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Democratic Debate Surprise: Candidates Cave to Matriarch Hillary

I predicted that Bernie Sanders would best Hillary Clinton during the first presidential debate, much as Donald Trump triumphed over the Republican presidential candidates. They both have an edginess and outsider willingness to challenge traditional conventions in a way that appeals to the base of their respective parties. Clinton was the establishment candidate, the Jeb Bush of the Democratic party, the candidate of the old ways the base was busy rejecting. It seemed an easy prediction.

I couldn’t have been more wrong. Instead, Sanders and most of the other candidates bent over backwards to let Clinton off the hook on the biggest scandal that could derail her campaign — Servergate. When asked about Hillary’s emails, Sanders responded,

I think secretary [Clinton] is right, the American people are sick and tired of hearing about your damn emails. Same with the media. The middle class is collapsing, and want to know if well have a democracy or oligarchy. Enough of the emails.

The crowd cheered wildly. O’Malley chimed in and agreed, “We don’t have to be defined by the email scandal, we can discuss affordable college, etc.”

Lincoln Chafee was the only Democrat who dared to criticize Clinton over her emails, saying in a curiously shaky voice, “This is an issue of American credibility. I think we need someone with the best ethical standards.”

Moderator Anderson Cooper of CNN asked Clinton if she wanted to respond to Chafee, and she responded in an arrogant tone, “No,” to much applause. This seems to be evidence something funny is taking place. Did Clinton promise the other candidates cabinet positions in exchange for keeping quiet about Servergate? Or more sinister, did the Clinton machine make some kind of threat to the candidates? Was that why Chafee’s voice was shaking as he challenged her?

While Clinton appears to have taken some voice training to improve her bland, monotone style, every time she opened her mouth it reminded me of her condescending line in the early 1990s about stay-at-home moms: “I suppose I could have stayed home and baked cookies and had teas, but what I decided to do was to fulfill my profession which I entered before my husband was in public life.” Her rhetoric was full of the usual braggadocio; she managed to get both the words “proud” and “privileged” into her opening statement.

When asked how her presidency would be different than President Obama’s, she declared, “It’s pretty obvious, being the first woman president would be a pretty stark change.” This is quite a contrast from Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina, who has pointed out that being a woman is not an accomplishment. When asked why the Clinton dynasty should continue, Hillary said with a straight face, “the first woman president is an outsider” and went on to repeat her favorite line that she would fight for women and children.

Practically everything she said was duplicitous, trying to have it both ways. The most quoted example was: “I’m a progressive, not a moderate. But I’m a progressive who likes to get things done.”

What about her competitors? Sanders didn’t help himself sound any less scarily socialist. He praised socialist countries: “We should look to Denmark, Norway, Sweden and what they’ve accomplished for their people.” He declared that he didn’t consider himself a capitalist, and when asked what the greatest national security threat facing us today, responded, “climate change.” The audience roared. He said he wants to make every university free and raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour everywhere. He also trotted out the much discredited myth that people are locked up in prison merely for smoking marijuana, as did Clinton.

Jim Webb, who has a prestigious history of military service, came across as the most moderate of the bunch, and was attacked for not fully supporting affirmative action. O’Malley did little to distinguish himself from Clinton. All of the candidates, with the possible exception of Chafee, had little sympathy for NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and said he should be punished. The Planned Parenthood body parts selling scandal never even came up.

The candidates’ messages was one and the same: how to redistribute wealth, taking it away from the rich and setting up new government assistance programs to give it to the poor and middle class. The one thing the candidates did agree upon was that under Obama, the gap between the rich and the poor has increased, the middle class is disappearing and wages going down. And their non-message was also one and the same: There was a noticeable lack of patriotism or optimism about America.

With the other candidates unwilling to really challenge Clinton, it becomes less likely that Joe Biden will enter the race. If the other candidates had shown that they were strongly opposed to her candidacy and hammered her in the debate, or if she had imploded over Servergate, there would have been a natural void for him to enter and immediately become the frontrunner. Now, the Democratic race is up in the air, and Clinton again has a realistic chance at winning the nomination. (For more from the author of “Democratic Debate Surprise: Candidates Cave to Matriarch Hillary” please click HERE)

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Bernie and Hillary Try to Join the Tea Party’s Populist Bandwagon but Fall Flat

Watching the Tea Party’s successful messaging against crony capitalism, it’s no wonder that leading Democrat senators and presidential candidates, most prominent in the platforms of Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, have embarked on a populist campaign against policies they view as beneficial to Wall Street and well-connected lobbyists and detrimental to ordinary Americans. This was on full display at last night’s Democratic presidential debate as all the Democrat candidates ingratiated themselves to “the little guy” by bashing the evil rich people and their politically connected cronies.

While there is merit to some of the progressive populist diagnosis of the flawed and corrupt structure inherent in our political class, they have the wrong prescription to fix the broken political system. And in fact, their version of populism – de facto venture socialism, as former Senator Jim DeMint (R-SC) once observed – is nothing more than warmed-over government largesse, which has engendered the very sort of cronyism she inveighs against on a regular basis. Only free market populism, which eliminates the ability of the federal government to pick winners and losers in the first place, will foster the fairest and most prosperous economy for both Wall Street and Main Street.

BANKING

Although both authentic conservatives and principled liberals share the same disdain for government-sponsored handouts to big banks, the banking industry in itself is not the source of the economic downturn in 2008, and trash-talking banks as an ends to itself will not usher in an era of prosperity.

Last December, Elizabeth Warren referred to the Dodd-Frank provision in the Cromnibus as “the worst of government for the rich and powerful” that “would let derivatives traders on Wall Street gamble with taxpayer money and get bailed out by the government when their risky bets threaten to blow up our financial system.”

It’s true that this non-germane carve-out had no business being slipped into a budget bill without any transparency. And indeed, the lack of transparency is one of many reasons why conservatives voted against the bill. But once again, her diagnosis of the problem and ensuing prescription misses the mark. The “worst of government for the rich and powerful” that led to the housing crash, credit crisis, and subsequent bailout of the banks stems from the very government interventionist policies that Warren and her fellow leftists have championed for decades.

Social engineering policies such as Bill Clinton’s National Homeownership Strategy, coupled with the officious interventions of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, created the entire culture – directed straight from Washington to Wall Street – that coerced banks to underwrite risky mortgages in order to please the central planners in Washington. It was these greedy government-sponsored entities that bought up almost all of the subprime mortgage securities. It was these government policies and agencies “that gamble with taxpayer money and get bailed out by the government when their risky bets threaten to blow up our financial system.”

In fact, it was her prized legislation – the Dodd-Frank bill – that created the Financial Stability Oversight Council – a government agency that can completely bypass the bankruptcy process and bail out companies deemed too big to fail. Dodd-Frank is ostensibly the Obamacare of the financial industry and is another example of how the arsonists in the political class dress up as firefighters to solve the problems they helped create. The fact that this law was named after two politicians who embodied this big government collusion with the big banks is quite fitting.

Warren is correct to assert that banking lobbyists have too much power in Washington. But the way to reduce their power is to eliminate government’s ability to pick winners and losers instead of empowering them to continue growing the government/Wall Street cronyist complex. People have the right to lobby and petition the government all they want, but if Congress actually followed the constitutional enumerated powers, their lobbying efforts would be moot.

PICKING WINNERS AND LOSERS

Like all “hard-core” liberals, Sanders, Warren, and Clinton are content with government handouts to big business so long as they are presented in the form of a subsidy. They continue to champion energy subsidies for green energy cronies who don’t pay taxes. They support the ethanol mandate which uses the boot of government to enrich a small subset of corporate farmers, while increasing the cost of food on families by as much as $2,000 per year. Food prices are projected to be $3.5 billion higher in 2017 as a result of the ethanol mandate. Sanders is a champion of the cronyist ethanol lobby.

They advocate draconian environmental regulations that would have precluded the recent decline in energy prices, and opposes policies that will ramp up production and exportation of energy, which would lower prices even further for American consumers on a permanent basis.

One of the most glaring examples of the Sanders/Warren support for crony capitalism is their vote in support of the Internet sales tax. The so-called Marketplace Fairness Act is pushed by K Street and the big brick and mortar retailers to create an inter-state online tax cartel. This version of taxation without representation will punitively hurt small businesses, consumers, and low-tax states – all to grow government and benefit big business. Indeed, many more Americans beyond the “Donald Trump and his billionaire friends,” whom Sanders decried at the debate, will pay “a hell of a lot more in taxes.”

Indeed, there is nothing novel about the Sanders/Warren brand of liberalism. It was summed up by Reagan long ago as follows: “If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it.”

CONSTITUTIONAL POPULISM

In order to encourage true economic growth for everyone without dividing America into classes, we need to slash taxes and regulations for everyone and abolish subsidies for everyone. Both the corporate and individual tax rates need to be cut, as well as the double taxation on investments, estates, and Social Security benefits.

On the regulatory side, the total cost of federal regulations in 2014 reached $1.88 trillion, which amounts to a $14,976 hidden tax per family every year. According to the Competitive Enterprise Institute, this amounts to 23 percent of the average family budget of $51,000. The $1.88 trillion number is also more than receipts from corporate and personal income taxes combined. By eliminating gratuitous and costly regulations and implementing congressional sunset powers over new regulations, both families and corporations would save more money, which in turn, creates more jobs, raises wages, and lowers the cost of living.

Finally, it would be insensible to ignore illegal immigration. Nothing embodies “the worst of government for the rich and powerful” to the detriment of ordinary Americans more than the elitist open borders/amnesty agenda. Illegal immigration has had a devastating effect on American workers, taxpayers, healthcare, education, and welfare – all to enrich big corporations and lobbyists who want to use lawlessness to artificially drive down wages. Sadly, populist progressive leaders like Senator Warren have bought into the illegal immigrant-first agenda – hook, line and sinker.

If Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton are really concerned about wage growth in this country, they should join conservatives in the effort to restore the rule of law and place the concerns of American workers and taxpayers ahead of the special interests and lobbyists. They would join in the conservative effort to protect the welfare system and Social Security from being illegally accessed by those encouraged to migrate here illegally by big business.

Ideally, there would be a lot of common ground to plow through a populist alliance between conservatives and liberals. But that would require courage on the part of liberals to buck the dogma of their party on critical issues, not just on some strategies – something these progressive Democrats have clearly been unwilling to do.

The conservative grassroots and some of members in Congress, on the other hand, have demonstrated an unambiguous commitment to place the interests of the American worker and taxpayer ahead of the lobbyists, even when it means bucking party leadership on fundamental issues. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren would be wise to listen and learn. (For more from the author of “Bernie and Hillary Try to Join the Tea Party’s Populist Bandwagon but Fall Flat” please click HERE)

Watch a recent interview with the author below:

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LAS VEGAS SHOWDOWN: Pressure on Clinton to Keep Rivals at Bay — and Biden on Sidelines — in 1st Debate

Hillary Clinton faces heavy pressure during the first Democratic presidential debate Tuesday to outperform primary rivals cutting into her lead and perhaps keep her biggest potential challenger on the sidelines.

Vice President Biden, still mulling a bid, is not expected to be on stage in Las Vegas. But he’ll surely be watching as the former secretary of state spars in person for the first time with her 2016 Democratic opponents . . .

Most recently, Clinton has taken jabs from Democrats for coming out just last week against a major Pacific nation trade deal. In a taste of what awaits her on the debate stage, underdog rival Martin O’Malley noted he opposed the deal eight months ago, and didn’t just come out against it “on the eve of a debate … because polling told me to do it.”

A big question for Clinton on Tuesday night is whether she can shake that image and in doing so counter the ‘draft Biden’ push by showing she’s not so vulnerable after all.

Joe Desilets, managing partner for the Republican-leaning 21st & Main strategy firm, said that Clinton must “reintroduce herself to her Democratic base and to the country at-large,” if she’s going to change the narrative. (Read more from “LAS VEGAS SHOWDOWN: Pressure on Clinton to Keep Rivals at Bay — and Biden on Sidelines — in 1st Debate” HERE)

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This Is What Obama Is Blaming the Outcry From Hillary Clinton’s Email ‘Mistake’ on

President Obama said Sunday that Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server to conduct her correspondence while secretary of state was a “mistake,” but denied that U.S. national security had been jeopardized as a result.

“She made a mistake. She has acknowledged it. I do think that the way it’s been ginned up is in part because of politics,” Obama said in an interview with CBS’ “60 Minutes.” “I think she’d be the first to acknowledge that maybe she could have handled the original decision better and the disclosures more quickly.”

Obama added that he was not initially aware that Clinton was using the private server, which was kept at her home in Chappaqua, N.Y., as opposed to a professional data center. When CBS’ Steve Kroft pointed out that the Obama administration has prosecuted people for having classified material on their private computers, the president said he didn’t get the impression there was an intent to “hide something or to squirrel away information.”

The FBI is currently investigating whether classified information that passed through Clinton’s server was mishandled. Last week, the bureau extended its investigation to obtaining data from a second tech company, which had been hired by another firm in 2013 to back up data on Clinton’s server. (Read more from “This Is What Obama Is Blaming the Outcry From Hillary Clinton’s Email ‘Mistake’ on” HERE)

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Hillary Clinton: ‘I’m Really Not Even a Human Being’

Hillary Clinton declared in a new interview that she is a robot, implying that humanity should despair and bend to her superior A.I. will by voting for her in the 2016 election.

The shocking admission came during an interview with the BuzzFeed podcast Another Round, in which an astute interviewer noted that the Democrat presidential candidate did not sweat during the interview. Other reporters and Clinton associates have remarked upon Clinton’s remarkable ability to not sweat, even when working the rope line on a hot Iowa day. “I don’t mean sweat because you’re nervous,” said host Tracy Clayton. “I just mean physically. I’m genuinely curious what your deodorant is.”

After some banter over the thermostat and the traditional One Weird Fact about Clinton (“The weirdest thing about me is that I don’t sweat”), BuzzFeed foolishly suggested that Clinton was a robot . . .

HILLARY CLINTON: You guys are the first to realize that I’m really not even a human being. I was constructed in a garage in Palo Alto a very long time ago. People think that, you know, Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, they created it. Oh no. I mean, a man whose name shall remain nameless created me in his garage.

ANOTHER ROUND: Are there more of you?

(Read more from “Hillary Clinton: ‘I’m Really Not Even a Human Being'” HERE)

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Hillary Nightmare: Gennifer’s Back!

For the first time since Hillary Clinton announced her candidacy for president, Bill Clinton’s notorious mistress for 12 years, Gennifer Flowers, is now speaking out, calling Hillary’s bid to run in part on women’s issues “a joke.”

In the wide-ranging interview on the popular Sunday night program “Aaron Klein Investigative Radio,” Flowers further accused Hillary of being “an enabler that has encouraged him (Bill) to go out and do whatever he does with women.”

“She always got things on the back of her husband. … I think it’s a joke that she would run on women’s issues” . . .

Flowers used the interview to drop a few new bombshells, including revealing for the first time she has something incriminating on Bill Clinton locked in a safety deposit box; mysterious contents she said the Clintons know she possesses and that she has used to ensure her “safety.”

Flowers said she believes the issue of Bill Clinton’s former lovers is a legitimate discussion that should return for Hillary’s 2016 campaign. (Read more from “Hillary Nightmare: Gennifer’s Back!” HERE)

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There Is No Real Hillary Clinton

In the last day, Hillary Clinton announced her opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a deal that she will likely claim she only championed as part of her duties as secretary of state and that, in reality, she just as likely helped to create. She probably opposes it as strongly as she did NAFTA, which her husband created, and which she and Barack Obama campaigned against in 2008 and then proceeded to do nothing about. This is a habit. She probably is doing this because, in spite of a career in which neoliberalism got her this far, Bernie Sanders is starting to eat her lunch among labor voters, progressives and anyone who is not a big-money donor. You know, the people who vastly outnumber the latter and do things en masse, like vote.

In the last 10 days, once-prospective Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy praised the House Select Committee on Benghazi for doing what it was always — only — ever intended to do. “Everybody thought Hillary Clinton was unbeatable, right?” he told Sean Hannity. “But we put together a Benghazi special committee. A select committee. What are her numbers today? Her numbers are dropping.” McCarthy, who possesses both the look and adroitness of a personal injury attorney, accidentally disclosed that the allegedly most vital investigative body in American government is a petty leverage tool as sound as a plastic spork trying to pry open the pull tab on a fruit cup. Telling the truth only cost McCarthy his shot at a job doing the opposite.

But while the former issue addresses an agreement that covers 40 percent of the world’s total trade and represents a volte-face by a candidate critics accuse of having zero core beliefs beyond electability, the latter is what will make headlines forever. A trade deal, the future of American labor and the shrinking manufacturing base of this country is something for “unserious” social-democrat whackos like Bernie Sanders to talk about.

When we talk about Benghazi, we’re talking about who Hillary Clinton really is. And that’s something we’ll be forced to talk about until November 2016, with cynical political imprecations like murderer, with sad-sack troll jobs from dead-enders like Rand Paul, and with the inevitable Hillary Clinton response. A new declaration of authenticity — whatever that means, in a contest among people who think it’s normal to believe they can and should lead the free world — a new field trip to middle America, maybe a video with grandmothers, as if it say, “I, Hillary Clinton, recognize that those are grandmothers” . . .

More power to you if you remember what is being investigated about the September 11, 2012, attack on Benghazi, and what was found. Four Americans are dead, and the truth of their loss for friends and loved ones probably represents the alpha and omega of any objective sense of what happened: Everything else is a mishmash of fuckups, bad estimates and, later, bad spokesperson responses crushed under a midden of horseshit and committee minutes. Embassies request additional temporary security all the time, and most of the time nothing happens. In the past, when bad things happened, we responded with something like political proportionality, despite death tolls that would send today’s conservatives reeling and calling for the smelling salts. This time, the bad thing happened in Libya. And while one might want to blame the Republican-controlled House for cutting $243 million from America’s embassy security budget, that’s almost as much of a political football propelled by hindsight as anything the Republican Party has done since. (Read more from “There Is No Real Hillary Clinton” HERE)

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Hillary Clinton Tells a Fishy Story About Being ‘Fired’ From Job in Alaska

Through the course of her 20-plus years in national politics, Hillary Clinton has on many occasions told a tale about the time in the summer of 1969 that she worked briefly at a fishery in Valdez, Alaska after graduating from Wellesley College.

The story appears to have a couple of purposes. It makes Clinton seem tough, gritty and humble — the kind of story that a person with political aspirations would like to tell. Clinton also uses it as the perfect analogy to a career in Beltway politics.

“Best preparation for being in Washington that you can possibly imagine,” she told David Letterman during an interview in 2007.

But the story has morphed over the years, from its first iteration in 1992 when the then-first lady of Arkansas claimed she was fired from her job because she confronted her fishmonger boss over the putrid state of the salmon she was hired to gut to the version she shared during a question-and-answer session during a town hall on Monday . . .

Asked if she has ever been fired from a job, Clinton told voters in New Hampshire Monday that she was. (Read more from “Hillary Clinton Tells a Fishy Story About Being ‘Fired’ From Job in Alaska” HERE)

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Here’s the Ridiculous Thing Hillary Thinks Obama Is ‘Too Strict’ on

Hillary Clinton took a swing at President Barack Obama for being too strict on illegal immigrants. Clinton said, in an interview with Telemundo, that she would be less strict if she becomes president of the United States.

“I believe in comprehensive immigration reform. And it would include in my plan a path to citizenship, which I think is absolutely essential. That is the goal. But if we still are f– working toward it, fighting for it, then I want to do everything in my power not only to continue– the executive orders that– President Obama has put forth, D.A.P.A., and D.A.C.A., and the kinds of changes that he has made,” Clinton said in response to a question about how much further she’d go on executive action than Obama.

“But I want to do more on an individual basis by putting more resources, more personnel into the system to try to help as many people as possible get a different status. I will not be deporting parents. I will not be breaking up families. I will not be doing what we’ve seen too much of, which is tryin’ to, you know, make immigrants the scapegoat for everything that people are concerned about in the country.

“And the best way to do that is to build on what we have accomplished, keep fightin’ for comprehensive immigration reform, and then use the tools that exist for more individual determinations about how to keep more people who are hard working, contributing people in our country while we still– fight over the comprehensive immigration reform– plan.” (Read more from “Here’s the Ridiculous Thing Hillary Thinks Obama Is ‘Too Strict’ on” HERE)

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This Person From Hillary Clinton’s Past Has Vowed to ‘Haunt’ Her Through Campaign

Kathleen Willey, one of the women caught in the crossfire of alleged sexual harassment by former President Bill Clinton and what she characterizes as acts of intimidation to silence her, announced new plans to “haunt” Hillary Clinton throughout the 2016 presidential race and beyond.

During a radio interview Sunday, Willey delivered a message to Clinton: “I am going to be shadowing you every single place you go to remind people, especially young people, young women, college-aged students who don’t remember any of this. I want them to know all about this. Because once they do they are not going to be real proud of supporting her as the first women president.”

“I am going to haunt her everywhere she goes,” Willey stated of Clinton. “So she’s not going to get rid of me ever until she disappears.”

“And I have plans already for New Hampshire,” she said, referring to the Democratic Party presidential primaries . . .

The Clinton sex accuser used the interview to tease the October 13 publication of a new book by bestselling author Roger Stone entitled, “The Clintons’ War on Women,” for which Willey wrote the forward. (Read more from “This Person From Hillary Clinton’s Past Has Vowed to ‘Haunt’ Her Through Campaign” HERE)

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