after decades of thin gruel to feed on.

There are many others who could have and should have stepped in more forcefully before it came to this, but when it comes right down to it there was something about the gruel they never wanted to give up.

Let’s start with the example of the church. The reason religious factions came to dominate the activity of just one political party’s base is a cautionary tale. Such a thing happened because the broader church did nothing short of surrender its true missionary calling in the culture.

Way too much comfort and conformity. Way too little cross.
And so it was that the breach was often filled by the ill-equipped, the overly-harsh and, perhaps most of all, by people on both the blue and the red teams who felt it easier and easier to check the God box without ever standing and delivering on His behalf.

Then it got worse. More and more folks started justifying things in God’s name that are in fact antithetical to His plan and purpose. The church fumbled, and the country floundered.

Now we have businesses being shut down because of their beliefs, non-existent borders, worship of the environment, a cross-dressing military, dudes marrying dudes, and bags of baby parts for sale. Yet prophets of rebuke are still in remarkably short supply.

Enter the Sharknado in the form of Trump, a moral code unto himself. Some form of morality – good, bad, or Trumpian – will always fill the vacuum left behind by moral cowards. And right now we are getting the street justice of a campy action film star who isn’t afraid to blast Jaws 3 The Director’s Cut-level rhetoric in all directions.

How long that will be more entertaining than exhausting remains to be seen. But it ain’t Trump’s fault. A Trump has to Trump.

The simple fact is that the GOP establishment treachery – which became the true high-church calling for many playing fast and loose with the labels Christian and conservative — has gotten so bad that the unpredictability of Sharknado politics is far preferable to two-faced business as usual. And you know why? Because at least it’s honest.

Trump isn’t saying he’s a conservative and no one expects him to be. Everyone who isn’t protecting some version of the flat-earth society gets that by now and has made their peace with it. Give them anything other than traveling down a road that leads to the likes of McCain, Romney, Boehner or McConnell.

Literally anything.

In fact, folks appreciate Sharknado politics for being so brazenly over the top when all they’ve been dealt for years is underhandedness and subterfuge. It’s kind of like going to Vegas at this point. Sure, they may lose it all on Trump if they go all in, but with the GOP establishment they know they don’t even get to play a hand.

Every other GOP politician, including fellow “outsiders” Ben Carson and Carly Fiorina, is indentured to playing by a different set of rules, though. No one stands a chance of out-Trumping the Donald. But if they can combine the qualities of the poet, the statesman, and the warrior in defense of American Exceptionalism as patriots like Jefferson, Lincoln and Reagan once did, then and only then can the Sharknado be quelled.

There is no other way, and in my estimation someone like Texas Sen. Ted Cruz is just the field general to call forth the enormous power and glory of the better angels of our nature. Someone who like Trump also offers a divergent path from the GOP establishment’s road to nowhere, but with the conservative principles we cherish in tow.

The only way to clear the air of the Sharknado is to seek new heights, not dig a deeper ditch to nowhere. There are normally reliable, articulate conservatives among the political class and the beltway punditry who have either not figured this out yet or simply resent the hell out of it. The world is passing them by and is requiring far more than words that sell magazines and garner “follows,” but otherwise don’t move the cultural needle.

Enough is enough. The status quo gave us the Obamination enabled and funded by the GOP establishment we currently live in. Thus, viva la revolution!

In the church. In the culture. In our conscience. Every corner of our country is desperate to see the light. (Re-posted with permission, “Trump and the Sharknadoing of American Politics” originally appeared HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

What Would Happen If a Massive Solar Storm Hit the Earth?

1395861452855424172We all know that major storms can wreak havoc, flooding cities and decimating infrastructure. But there’s an even bigger worry than wind and rain: space weather. If a massive solar storm hit us, our technology would be wiped out. The entire planet could go dark.

“We’re much more reliant on technology these days that is vulnerable to space weather than we were in the past,” said Thomas Berger, director of the Space Weather Prediction Center at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. He told Gizmodo, “If we were hit by an extreme event today, it’d be very difficult to respond.”

“Solar storm” is a generic term used to describe a bunch of stuff the Sun hurls our way, including x-rays, charged particles, and magnetized plasma. A massive solar storm hasn’t hit the Earth since the mid-19th century, but space weather scientists are very worried about the possibility of another . . .

A solar storm usually starts with a solar flare — a giant explosion on the surface of the sun that sends energy and particles streaming off into space. Small, C-class flares occur all the time and are too weak to affect the Earth, while mid-sized M-class flares can produce minor radio disruptions. X-class flares, meanwhile, are the largest explosions in the solar system, releasing up to a billion hydrogen bombs worth of energy. These eruptions occur very rarely, but when they do, they’re an epic sight.

One of the most powerful flares measured with modern instruments took place during a solar maximum in 2003. It was so large it maxed out our satellite sensors, which registered an X-28 (28 types larger than an X-1 flare, which itself is 10 times greater than an M1 flare). (Read more from “What Would Happen If a Massive Solar Storm Hit the Earth?” HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.