Rekindle the Spirit of Independence by Legalizing Home Distilling
A modern legal battle challenges the federal ban on distilling alcohol at home—a favorite hobby of the Founding Fathers.

In 1791, a proud and hearty band of rabble-rousers in western Pennsylvania protested the first tax ever to be levied on a domestic product by America's new federal government—a tax on the sale of whiskey. Today, the Whiskey Rebellion is primarily remembered as one of the country's first populist uprisings—and one that presaged many future clashes between the American heartland and government elites.
However, debates over whether Alexander Hamilton's whiskey tax was a prudent revenue-raising scheme or an egregious instance of governmental overreach often overlook what was not in dispute during the rebellion. Namely, that Americans have a right to make their own liquor.
Just three years after George Washington was seeking to aggressively enforce his treasury secretary's tax, America's first president opened a distillery on his Mount Vernon estate. Washington would go on to operate one of the largest distilleries in America in his retirement years—and he was far from alone when it came to liquor-making Founding Fathers. Peers such as James Madison and Patrick Henry also operated distilleries on their Virginia plantations.
Home distilling was hardly contained to the slave-holding ruling class. As the Whiskey Rebellion itself showed, homemade liquor was most common on small backwoods farms in the western Appalachian regions of the country. It was nearly impossible for these farmers to get their harvested crops to large urban buying markets before they spoiled. But if they distilled those crops into a high-proof spirit, it not only lasted much longer but also vastly reduced the volume and weight of the goods being transported.
And so, America's tradition of home-distilled whiskey took off in earnest in the late 18th century (although the roots of homemade whiskey on American soil dates as far back as 1620 to the Berkeley Plantation on the James River). But what early citizens saw as a central part of their American birthright is now illegal in modern America.
Under federal law, home distilling is a felony violation punishable by up to five years in jail. While America's hardline stance on home distilling has long raised eyebrows among policy wonks and industry stakeholders—especially in light of home brewing being legalized in the late 1970s—it now has attracted the attention of the libertarian legal community. The implications go well beyond homemade hooch.
Earlier this year, the Buckeye Institute—in conjunction with the elite litigation team at BakerHostetler in Washington, D.C.—launched a lawsuit challenging America's home distilling ban, arguing that it violated the commerce clause of the United States Constitution.
The modern elastic interpretation of the commerce clause has been a thorn in the side of originalist legal scholars for decades. The advent of the commerce clause's inexorable expansion can be found in the 1942 case of Wickard v. Filburn, in which the Supreme Court ruled that wheat grown by a farmer for home consumption was still subject to federal government regulation under the commerce clause by virtue of it having an indirect effect on the greater national wheat market (under the convoluted theory that every homegrown bushel of wheat a farmer consumed was one less bushel he might buy on the open market).
In 2008, the commerce clause was stretched even further in Gonzales v. Raich when the Court upheld the federal government's power under the Controlled Substances Act to regulate the local cultivation and use of marijuana. The commerce clause's ever-expanding scope has allowed the federal government to subsume more and more of American life within its regulatory orbit. Since the Raich decision, libertarian and conservative legal scholars have been looking for a way to claw back the seemingly limitless contours of the commerce clause's reach.
Enter the federal prohibition on home distilling. The Buckeye Institute's client, John Ream, owns Trek Brewing in Newark, Ohio, and is equal parts entrepreneur and engineer. "About 15 years ago, [my] wife gave me a homebrew kit and I just fell in love with that," Ream told Reason. "I was an engineer by trade, so testing different things, trying different things, how different flavors come together, that really interested me."
Formerly an aerospace engineer, Ream opened Trek in 2018. While he now brews as an occupation, he would like to be able to distill as a hobby. "The natural step from [home brewing] is looking at distilling, since the start of the [brewing and distilling] processes are the same, but then you run into a roadblock when you learn that it's illegal," said Ream.
Unlike in Raich, where marijuana was a Schedule I substance under the Controlled Substances Act, the federal government does not have a comprehensive regulatory scheme in place for alcohol—which has largely been regulated at the state and local level since the repeal of Prohibition. As the Buckeye Institute argues in its legal briefs, if the federal government can ban home distilling, there will be no legal limiting principle to the commerce clause at all. The federal government could even be free to ban home gardening, home baking, or home-based employment.
While a commerce clause challenge will sidestep debates over the policy merits of home distilling, the rationale behind prohibiting home distillation is as shaky as the legal arguments. The most cited reason for banning home distilling is that the process can carry some risk—such as fire or explosions—if not handled properly.
Not only does this rationale ignore that we allow citizens to access everything from firearms to Fourth of July fireworks, but it also ignores data from countries like New Zealand, which legalized home distilling in 1996. New Zealand's government tracks nationwide deaths caused by residential fires and has not recorded a single incident of death or injury from home distilling. Further, they keep overall fire statistics, and since legalization, fires from home distilling have been far less common than fires from electric or gas stoves and cooktops.
"I'm an engineer by trade, I have a family, I have two boys, I'm not going to do anything that puts anyone in danger," said Ream.
John Ream is merely trying to do what generations of Americans have done before him, from the small farmers of rural Pennsylvania to the landed gentry of Virginia's line of Founding Fathers. If he succeeds, he might just save the U.S. Constitution along the way.
"Ultimately, this is what we feel is right," said Ream. "And so it's something we're proud to try to make happen."
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I'll give the article a B+ on distilling the subject down to its essence. (Waving the Chumby flag.)
You'll need to show the proof of your claim.
That's the spirit!
Call me old-fashioned, but this could lead to pour decisions.
Pour sarc!
But we need a sober perspective.
We have no proof sarc can do that.
Doesn't Sarc usually go for higher proof?
He couldn’t make heads or tails of it.
It’s a ginned up story.
It left me shaken, but not stirred.
The reticle real.y waters down the subject.
You guys didn't disappoint. Chumby would be proud.
How are the Democratic [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s] going to monopolize the energy sector if they can't even control backyard ethanol?
Plus if you make your own booze and consume it in your house, you're clearly affecting interstate commerce.
What if you're a POC? Only Kamala and Fani are allowed to prosecute them.
Type in "amazon distillery" to your Google and see tons of offerings!!! Lots of people are doing this... Shit just ends up being more random and arbitrary law enforcement bullshit... Might ass well outlaw nose-picking, because nose-picking affects the interstate commerce in booger-rags!
Stills are available on Amazon and perfectly legal, as long as you don’t use them for booze. And YouTube is full of videos of people in less-free countries making legal booze for anyone who wants to learn how. The problems happen when people share with their friends and word gets to someone in law enforcement, or worse they get good at it and try to sell it without paying taxes. That’s when they go away for a long time.
But legalizing home distilling could never kick off a craft spirits revolution like it did with homebrewing, because making it at home is not commercial. Just as the craft brew revolution was not kicked off by legalizing homebrewing because homebrewing is not commercial and was legalized by a Democrat.
What if Trump legalizes home distilling? That will most certainly kick off a craft spirits revolution because he’s a Republican! Just ask Jesse.
There are dozens of craft distilleries here in Denver. Two that are closer than the nearest grocery store. Combined with the slew of them in the mountains that bring their product down to the tasting rooms etc here. I'm sure the revenooers have regs re this or that (eg pot/batch stills v column/continuous stills), but it clearly doesn't strangle the growth of a really vibrant industry.
How many of them started off distilling at home? I'd venture to guess none, or none will admit to it. And what kind of imaginative spirits are they making? There are a few craft distilleries around here and all they make is expensive vodka.
I have no idea. Denver is mostly (like 70% of the city area) single family zoned so obviously distilleries there don’t get approved and the neighbors there are gonna be more assholey than getting a duplex approved or a ministore. But that’s a local obstacle not federal. Both the ones near me are in a light industrial commercial zone.
The products (in the tasting rooms at least) – whiskey, gin, rum, vodka, brandy with flavors ranging from adobo/cactus to lavender/fruits.
If there’s a threat, it comes from the big chain retail. Where those exist they kill shelf space for craft producers and the tasting/social vibe. CO had an odd post-prohibition restriction on retail. Limiting retail licenses to three outlets. Which meant a ton of momnpop retailers looking for something unique for their shelf space. It’s a reason CO became a big craft brewing state. The craft brewers are now in real trouble because of ballot initiatives (funded by chains and supported by the BigCo donor-class shitheads here at Reason) that made CO friendly for Safeway, Target, WalMart, Total etc. So far the distilleries are ok.
You've got a point about CO liquor laws being dumb.
Actually I support the old CO liquor laws before the recent change. Those enabled:
A ton of momnpop retailers with unique inventory and local purchasing so customers can get informed
The biggest liquor store in the world with a massive inventory from around the world precisely because they were limited to one outlet. Fuckload better than the chain shit.
Craft producers who have ways to step up their production in increments that they can manage their own growth
A state that for liquor is very unique. Not the same as every other cookie cutter state that wants federal laws to support their cookie cutter status quo.
Oh - and apparently liquor prices that are among the three lowest (Georgia and Kentucky are in the same range) for almost all 'national' brands + obviously a lot of choice of local brands.
I still think there would be more distillers making a greater variety of spirits if it was a legal hobby.
Well. Legalizing home distilling is a fucking nothing problem compared to legalizing more housing in residential areas.
Indeed it is such a nothing problem that I suspect the motives of any Reason author blowing smoke about what a problem it supposedly is in places far far away from me.
You mean Reason should be writing about what you feel is important, not this. How is that attitude any different from that of the MAGA crybabies who bitch and moan and throw insults at the author whenever tReason doesn’t cover what they feel to be important? Don’t be like them. They suck.
No, THEY suck. And so do you, drunken little bitch.
Don't worry. I will remain far more hostile to the Magamises clowns here than to Reason writers.
You seem to be missing the point of the article.
This holiday, Independence Day, celebrates the signing of The Declaration of Independence. When it was signed, distilling crops into liquor was as American as apple pie. The first president made whiskey.
Then, to pay off debt from the Revolutionary War, a temporary tax was levied on distilled spirits. It was on the production, and it was written in such a way as to only allow those who produce large quantities for sale to pay it, effectively making it illegal to do at home or on the farm. The article questions the constitutionality of the tax itself, and it’s right if you think about it.
Yes there are indeed more pressing issues in the country, like housing and inflation, but in principle this is an issue of independence.
So why not discuss it on Independence Day?
All while you steadfastly defend the people that make it illegal and infeasible to engage in their own distilling.
Seriously, fuck off you drunk bitch. Leave the discussions about liberty to those of us who truly believe in it.
We didn’t have zoning in 1776. And the largest city then was 35,000 – which wasn’t where home distilling was happening.
So I’m not going to accept the narrative here as anything relevant to today. It’s kind of like the silliness every Tgiving about the Pilgrims being Communist until they discovered private property and laissez faire capitalism. The whiskey rebellion is certainly an interesting story but that is about disparate taxation not home distilling
How many of them started off distilling at home? I’d venture to guess none,..
What else would have inspired someone to invest large sums of their own money into a new business without knowing if they had the skills or the passion for the craft?
Poor broken sarc. Lol.
It would be great if his liver would finally break and spare everyone his existence. Same with his spooning partner Jeffy and his heart/kidneys/pancreas/ skeleton.
"What if Trump legalizes home distilling? That will most certainly kick off a craft spirits revolution because he’s a Republican! Just ask Jesse."
This is called trolling, but it's okay when Sarc does it because he's very principled. Just ask him.
But remember, if Jesse punches back he will be a 'mean girl' and an 'asshole'.
Number one on the drunks list. Fotever and always. Two mentions before I even opened the article.
Must. Make. It. About. Trump!
Who here thinks sarc makes booze in his bathtub?
Takes too long for him. He'd never get a finished product before he tried drinking it.
While lying in it.
Bitters pre added.
If by ‘bathtub’ you mean the garbage can in that alley where he lives, then yes. And if by ‘booze’ you mean that he attempts to ferment his own piss, then also yes.
This is why we say you have TDS bad. No one in this entire thread up to this point, including the article author, mentioned Trump once. Then you dragged him into a Trump-less thread.
Legalizing homebrewing did not precipitate the craft brew revolution because craft brewing is commercial while homebrewing is not. Therefore we'd still have all the same microbrews that we have today if homebrewing was never legalized. So what if 90% of craft brewers started off as homebrewers? There is no connection between the two at all. How do we know this? Because homebrewing was legalized by a Democrat. Just ask Jesse.
Rent free in your head on 4th of July? Shit, im outta here.
Do you celebrate the 31st of October, last Thursday in November, or the 25th of December? No? Then why call this the 4th of July?
It’s Independence Day as in celebrating the signing of The Declaration of Independence, not a date on the calendar.
Shame on you.
Makes sense. However they wouldnt let me edit that comment anymore. Cuz that would be a bit TOO strategic. So theyre reluctant.
Didnt have to add shame on me.
Didn't have to tell me that fucknuts lives in my head, especially when you've never once said anything like that to him despite the fact that if I unmute him and search for 'sarc' he talks about me all the fucking time. Looks to me like you're a coward who is afraid to risk the wrath of the trolls.
LOL @ “unmute”.
Just hilarious at this point.
"despite the fact that if I unmute him and search for ‘sarc’ he talks about me"
Well, this one is a keeper.
Holiday drunk Sarcasmic is the gift that keeps on giving.
Notice both his mentions were before I even entered the thread. He even lies about his own fucking behaviors lol.
Awe, poor sarc got his feewins hurt.
You're already hammered. Damn boy, started early. Must be at a half million dollar lake house rental with people who can barely tolerate you.
It doesn’t matter how many links or articles I give you, you just know. No matter how wrong you are. You just know.
The boom started in the early 80s when states started giving permits for the craft beer sales. You know the thing that allows entry into market and increases of scale. You’ve been provided the evidence. But you have this weird desperation to hold Carter up as the most libertarian president ever. Part of the leftist reformation project of Carter. Despite starting the DoE and DoEd.
Just such a fucking weird windmill to tilt at when claiming not to be a leftist. Lol.
And as a lover of all forms of alcohol you should realize brewing at scale is different than brewing at home.
Right. It had nothing to do with homebrewers wanting to sell their brews. There was no connection at all.
Normally I wonder if you are dishonest or stupid. In this case there is no doubt at all that you’re a fucking moron.
Go stick a Roman candle up your ass, idiot.
Back on mute you go, attack Chihuahua. You can yip in silence.
Don’t look at me! 15 mins ago
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Mute User
LOL @ “unmute
Your love of intentional ignorance even when given evidence is only behind your love of reforming democrats.
It is amazing how you spend more time defending your ignorance than you spend trying to educate yourself. And you call others stupid lol.
Muting. Insults. Personal jibes.
You've hit your own trifecta today.
Tell you what —— you have my permission to mute me momentarily, then unmute me, so you can pretend I was a gray box.
Being fake muted is the new badge of honor here.
I hold the honor of “permamuted”. Except when he peeks, which is often.
Right. It had nothing to do with homebrewers wanting to sell their brews.
But somehow it’s different with distillers?
“Back on mute you go”
Narrator: “But it truth Sarc was too pleased by any attention, positive or negative, to actually mute him”
“You can yip in silence.”
You actually think if you mute Jesse, nobody else can read his posts, don’t you.
Sarc’s too drunk to comprehend a simple post.
You know what started me on my path to libertarianism?
The episode of Drew Carey where he fights city hall for the right to sell the beer him and the gang brew in his garage.
Do you think he and his gang would have had beer to sell, and fought for the right to sell it, if Carter had not legalized homebrewing?
Did laws allowing the commercial sale of craft brews pop up out of nowhere, or were they the result of homebrewers pressuring local governments to allow them to sell their beer?
But as you say above, distillers never started at home?
Seeing as the order Carter put in explicitly excluded sales….
Lol.
States were already expanding brewing licenses before Carter. It got a second boost in states under Reagan.
You've been given the history.
You continue to attribute sales to a regulation explicitly disallowing sales. It is amazing to watch.
I mean. Here is the graph. Oddly the explosion didn’t occur in 1978.
https://content.kegworks.com/hs-fs/hubfs/Imported_Blog_Media/brewery-count-2.gif?width=1125&height=958&name=brewery-count-2.gif
But your desperate need to prop up Carter is noted. Lol.
Never mind. If you give a reasoned answer you’ll be labeled as “on sarc’s side” and be a target for the trolls. So don’t worry about it.
Poor drunk and raging sarc.
Poor sarc.
Carter legalizing homebrewing was one of the few things he actually got right. Credit where it’s due.
Sales were a totally different animal and were actively opposed at all levels of government for a long time. My gut says that it was probably more on the Democrat side, but I can at least admit to my biases.
Sale of craft brew was legalized just a few years after homebrewing was legalized. I see a direct cause and effect relationship, meaning that would not have happened had homebrew still been illegal. To me it isn’t a partisan issue. Though sadly for some everything is partisan, and they are incapable of giving credit where it’s due.
Enough of this nonsense. Time to go blow some shit up.
Happy Independence Day!
I heard shooting fireworks off your head is the new hot. Give it a try!
Psst. The chart is right above.
It was a coffee brew if I recall. Jolt beer? Too lazy to look it up.
Buzz Beer. Brewed with coffee.
"Despite starting the DoE and DoEd." Not to defend Carter, who to my best recollection never saw an intrusive or overbearing government action he didn't like, but neither of these was a new function. Carter just rearranged them. DoE traces back to the Atomic Energy Comission through several intermediate agencies. DoEd was split off from HEW (Health, Education, and Welfare), which was formed in the 1950's by merging six separate bureaus, including the Office of Education.
Tell me Sarc, how much space in your head do you give Jesse rent-free?
[Note to reason innovators: you guys are incredibly smart and forward thinking, holy hell i feel blinded by the light of your genius. Like its bad, real bad. However, if youre giving someone a way to edit their comment for a limited amount of time, you should consider also giving them a way to DELETE their comments during that time frame, even if they would only be allowed to do so reluctantly and strategically]
Should add a breathalyzer option for sarc as well to know when he should stop posting.
We would never hear from him again.
I can live with that.
Or without him, for that matter.
Is there a breathalyzer out there that can handle that?
What do they use on satellites to analyze solar wind particles? Those have to be tough.
Can't they just hook up a 3g signal from the one in his car to ping when it goes active?
I would go the other way and disable the edit button once someone has replied.
Doesn't solve the problem, dipshit. You load comments, and two minutes later click REPLY, not knowing if the comment has already been edited. What it would have to do is redisplay the original comment and lock it, and then if someone gives up and closes the browser window, it never gets unlocked.
What if they limited how many times you can mute/unmute people? That would really fuck your game up.
Not really. He doesn't mute.
https://x.com/Slatzism/status/1808578756312760701?t=0O0DtGtyrLi7mYE0sqyheQ&s=19
"multiculturalism is when food" is a line that demonstrates how out-of-touch shitlibs are with the policies they advocate for. they’re sitting in their palace, totally perplexed as to why the commoners are rioting.
think “let them eat cake” but instead it’s “let them eat curry.”
[Link]
From food trucks.
https://x.com/EndWokeness/status/1808742588649758790?t=YaxjAYGNnTExHAWODgsVZA&s=19
Huffington Post says the Biden campaign should deceive the American public into thinking Biden is healthy by using AI.
Yes, they actually published this.
[Link]
A beautiful complement to the New York Times article The First Amendment Is Out of Control
They certainly aren't keeping their plans a secret anymore.
This is why every political persuasion need to get the Democrats out of power. People always say "Giant Douche vs Turd Sandwich", but it's not. It's Giant Douche and Turd Sandwich versus the forces of hell.
Everything they accuse Trump of wanting to do is straight projection of what they already think/want/or do. This goes for the people that uncritically repeat their bullshit too.
Oh yeah? BUT TRUMP!!!! ARRRGGHHHH!!!
— sarc
What is the WaPo, chopped birdcage liner? "Democracy Dies in Darkness" isn't just their slogan, it's their plan.
Jeff's unbiased media of record.
https://apnews.com/article/biden-age-election-debate-trump-7c366fda83a697265d9ecc77e8a32fd1?utm_campaign=TrueAnthem&utm_medium=AP&utm_source=Twitter
Biden at 81: Often sharp and focused but sometimes confused and forgetful
Sarc, you have your new Joe talking point. Go forth.
CNN says corporate media could have been more honest, pivots to blaming conservatives for pointing out the obvious forcing journalists to lie.
https://www.cnn.com/2024/07/02/media/biden-mental-fitness/index.html
Sharp and focused within normal parameters, during working hours (10AM to 4PM).
It's okay. The room is packed with adults. Nobody knows exactly who they are but they've got everything under control.
The president is now a team effort, as always intended!
Kinda like a Central Committee?
Is that one of the adults cackling?
I often wonder what Jeff would have thought of Pravda under Stalin.
Most honest paper in russia.
I mean, it's right there in the name: pravda = truth.
The new definition of often is the antonym of the old definition of rare.
Happy Independence Day to everyone who isn't a Biden or Trump supporter!
What about those who say they don’t defend Biden and then cry when he is attacked?
sarcasmic 2 years ago
Flag Comment
Mute User
What about the blind hatred for Biden in these comments? Seems like a majority of the people here start the day with the “Fuck Joe Biden” prayer. Why is that warranted while anyone who says “Boo” about Trump is accused of Trump Derangement Syndrome?
Sarc ♥'s Joe.
So not you.
https://x.com/EPoe187/status/1808772967779721265?t=egMySj2TrCNpxdOmAPbOSg&s=19
Progressivism rises like primordial life from the swamp of equalitarianism. The assumption is races are the same so equal rights will lead to equal outcomes. When that failed, esoteric theories about systemic racism were forward and the focus moved to equal outcomes.
So long as the big lie of racial sameness permeates mainstream society and the intelligentsia, some variant of progressivism will flourish. How else explain the vast disparities between blacks and whites? The way to end woke is to end the lie.
[Link]
The assumption is races are the same so equal rights will lead to equal outcomes.
Not originally. When they started off, Progressives were at the forefront of the eugenics movement. Then some guy in Germany took that school of thought to its logical conclusion and it fell out of favor.
Except that many on the left continued to support Hitler.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/when-democratic-senators-sided-with-american-nazis-to-stop-hollywood-from-taking-on-hitler
Major newspapers at the time were against entry into the war.
And now we see them openly supporting the same behaviors with Free Palestine.
But they changed right buddy?
Hitler wasn't as bad as Lenin, Stalin, or Mao.
Fascists aren't as bad as communists.
They are both bad. They are both forms of socialism. I'll keep calling both out. I'll keep pointing out both are socialists. I'll keep attacking the left attempting to separate the two so they can put one as far right.
Thanks though.
Hitler wasn’t as bad as …..
How not to win friends and influence people.
Hitler was a progressive.
https://x.com/epkaufm/status/1808764715981513159?t=aMDwNeZ7xNp-j6q4CufitA&s=19
1/ Woke won’t fade away because it is rooted in left-liberalism, the basis of modern western culture.
A thread on my new book Taboo (The Third Awokening in North America), released today: [link]
2/ Woke is a useful analytical concept that describes a distinct phenomenon in the world: the making sacred of historically marginalized race, gender and sexual minority groups. Woke people are emotionally attached to minorities and cold toward majorities.
3/ Despite firms cutting back on DEI and less talk of ‘white privilege’ in the media, woke cultural socialism is not going away. Why? Because young people are a lot more woke. In 20 years they will be the median voter. Generational turnover will mainstream woke.
[Poll]
4/ Woke is not new. It was created around 1965 when Black Americans were sacralized in polite society. This is the ‘Big Bang’ of our moral order, the sun around which it revolves, as Shelby Steele - a black conservative writer who lived through it - recognized. The die was cast.
5/ As in the Civil Rights Movement, modern liberals, not cultural Marxists, led the way. White guilt, compassion toward blacks and fear of the white majority were the engines, not a desire to overthrow capitalism. This spawned Affirmative Action, the beginning of DEI.
6/ Woke is based on stories that drive the moral emotions of “majorities bad, minorities good.” This creates DEI, or cultural socialism. First, outcomes must be equal by race and sex. Second, minorities must not experience emotional harm. Anything less is sacrilege.
7/ To translate, “Diversity, Equity” means equal outcomes, “Inclusion” means emotional harm protection, for sacred groups. Jonathan Haidt terms these the equality & care/harm moral foundations. “DE” discriminates against whites & men, “I” censors free speech.
8/ Because this ideology emerges from emotional attachments & stories, it spreads from ‘below’, infiltrating institutions like universities, schools & the bureaucracy more than elected government.
9/ Woke is empathizing, emotional and emergent, not a top-down intellectual system like Marxism. More like pentecostalism than Catholicism, it produces Protestant-style awakenings. We are in our Third Awokening, not our first. Woke is a continuation, not a deviation.
10/ Because woke spreads from below, it must be resisted in the institutions. One way of doing this is to mobilize people, but taboos around race, sexuality and gender enable small numbers of DEI speech police to quash resistance in organizations.
[Poll]
11/ Even so, progressive illiberalism is not mainly about a spiral of silence. Most left-liberals genuinely believe in DEI initiatives like mandatory diversity statements and ‘decolonizing’ race/sex quotas for authors on reading lists.
[Poll]
12/ Since woke is centred in elite institutions bound by its taboos, only elected government – the one institution voters control - can neutralize its power. This means enforcing political neutrality in public bodies, schools, university administrations & monopoly tech firms.
13/ The public school curriculum is crucial. This reinforces the ideology of equal outcomes and emotional safety. National sins should only be taught alongside sins of non-Europeans (Aztec, Comanche, Ottoman, etc). Woke bias is warping our historical consciousness.
[Poll]
14/ 2 in 3 voters are anti-woke in the UK, US & Canada. This is an open goal which conservative parties need to focus on, raising the profile of culture war issues. Only when the cost to the left is high can moderate leftists like James Carville gain the upper hand over the woke.
15/ Libertarians who think the market will solve all problems, and government is the enemy, are useful idiots for the cultural revolution. Most sectors are subject to monopoly effects. Devolving power away from elected government places it in institutions the woke left controls.
16/ The culture war is not a campus sideshow but a fight for the basis of our civilization. What will it be: truth, freedom, excellence & cohesion, or equal outcomes & emotional harm protection?
17/ The culture war is not just about culture. Woke taboos make it impossible to address crime, immigration, falling educational standards, minority achievement, homelessness, military & police recruitment, polarization and other concrete problems.
18/ This is less about winning minds – it’s easy to refute woke - as winning the subconscious hearts that drive people. We need to reconfigure our emotional regime, creating new narratives to lower the volume on woke’s sacred categories while raising it on others.
19/ Conservatives & classical liberals need a moral argument to match the woke “be kind.” As in the Cold War, this means talking about wealth, freedom & human flourishing as moral imperatives. Cultural socialism, like economic socialism, stifles & immiserizes. It shrinks the pie.
20/ A post-woke vision foregrounds resilience over victimhood, focusing on all aspects of human flourishing. It seeks to optimize, not maximize, diversity, equality and inclusion. Today’s woke cultural socialism leads only to division and stagnation.
Modern liberals ARE cultural Marxist.
Jeff and sarc outrage alert.
https://thefederalist.com/2024/07/02/counting-the-most-horrific-crimes-allegedly-committed-by-illegals-who-crossed-the-border-under-bidens-watch/
Since the Democrat took office during fiscal year 2021, aliens illegally residing in the U.S. have been convicted of more than 66,000 crimes, including murder, manslaughter, assault, battery, domestic violence, burglary, robbery, larceny, theft, fraud, driving under the influence, illicit drug possession and trafficking, illegal possession of weaponry, and a slew of sexual offenses like rape.
.
Before Biden, nearly two-thirds of federal arrests involved border-breaking suspects. Now, after more than 10 million crossings under the Democrat’s catch-and-release regime, Americans have endured close to four calendar years of avoidable heartache because foreign criminals who face little to no scrutiny from border authorities are staying.
Thank God it is so rare.
https://x.com/theblaze/status/1808590579691106815?t=i2xJY0InOSLVQCQwWb-eAg&s=19
Illegal alien allegedly butchers girlfriend in Texas. Jail records list his race as 'white.'
[Pic, link]
They did that with the douchebag that shot up the Allen outlet mall a couple of years ago too.
Would be interesting to see accurate crime demographics
That would be fake news. Among many helpful media tautologies:
White people are bad. Bad people are white. QED.
Don't worry, these people are "accurately" tracking crimes committed by Illegal Aliens...
https://x.com/UnbiasedCrime/status/1781068981035786356
This account has a lot of similar examples.
Joe's 2 point plan to fight inflation. Sue grocery stores, spend more money on SNAP.
https://x.com/POTUS/status/1808470746559123953
Sue those grocery stores until they are out of business! That will show them.
Was it Oakland who sued a store that was closing in bankruptcy?
It Was In A Food Desert!
Can you have bread lines in a food desert? Asking for this crazy guy with white hair.
It's a San Francisco bill. No idea if it passed.
The federal prohibition of home distilling originated as a temporary tax to pay off Revolutionary War debt.
‘Nothing lasts longer than a temporary government program.’ –Ronald Reagan
That’s got to be the oldest temporary government action.
https://x.com/AuronMacintyre/status/1808682323225030683?t=6yiIDmXGlAIWql89sz6Dmw&s=19
Those crime stats aren’t going to cook themselves
[Link]
This would have been an appropriate reply to Jesse's post just above, but alas
https://x.com/NormieUtah/status/1808685614218580125?t=Nl0epUT2ij6Km2_wdA-y8g&s=19
Utah does the exact same thing for our illegal immigrant criminals from South America.
Hispanics who commit crimes are white.
Hispanics who are victims of crimes and applying for college are “people of color”.
[Table]
https://x.com/Micaheadowcroft/status/1808581469201371157?t=vMmFPSpXEMku94D1l2n2dg&s=19
A Peter Thiel point on this I return to often is that the settlers who became Americans in the 19th century were—for most intents and purposes—dead to the Old World.
Today, thanks to communication and transportation tech, migrants never have to fully leave home psychologically.
[Link]
https://x.com/AuronMacintyre/status/1808676992406999108?t=eGue5dxEgJNLpdrXP9xk7A&s=19
The Total State has no choice but to rip the mask off
[Link]
https://x.com/extradeadjcb/status/1808877670261723598?t=kgQEEM6ma6L9mVJltzeErA&s=19
Freedom of association is fundamentally a property right - the idea that people ought to be able to hold property in common & decide who uses it & how
Homeless encampments are an assertion by the state that citizens have no rights to the streets of the cities they pay for
[Link]
Don't tell JFree that.
But do feel free to take a dump on his front porch. He's declared it your right.
The only unmasked and I vaccinated people he supports.
Make your own booze?
You know the powers that be will never tolerate that because they would not be able to tax or license home made liquor.
If anything, there might even be a crack down on this idea along with SWAT team invasions, a network of informants, fines, jail time, etc.
But we should expect this kind of crack down since we lost most of our freedoms decades ago.
Now do beer.
Apparently you’ve already done about 8 today.
Is colt 45 considered to be beer?
https://x.com/Partisan_O/status/1808822350382596100?t=9-45Se-LJ-c7QGSU4UppiA&s=19
We Americans can’t forget that our independence didn’t ultimately hang on Jefferson’s eloquence but on the nameless rabble who captured Fort Ticonderoga, liberated Boston, and braved the winter cold at Valley Forge.
To the fighters, Happy Independence Day
Legalize home poppy cultivation and harvesting of raw opium.
Fun fact: it's legal to grow opium poppies if you don't know what they are.
Works for me. Home brewing is legal, home distilling of spirits, home growing marijuana all should be legal. I don't care if you want to grow mushrooms or make you own meth. As long as it for personal use and you are not selling it, I don't care.
I find the argument that home distilling is dangerous silly. At any home supply store, you can buy a propane grill that is just as dangerous as any still. Both need to be used as intended and as instructed.
Why not be able to sell it, slaver?
I bet he hates bake sales.
If you want to sell it there is the opportunity. Get a license and get a business plan. There are very few businesses that you can run out of your home and there are reasons for that. How would you feel if you neighbor told you he is planning on making and selling bacon flavored beer and he will be raising some pigs in his backyard.
Must have government permission slips….
Yes. That pretty common for most of the things we do in this country.
Like on this date in 1776?
Why do we think you would have been defending the King and his servants?
A couple of pot belly pigs is a perfectly reasonable way to raise bacon at home.
Why would I care if my neighbor had pigs in his yard? He’s already had chickens, bees, and marijuana.
It is more dangerous if you are trying to hide it. Poor ventilation during distillation can lead to fires. Good ventilation can lead to getting caught.
https://x.com/PpollingNumbers/status/1808851848012484900?t=lTwrWk2R-KKSTEeD2qPcrg&s=19
#New Patriotism poll
GOP
Very Patriotic - 62%
Somewhat - 33%
Not very patriotic - 3%
Not patriotic - 2%
Dem
Very Patriotic - 28%
Somewhat - 43%
Not very patriotic - 18%
Not patriotic - 12%
YouGov
Beer is fine, but I heard that Samuel Adams guy was an insurrectionist.
And his beer is overrated.
I thought she changed her name to Samantha Adams?
Happy “Fuck the Crown” Day, ya filthy animals.
https://x.com/Sarcasmcat24/status/1808905175450419504?t=hbyGaS9VVxZktA5OGE6vAQ&s=19
Can’t put my finger on it, but something is missing?
[Pic]
Sarc and Lying Jeffy get an erection:
“While we are enjoying Independence Day, Steve Bannon, Peter Navarro, and the J6ers are behind bars
Never forget the stakes
Independence is not guaranteed”
https://x.com/JackPosobiec/status/1808862112824820056
Not only does this rationale ignore that we allow citizens to access everything from firearms to Fourth of July fireworks
"2A guarantees my right to make bathtub gin."
That's a new one.
…that we allow citizens to access everything…
That’s not really how it works.
I consider home distilling performance art and that falls under the first amendment.
Between the US's puritanical streak, campaign contributions and tax revenues, small wonder legalisation has been resisted...
Didn't fucktard Alex Hamilton conspire with Robert Morris, private funder of the American revolution, to buy up paper scrip at pennies on the dollar, and then get legislation passed that required the new federal government to redeem scrip at full face value?
Insider trading has a long tradition.
And more germane to the story, Hamilton wanted to lead an army to crush the tax rebellion in Pennsylvania, from the farmers who didn't want to pay a tax on... whiskey.
Ultimately George Washington had to lead the army himself, to prevent Hamilton from going all Napolean Bonaparte on the new country.
Seems like an odd choice for the hero of a Broadway musical. Unless you are a progressive elitist.
That everyone assumes home distilling reflects the government's control of commerce. I thank Mr. Dieterle for pointing out it's another freedom stolen from us.
IMHO, it's one of the unenumerated freedoms to which the Ninth Amendment tells us, we have. Another unenumerated freedom is the freedom to defend your life which is unimaginable to me, but a lot of politicians don't think we have that either.