Project 2025 Is No Match for MAGA Dysfunction
Trump promised to hire "only the best people," yet his presidential plans were repeatedly thwarted by his staff. Will a second term be different?

If any two beliefs are shared by both critics and admirers of former President Donald Trump, they are these: His whims were frequently hamstrung by the people who surrounded him during his first term in office, and that won't be allowed to happen again.
Trump's victory in 2016 appeared to surprise his campaign as much as anyone. He boasted during the campaign that he hires "only the best people," but that was easier said than done. Bereft of institutional backing, with no serious plans for a postelection transition, the 45th president had no choice but to turn to the "Beltway establishment" to staff his administration. "When I first got to Washington," he lamented in April to Time, "I knew very few people."
Trump was supposed to be a repudiation of "Conservatism, Inc."—not just in tenor but in substance. Out were the commitments to limited government and free trade, the insistence on fiscal belt tightening and entitlement reform, and the largely sunny orientation toward immigrants associated with previous Republican leaders such as former House Speaker Paul Ryan. In were hardball politics that pulled no punches, minced no words, and had no qualms about a "muscular" state that interferes at will in people's lives.
But Trump had trouble getting the rest of the governing apparatus to line up behind him. Unfavorable court rulings bookended his presidency, overturning his Muslim travel ban in 2017 and rejecting his election fraud claims in 2021, with other losses along the way. After he left office, the conservative America First Policy Institute released a report complaining that "career bureaucrats resist[ed] Trump Administration policies" by withholding information, slow-walking priorities, and otherwise refusing to carry out work that didn't align with their ideological preferences.
Worse, Trump's own advisers and appointees often seemed to be working at cross-purposes. "His White House was hastily staffed by a mix of underqualified true believers, opportunistic hacks and experienced but disloyal swamp creatures who colluded with journalists and permanent bureaucrats to undermine the president's populist agenda," wrote Sam Adler-Bell in The New York Times in January, summarizing the MAGA view. "The solution, then, should be simple: Find, vet and train the right people, and everything will be different."
And so, almost immediately after Trump left office in January 2021, conservatives in Washington began mobilizing to prepare for his return.
The conservative Heritage Foundation has been releasing presidential policy blueprints, known as Mandate for Leadership, for decades. This time around, under the "Project 2025" banner, it announced a plan to supplement its policy work with a personnel database: a "conservative LinkedIn" that would "provide an opportunity for rock-solid conservatives to place themselves in contention for roles in the next administration," the think tank explained.
Meanwhile, veterans of Trump's first term launched the aforementioned America First Policy Institute, a rival group with much the same mission. Similar entities have been proliferating and expanding ever since: the Conservative Partnership Institute (led by former South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint), American Moment (which focuses on identifying Trump-friendly young conservatives), the Society for American Civic Renewal (a spinoff of the Claremont Institute, home to attorney John Eastman, who is currently under indictment for helping Trump attempt to overturn the 2020 election), a new Association of Republican Presidential Appointees, and on and on.
A general telos unites many of these groups: to ensure, if Trump wins again, that his vision for America won't be stymied by personnel who don't fully embrace it. As Paul Dans, the director of Heritage's Project 2025, put it on C-SPAN, "It's incumbent on us to get the right people and make sure they have the right ethos."
That strategy was on display in July with Trump's selection of Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance as his running mate. The pick stood in contrast to 2016, when Trump chose then–Indiana Gov. Mike Pence to balance the ticket and calm any misgivings that evangelical Christians and other traditional conservatives might have had about voting for a philandering TV star. Today, the only truly important qualification is loyalty. After the 2020 election, Pence refused an order from Trump to interfere with Congress' certification of Joe Biden's victory. Vance, a power-hungry populist who once mused to a friend that Trump might be "America's Hitler," later said publicly that he can be counted on to do what his predecessor would not.
This explosion of activity has caused agita in Democratic circles and among the press, and there are a number of real causes for concern in these developments. Yet a clear-eyed analysis of the situation offers at least one source of comfort: Many of the things that prevented Trump from putting his worst impulses into action during his first term would likely do the same in a second one.
Be Afraid
The last public address Tucker Carlson gave before Fox News ousted him in April 2023 was a keynote speech at a dinner celebrating Heritage's 50th anniversary. Hailing Carlson as a hero, Kevin Roberts, the foundation's president, noted afterward that "if things go south for you at Fox News, there's always a job for you at Heritage."
Carlson by that time had earned a reputation for dabbling in conspiracy theories, racially tinged and otherwise, and questioning the free markets that Heritage had long claimed to defend. His appearance at the gala, alongside other changes then afoot at the think tank, caused many observers to wonder what in the world had happened to the once-staid Heritage Foundation.
I spoke with multiple people formerly associated with Heritage, from research fellows to senior staff. They painted a picture of an organization that has, in the 14 years since launching its lobbying arm, Heritage Action for America, come to care less about getting conservative policies into law and more about getting friendly Republicans into power. During the Trump era, that has increasingly meant defending the 45th president and attacking his enemies, full stop, no matter what.
Standing by Trump after the events of January 6, 2021, was apparently a bridge too far for some Heritage insiders. Then-President Kay Coles James and then–Executive Vice President Kim Holmes announced their resignations in March of that year. Many more departures would follow—some voluntary, others less so.
In contrast, Roberts, who succeeded James in late 2021, has seemed unbothered by Trump's continued insistence that the 2020 vote was stolen. Asked in a January interview with The New York Times whether he believes Biden won that election, he was quick to say "no." This, mind you, was after Trump declared that "a Massive Fraud of this type and magnitude allows for the termination of all rules, regulations, and articles, even those found in the Constitution."
Heritage under Roberts has embraced a decidedly authoritarian rhetorical style. "The conservative movement increasingly knows what time it is in America," one staffer wrote in a blog post about Project 2025. "More and more of our politicians are willing to use the government to achieve our vision, because the neutrality of 'keeping the government out of it' will lose every time to the left's vast power."
"This is our moment to demand that our politicians use the power they have," Roberts told The American Conservative last year. "This is the moment for us to demand of companies, whether they're Google, or Facebook, or Disney, that you listen to us, rather than ram down our throats and into our own families all of the garbage that you've been pushing on us. This is our time to demand that you do what we say. And it's glorious."
More recently, the Heritage president said on the War Room podcast that "we are in the process of the second American Revolution, which will remain bloodless if the left allows it to be"—a remark one longtime conservative foundation leader described to me as "grotesque and dangerous" and evidence that Roberts "lacks the judgment and maturity to lead the Heritage Foundation or any other institution in our movement."
Offered a chance to clarify, Roberts passed along a statement asserting that Americans "are committed to peaceful revolution at the ballot box. Unfortunately, it's the Left that has a long history of violence, so it's up to them to allow a peaceful transfer of power." It made no mention of January 6.
Even sharp departures from positions that Heritage has championed for decades don't seem to faze Roberts. At the 2022 National Conservatism Conference, he astonished onlookers by proclaiming that "I come not to invite national conservatives to join our conservative movement but to acknowledge the plain truth that Heritage is already part of yours." Though the Heritage mission statement lists "free enterprise," "limited government," and "individual freedom" as core values, national conservatism seeks to concentrate power at the national level and is comfortable with many government interventions into the economy, such as industrial subsidies and tariffs.
Admittedly, some responses to the policy components of Project 2025 have been overwrought. Opponents claim the agenda would limit access to contraception, for example—verbiage that suggests a desire to throw up legal barriers to the purchase or use of birth control. What it actually says is that a conservative president should allow religious organizations to opt out of paying for contraceptives and not force employers to cover "potential abortifacient" drugs, two pre–Trump GOP views supported by many if not most Americans. The bulk of the program is just this sort of run-of-the-mill Reaganism: deregulation, welfare and entitlement reform, "drill, baby, drill," etc.
Yet there are disquieting aspects of Project 2025, and of Heritage leadership's broader decision to cozy up to hardline anti-liberal elements on the right. This summer's National Conservatism Conference, where Roberts also spoke, included sessions repudiating the idea of separation of church and state; promoting "mass deportations" as necessary to "decolonize America"; calling on Republican officials to criminally prosecute their political opponents ("unfortunately, we're going to have to use banana republic means," warned the former George W. Bush administration lawyer John Yoo); and supporting laws "governing the internal affairs of corporations" to ensure they're run in accordance with a right-wing understanding of the common good.
The latest Mandate for Leadership also departs from prior iterations by taking a Trumpier approach to immigration (proposing "the civil arrest, detention, and removal of immigration violators anywhere in the United States, without warrant where appropriate") and wavering on international trade.
If it looks as if the contemporary Heritage Foundation has become primarily a vehicle for ensuring Trump's will is realized, whatever that will might be at a given moment, Roberts doesn't seem to disagree. In the same New York Times interview where he refused to say that Biden's election was legitimate, he described Heritage's role as "institutionalizing Trumpism."
That switch from standing for a set of principles, regardless of who espouses them, to standing for a candidate, regardless of his principles, has put Heritage in bed with some unsavory characters, from Steve Bannon to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.
At an institutional level, consider the Bull Moose Project, a startup run by edgy young activists with a history of posting such statements as "White lives matter" and "Libertarians contribute nothing of use to the conservative movement." In 2023, Heritage sponsored the Bull Moose Leadership Summit even after critics pointed out that one of the group's executives had proudly defended "blood and soil" nationalism and allied himself with the antisemitic influencer Nick Fuentes. (Veep hopeful Vance was an advisory board member for American Moment, another sponsor of the event.*)
What was the Bull Moose worldview that a Roberts-led Heritage was keen to bolster? "National populism is the future of the Right. All other competing philosophies will be eliminated," tweeted former Florida state Rep. Anthony Sabatini beside a photo of himself with fellow summit attendees. Or as former Bull Moose staffer Gabe Guidarini said at a different conference a few months later, "We have to build a conservative movement that doesn't shy away from achieving victory by any means necessary." Behold the will to power.
After Fox sent Carlson packing, Roberts released a statement claiming that "no one in America has demonstrated more courage in speaking truth to power than Tucker" and that "the entire Heritage family is deeply upset." A year later, after Carlson traveled to Russia and then released a series of bizarre propaganda videos glorifying life under Vladimir Putin, Reason asked Heritage if it wished to distance itself from its onetime keynote speaker. The think tank did not respond. But in June, Roberts announced that he would appear with Carlson and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R–Ga.) at an event this fall.
Recall that the avowed purpose of Project 2025 is "to get the right people and make sure they have the right ethos" to serve in the next Republican administration. If this is the ethos that groups like Heritage will be looking for as they offer staffing advice, it's hard not to be afraid.
But Don't Panic
The regnant narrative on the right is that the first Trump administration suffered from being populated by a combination of establishment conservatives who weren't truly devoted to implementing the president's vision and Kool-Aid-drinking MAGA warriors without the know-how to get things done.
By all accounts, the various groups preparing to staff a second Trump administration are laser-focused on solving the first problem by demanding absolute fealty to the big man and his desires. Saurabh Sharma, the youthful head of American Moment, "is prescriptive about what gets a person on his list," reported Axios' Jonathan Swan in 2022. "He wants applicants who want to cut not just illegal but also legal immigration into the United States. He favors people who are protectionist on trade and anti-interventionist on foreign policy. They must be eager to fight the 'culture war.' Credentials are almost irrelevant."
John McEntee, a veteran of the Trump White House's personnel office who went on to advise Heritage, takes a similar view. "A red flag went up if a prospective employee answered 'deregulation and judges' when asked to name their favorite Trump policies," Swan wrote, also in 2022. "It was a sure sign the applicant could be a weak-kneed member of the establishment."
But the solution to Trump's first problem—ensuring his new staff is fully ideologically aligned with him—pulls against the solution to his second. He can have people who are true believers or he can have people who are competent; he probably can't have both, because there are simply too few of them. Stacking the government with folks from outside the establishment, without relevant experience, leaves you with a work force that is unlikely to be effective at implementing an agenda.
"The best way to describe these lists is it looks like they're looking for incompetence as the chief qualification," says Cato Institute Senior Fellow Thomas Firey. "The bureaucracy, whether you love it or hate it, is an extremely complex machine that is extremely hard to operate….It's like giving my 8-year-old the keys to a steam shovel. Nothing's going to happen but a disaster."
Much press coverage has focused on "Schedule F," shorthand for an executive order that could in theory allow a president to fire as many as 50,000 members of the permanent bureaucracy and replace them with his own political cronies. The effort has been described in apocalyptic terms, as something very like a coup, by mainstream and left-of-center outlets.
In June, the Associated Press reported that a new group called the American Accountability Foundation, with funding from Heritage, had begun "digging into the backgrounds, social media posts and commentary of key high-ranking government employees, starting with the Department of Homeland Security." Its aim is to identify figures hostile to Trump's goals—described by Heritage as "anti-American bad actors"—who could be targeted under Schedule F.
The issue is a tricky one to approach from libertarian first principles. The bloated and biased executive bureaucracy, and the "civil service protections" that make it almost impossible to get rid of lazy federal workers—these are longstanding and legitimate complaints of limited-government types. On the other hand, Congress did statutorily establish the civil service system with an eye to shielding career employees, who are supposed to be nonpolitical subject matter experts, from rank electoral considerations. If things haven't worked out as intended, it ought to be Congress' responsibility to pass a structural fix. There's something unsettlingly Soviet about the image of a president hunting for thought criminals to cast into the darkness.
But wherever you come down on the appropriateness of Schedule F, it probably won't matter much in practice. "Given Trump's frequent vows to deliver 'retribution' against his critics and political opponents if he returns to office, it is unnerving to think of a federal bureaucracy of loyalists carrying out his commands," wrote Firey in a recent Cato report. "But a Trump restoration of Schedule F and takeover of the federal bureaucracy is unlikely to play out the way either he or his critics imagine."
Presidents already have the ability to make some 4,000 political appointments. Trump could not manage it last time—and many of the people he did appoint turned out to be insufficiently sycophantic for his taste. (It seems most folks do have some lines they're unwilling to cross.) The idea that Trump's team could fill tens of thousands of additional openings with workers who are even mostly aligned and minimally competent beggars belief. "I think a lot of these positions are just going to sit empty," Firey says.
Yes, a whole brood of groups, new and old, have positioned themselves to help a second Trump administration do better. But there are reasons to be skeptical that they're up to the task. Behind the scenes, the various organizations are busy squabbling among themselves and jockeying for prominence. And several of them are gimcrack enterprises headed up by 20-somethings whose biggest claim to fame is acting out online via inflammatory social media posts.
There's also an incredible amount of money sloshing through and around these efforts, which makes them an inevitable magnet for grifters—the kind of political operatives who specialize in lightening donors' pocketbooks rather than actually accomplishing things. A May New York Times exposé found that the Conservative Partnership Institute, which contributed to Project 2025, had paid millions of dollars "to corporations led by its own leaders or their relatives" in a pattern of "insider transactions" that "raise concerns about self-dealing." People just looking to get paid are not exactly known for their ability to tackle complicated strategic and administrative challenges.
Finally, there's the problem of Trump himself: that even as he demands unswerving loyalty from his subordinates, he exhibits zero hesitation about throwing those around him under the bus when doing so suits his interests or his mood.
Multiple groups have gone all in on backing the 45th president. If they hoped for gratitude, they must be feeling disappointed. Initially, Trump seemed to stand behind the work being done at places like Heritage and the America First Policy Institute. But over the last year, his campaign managers have issued a series of escalating bulletins warning that "unless a message is coming directly from President Trump or an authorized member of his campaign team, no aspect of future presidential staffing or policy announcements should be deemed official."
In July—following bad press regarding the Heritage policy agenda and Roberts' "bloodless revolution" comments—the former president apparently decided he'd had enough. "I know nothing about Project 2025," he posted on his Truth Social platform. "I have no idea who is behind it. I disagree with some of the things they're saying and some of the things they're saying are absolutely ridiculous and abysmal."
A campaign aide went further, telling Semafor that "if you're an organization that is purporting to be pushing 'Trump policies,' it's probably the last organization that we'll take references from for personnel." That smackdown by the Trump team, Semafor added, could "signal to conservative donors that Heritage, a power inside the movement for more than 50 years, would have less clout in a second administration."
A few weeks later, Project 2025 chief Dans announced his departure from the think tank. "Reports of Project 2025's demise would be greatly welcomed," the campaign said in a statement, "and should serve as notice to anyone or any group trying to misrepresent their influence with President Trump."
It's hardly certain that, push coming to shove, a future Trump White House would turn away help from groups such as Roberts'; staffing the executive branch may necessarily be an all-hands-on-deck effort. Still, the episode typifies the chaos that seems ever to follow in Trump's wake.
Democrats are trying hard to paint Project 2025 as part of a "playbook for Trump to achieve his dream of being a dictator on day one." Yet the former president isn't even disciplined enough to play nice with a guy who sold out a venerable conservative policy institution in order to put it entirely at the disposal of Trumpian whims. The will to power is strong in MAGA world, but the dysfunction may be stronger.
*CORRECTION: This article originally misstated the group for which Vance was an advisory board member.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "'Only the Best People'."
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Might take note that the Marxists at reason spend thousands of words on project 2025 while hiding anything about the un and wef project 2030.
The people at reason are retarded controlled opposition.
I stopped reading at
Out were the commitments to limited government
Hey step what president has lowered regulation more than Trump?
When Slade teased this on Twitter, I asked whether she did her journalistic duty and actually read project 2025. She blew off the question and it's clear hasn't read any of it or done basic reading or reasoning to write this dishonest hit piece
None of them have ever read it because then they'd lose there ability to deny that they were knowingly lying about it and just reporting on what others had said.
Not reading it enables them to pretend that anything bad they can think of is in it.
They suck.
I read most of this crap before the bile rising in my throat forced me to stop.
THIS is what we get from REASON?
We have reached the point where there is no reason in REASON.
The people at reason are retarded controlled opposition.
Evil, retarded controlled opposition.
They did this in 2016 and 2020. It was pointed out to them. They're doing it again. The idea that they don't know, are unaware, or are being reluctant and strategic is no longer plausible or should be effectively treated as such.
I could imagine people in 2016 thinking that maybe Biden would act like an old-school moderate Democrat (despite his campaign literature and the party platform). There is no reasonable space to believe that about Harris now, or Biden 2 months ago given the past 4 years.
How nice.
Colleges are reopening.
Now we get to again hear all the democrats march and set up tents... demand all Jews get gassed.
The democrats demand the land of the Jewish people is washed clean of Jewish people from "the river to the sea".
Now - gas chambers at Cornell university.
Gas chambers at NYU.
Democrats must be stopped before they gas all Jewish people.
This seems to be about the Democrat’s freakout about 2025 and attempt to tie it to Trump as much as anything else. Though I do agree it isn’t quite accurate about Trump and what he expects from people. I don’t think “sycophancy” is quite it. Trump certainly like flattery and people who flatter him. But from what I’ve read from some people who have worked with him, he has no problem with disagreement and debate when it’s someone who is honestly trying to help and not just trying to tear him down by any means available.
I stopped at "...had no qualms about a "muscular" state that interferes at will in people's lives."
What a hack.
The most damning indictment of Heritage is that while it hosted a few interesting folks in the Reagan era. its leading lights today are intellectually indistinguishable from the Rev Kuckland or Tuck Carlson.
Have you even TRIED killing yourself?
FOAD, TDS-addled steaming pile of shit.
Project 2025, which has been done for years, was immediately disavowed by Trump but never let that pesky fact derail a narrative much like the "good men on both sides" fiction.
As for the staffing, I think Trump got a giant wake up call. He entered the WH naively thinking that once sworn in the partisan bickering and deep state machinations would stop and everyone would unite for our country. Sounds silly but I think that was what happened and he was unprepared for the pushback at every turn. This time I think he is going in with eyes wide open.
Reason is often unreasonable.
His presidential plans were repeatedly thwarted by His staff?
You mean like getting the Mexicans to pay for His Big Beautiful Walls? Should we be blaming the Mexicans for that, or His Staff, for not supporting bombing Mexico into submission?
Ass for me AND for Spermy Daniels, we BOTH blame the Deep State for making His Not-So-Stiff Staff be not tough and HARD enough, which, of course, led to the Stolen Erections!
AMLO did pay by keeping invaders on his side of the Wall.
Twat happens when NO ONE dare tell The Emperor that He is naked? And when we brook NO dissent to the sentiment of “HANG MIKE PENCE”?
No one dared to tell Putin that which He didn’t want to hear, so He invaded Ukraine! See what THAT has gotten for Russia!
Will anyone dare to advise Der TrumpfenFarter-Fuhrer AGAINST forcing Mexico to pay for His Big, Beautiful Walls?
2024 Presidential race: Naked Emperor vs Empty Suit.
Empty Suit should give some of her clothes to Naked Emperor! Share and share alike! It takes a village to clothe The Emperor!
"This explosion of activity has caused agita in Democratic circles and among the press,..."
The Democrats are not excatly known these days as being liberty minded or anti-authoritarian, and most of the press are essentially the Dems propganda arm, so their does not impress me.
"[Tucker Carlson's] appearance at the gala, alongside other changes then afoot at the think tank, caused many observers to wonder what in the world had happened to the once-staid Heritage Foundation."
Libertarians embracing a "guilt by association" standard is a fascinating development.
"What it actually says is that a conservative president should allow religious organizations to opt out of paying for contraceptives and not force employers to cover "potential abortifacient" drugs, two pre–Trump GOP views supported by many if not most Americans."
Which is reflective of the Left's authoritarian stance on contraceptives. An employer not providing a health insurance package that includes contraceptives is "limiting access", so government must use the force of law to mandate such coverage.
Slade's pearl-clutching about "separation of Church and State" amounts to a speaker list for one session of a conference with blurbs that really do not convey what the discussion is about except a distaste fro hwo that is currently being interpreted.
"On the other hand, Congress did statutorily establish the civil service system with an eye to shielding career employees, who are supposed to be nonpolitical subject matter experts, from rank electoral considerations. If things haven't worked out as intended, it ought to be Congress' responsibility to pass a structural fix. There's something unsettlingly Soviet about the image of a president hunting for thought criminals to cast into the darkness."
There is also something unsetlling about the idea that elections do not matter as the civil service is politically captured and will do as it pleases no matter who is ostensibly the Chief Executive, because there is no authority to remove corrupt career bureaucrats. Kind of smacks of oligarchy.
Stephanie is actually stupid enough to say that Congress gets to decide who will implement policy in the Executive branch. Sorry commie girl but if the high ranking members of the executive branch aren’t doing their jobs for political disagreements then they should be fired.
Well put
"A red flag went up if a prospective employee answered 'deregulation and judges' when asked to name their favorite Trump policies," Swan wrote, also in 2022. "It was a sure sign the applicant could be a weak-kneed member of the establishment."
The KKKORRECT answer is, "Trump makes the liberals cry!"
Those Judges were his crowning achievement
The Trump Derangement Syndrome Greatest Hits Album
The sound of exploding heads is music to my ears.
"Finally, there's the problem of Trump himself: that even as he demands unswerving loyalty from his subordinates, he exhibits zero hesitation about throwing those around him under the bus when doing so suits his interests or his mood."
How exactly does this differ from the other candidate?
By a matter of degrees, is all... Under Trump, even HIS VEEP should be hung! Loyalty need only flow upwards!
Trump agrees with “Hang Mike Pence!”
https://www.cnn.com/2022/05/25/politics/donald-trump-january-6-mike-pence-chants/index.html
Trump reacted with approval to ‘hang Mike Pence’ chants from rioters on January 6
That didn’t actually happen. The guy that yelled it on the megaphone was the same guy who was yelling in the crowd, and incidentally, just like the FBI agent caught on Camera breaking the front windows and initially like the FBI agent caught calling on camera for “insurrection” (Ray Epps), he was never investigated or arrested.
As for the claim that Trump agreed with it, the guy it was attributed said: “This partisan committee’s vague ‘leaks,’ anonymous testimony, and willingness to alter evidence proves it’s just an extension of the Democrat smear campaign that has been exposed time and time again for being fabricated and dishonest,” he said. “Americans are tired of the Democrat lies and the charades, but, sadly, it’s the only thing they have to offer.”
A member of Meadows’ legal team, who declined to be named, told POLITICO that the account is “totally incorrect regarding Meadows.” An aide to Pence did not immediately respond to a request for comment.”
Time to stop repeating lies and propaganda, Shillsy. And if you ever read articles newer than several years ago, you'd have known this.
Caught on audio, PervFect Liar!
Oh, so THAT is why sore-in-the-cunt cunt-sore-va-turds shout down “wrong” ideas, and go all ape-shit-Trumpanzee at pro-mobocracy, anti-democracy “mostly peaceful” demonstrations, hissy fits, and violent temper tantrums?
And then they blame the Demon-Craps!!!
https://www.umass.edu/news/article/republicans-blame-democrats-antifa-and-us
REPUBLICANS BLAME DEMOCRATS, ANTIFA AND U.S. CAPITOL POLICE FOR JAN. 6 MAYHEM, ACCORDING TO NEW UMASS AMHERST/WCVB POLL
“Hang Mike Pence”!!! Dear Leader agrees!!!
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-defends-jan-6-rioters-hang-mike-pence-chant-newly-n1283798
Trump defends Jan. 6 rioters’ ‘hang Mike Pence’ chant in new audio
The audio captured part of an interview ABC News’ Jonathan Karl conducted with Trump at Mar-a-Lago in March for Karl’s upcoming book.
PS, Mike Pence’s dangerous words and ideas were that votes, voters, established democratic norms and processes, peaceful transfers of power, and the USA Constitution should actually be RESPECTED!!! Now just IMAGINE THAT!!! This was HERESY to True Trumpaloos!!!
Caught on audio
You didn't even read what I wrote, you shitty troll.
Instead of conversing with it, you should take it to the vet to be put down. Or throw it into an active incinerator.
A grey box appeared below me. I wonder what it says? Oh wait, no I don’t. Hopefully the loathsome thing will be out to sleep soon.
I've got links and You PervFectly do SNOT, Lying Bitch! Did the Lizard People make Der TrumpfenFarter-Fuhrer say twat He has been DOCUMENTED ass saying? WHEN is He going to take BACK His Blessings Bestowed Upon Political Violence?
It's a matter of record, for all but fanatics who think that EVERYTHING in the media that they PervFectly do NOT like, is all LIES, PervFect Liar! WHEN will You and Your Dear Leader renounce abject and obvious calls for political violence?
From my link, repeated here...
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-defends-jan-6-rioters-hang-mike-pence-chant-newly-n1283798
Trump defends Jan. 6 rioters’ ‘hang Mike Pence’ chant in new audio
Former President Donald Trump defended rioters’ chants of “hang Mike Pence” during the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, saying it was understandable because they were angry the election hadn't been overturned, according to audio released Friday of an interview with the former president in March.
The audio came from an interview with ABC News’ Jonathan Karl conducted at Mar-a-Lago in March for an upcoming book, "Betrayal: The Final Act of the Trump Show." The excerpt was obtained Friday by NBC News from ABC News' "This Week."
Your link is almost four fucking years old, retard. And it's been since established that the ONE guy chanting it hasn't been charged and the FBI refuse to identify him.
I’ve got links and You PervFectly do SNOT, Lying Bitch! Did the Lizard People make Der TrumpfenFarter-Fuhrer say twat He has been DOCUMENTED ass saying? WHEN is He going to take BACK His Blessings Bestowed Upon Political Violence?
By YOUR Own PervFect admission, Der TrumpfenFarter-Fuhrer has had almost FOUR years to take His Evil Shit BACK! Has the leopard changed shit's spots yet? WHEN will He do it?
"...just like the FBI agent caught on Camera breaking the front windows and initially like the FBI agent caught calling on camera for “insurrection” (Ray Epps), he was never investigated or arrested."
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/ray-epps-center-of-a-jan-6-conspiracy-theory-is-charged-with-a-misdemeanor-over-capitol-insurrection
Ray Epps was charged - albeit with a federal misdemeanor. The conspiracy theories he was undercover FBI did lead to death threats by the MAGA cult, however. So he was forced to sell his home and move.
Only after it became too inconvenient not to charge him due to congressional investigation you fucking retard.
“c0nsPirAcY tHeOrIEs”
Answer me this, Shill.
Ray Epps was the only Jan6 protester caught on camera calling for insurrection. Not only was he the only one calling for it, he was urging violence too, while others in the crowd were calling him a “glowie” and telling him to fuck off. Again, all on camera.
So why when the QAnon Shaman who did nothing, was getting railroaded by a prosecutor illegally withholding evidence, and the praying grandma got five years, did the FBI refuse to arrest him and the J6 committee exonerate him?
He was literally the only one of the “insurrectionists” calling for insurrection.
“There’s no need for a formal conspiracy when all of the economic and political elites share the same ideology.”
-George Carlin
The little cowardly bitch won’t answer. Much too scared.
Too scared to WASTE HIS OR HER TIME on people with fossilized so-called "minds"! Why present ANY facts to a brick wall?
FOAD, TDS-addled asshole.
HERE HERE
“Hang Mike Pence” may very soon be supplemented by “Hang Governor Kemp” of Georgia… Hang ALL of those who do NOT pervfectly, precisely toady up to Trump ass Trump demands!
Governor Kemp (R) of Georgia is latest target of Trump Wrath… https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2024/08/03/donald-trump-brian-kemp-rally-atlanta/ (paywalled) and https://apnews.com/article/trump-vance-atlanta-georgia-harris-rally-b21c25bbbfafdd0343c8812f6c3d7c9e
Trump again tears into Georgia’s Republican governor on the same day he campaigns in the state
Kemp, that unkempt, uncouth infidel, stole The Donald’s Sacred Erection!!!
It sounds exactly like "maverick" John McCain.
May he burn in hell.
He’s paying off the debt for killing all those sailors.
Are you referring to the USS Forrestal incident?
McCain and Walz are peas in a pod.
https://www.historynewsnetwork.org/article/mary-hershberger-investigating-john-mccains-traged
If so I'm giving McCain who I loathe a slight pass. If you read the report he claims the fired rocket hit his plane forcing his bombs to drop. It seems clear that when the fire started, McCain got out of the craft and inadvertently hit the 2 switches in his rush and dropped them himself. In the adrenalin and chaos he may have thought he was hit too. We don't know. He didn't actually leave anyone to die. Some guys stayed on deck fighting the fire, he went down a deck and helped throw bombs overboard then, not being a firefighter, watched on screen. We don't know if he had any idea all the firefighters were dead at that point and he may have thought it better to stay out of their way.
We just don't know what he was really thinking and never will.
How exactly does this differ from the other candidate?
Trump’s “under the bus” usually includes an insider tell-all book deal and a tour of the talk show circuit at the next politically convenient juncture, whereas the opposition’s “under the bus” usually includes trials, including threats of trials for unrelated family members and business associates, maybe a prison sentence, maybe even being found hanged by the neck in a federal prison cell or shot in the back, and a quiet disposal at the next politically convenient juncture.
You mean like "Hang Mike Pence"? All that we can rely on, is for people to DISOBEY the Commander in Chief?
Trump agrees with “Hang Mike Pence!”
https://www.cnn.com/2022/05/25/politics/donald-trump-january-6-mike-pence-chants/index.html
Trump reacted with approval to ‘hang Mike Pence’ chants from rioters on January 6
Because...because...he's mean!!!
Or any other candidate...ever?
Yeah, that's always a good question. Even if you don't think much of Trump, and I'm not much of a fan, it's not as if there is a choice between him and someone competent and sensible. It's a contest between a big weirdo who threatens the establishment, and a weirdo who represents the establishment and will do whatever they say. I know which I'd rather have as president.
Moreover, it is Trump who threatens a wholly CORRUPT establishment versus a fembot whose only purpose is to advance the agenda of said corrupt establishment, and make their abuse of power permanent. The choice could not be more clear.
There's something unsettlingly Soviet about the image of a president hunting for thought criminals to cast into the darkness.
What. The. Holy. Fuck.
I mean... What. The. Holy. Fuck....
OK, first Stephanie, you mendacious retard, have you heard of names like Julian Assange or Edward Snowden? Do you remember Kim Davis? The other party, the one you're not criticizing, is so renowned for hunting down its civil service opposition and championing it's own unrestrained civil servants acting against their electorate that your own employer did a parody of it. But, again as a mendacious retard, you don't seem to be aware of.
Second, you do realize that this narrative, in your head, assumes that civil servants and/or subject matter experts, if they can't be employed by the government, have been effectively unpersonned, right? That instead of assuming, like normal people, not even libertarians but *especially* libertarians, would; that they'd just go get a job in the private sector. You've pretty openly stated that in your mind, these people would not be employable or otherwise useful by society at large.
We don't even need the "Who are Reason contributors going to vote for?" article this year for writers to demure and deflect with 'reluctantly and strategically'. Once again, it's obvious that the majority, if not the totality, of the staff are in the bag for government-managed, one-party State run by nameless, unaccountable party-faithful bureaucrats. That's the vision they hold as needing to be guarded against Trump and that only a few of the contributors are, maybe, a little better or worse about hiding it.
What. The. Fuck.
OK, first Stephanie, you mendacious retard
You're kind of sugarcoating it and being a little too kind there.
She's the Jennifer Rubin of Reason?
i had to check if i somehow ended up at the MSNBC website. wow....why is such far left fake news propaganda posted here?
So much of the MAGA stupidity makes so much more sense.
Here’s the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025, Sarckles. Tell us which are the bad, scary parts:
https://www.project2025.org/truth/
Secure the Border
Project 2025’s policy reforms would end America’s decades-long border crisis by:
-Thoroughly enforcing existing immigration laws.
-Aggressively constructing a wall on our southern border.
-Efficiently identifying and rejecting fraudulent asylum claims.
-Restoring the “remain in Mexico” policy for people awaiting asylum claims.
-Arresting, detaining, and removing of immigration violators anywhere in the United States.
Unleash American Energy
Project 2025’s policy reforms would secure abundant access to energy for the American people, including low-cost gasoline, by:
-Ensuring access to abundant, reliable, and affordable energy.
-Removing efforts to push sustainable-development schemes connected to food production.
-Stopping collaboration with and funding of progressive foundations, corporations, international institutions, and NGOs that advocate for climate fanaticism.
-Ending the Biden administration’s war on fossil fuels in the developing world and supporting the responsible management of oil and gas reserves as the quickest way to end wrenching poverty and the need for open-ended foreign aid.
-Ensuring that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission facilitates rather than hampers private-sector nuclear energy innovation and deployment.
De-Weaponize the Federal Government and Dismantle the Deep State
Project 2025’s policy reforms would restore self-governance to the American people by:
-Firing supposedly “un-fireable” federal bureaucrats.
-Closing wasteful and corrupt bureaus and offices.
-Eliminating woke propaganda at every level of government.
-Restoring the American people’s Constitutional authority over the administrative state.
-Returning governing power to the Congress and President instead of unelected bureaucrats.
Improve Education
Project 2025’s policy reforms would strengthen our education system by:
-Expanding school choice, so all children have the option of a great education, regardless of zip code.
-Promoting parents’ rights in public education so American schools serve parents, not the other way around.
-Removing critical race theory and gender ideology curricula in every public school in the country.
-Returning education control to state and local governments.
-Shifting some functions of the Department of Education to other departments including Labor, Justice, and Commerce.
You just did more work than Slade did.
Talk about completely and totally missing the point of the article.
What the hell. Project 2025 is whole point of the article, retard.
Day drinking again I see.
Are you? I didn't expect otherwise. Now explain for everyone here how the Heritage Foundation's 2025 isn't the point of Slade's article.
I was talking about you, my spittle-spraying Canadian MAGA-monkey.
Here, I’ll help you out. Look at the title.
“Project 2025 Is No Match for MAGA Dysfunction”
Now look at it again, but don’t stop after 2025.
“Project 2025 Is No Match for MAGA Dysfunction”
You’re not doing it. Read the whole thing.
*sigh*
Never mind. Have some more maple whine or whatever it is you drink up there.
Here, I’ll help you out, our drunken trolling retard. Look at the article...
What? You didn't read the article and only decided to troll off of your personal interpretation of the title?
Reading is hard when you're drunk, huh?
"The conservative Heritage Foundation has been releasing presidential policy blueprints, known as Mandate for Leadership, for decades. This time around, under the "Project 2025" banner, it announced a plan to supplement its policy work with a personnel database: a "conservative LinkedIn" that would "provide an opportunity for rock-solid conservatives to place themselves in contention for roles in the next administration," the think tank explained.
Meanwhile, veterans of Trump's first term launched the aforementioned America First Policy Institute, a rival group with much the same mission. Similar entities have been proliferating and expanding ever since: the Conservative Partnership Institute (led by former South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint), American Moment (which focuses on identifying Trump-friendly young conservatives), the Society for American Civic Renewal (a spinoff of the Claremont Institute, home to attorney John Eastman, who is currently under indictment for helping Trump attempt to overturn the 2020 election), a new Association of Republican Presidential Appointees, and on and on.
A general telos unites many of these groups: to ensure, if Trump wins again, that his vision for America won't be stymied by personnel who don't fully embrace it. As Paul Dans, the director of Heritage's Project 2025, put it on C-SPAN, "It's incumbent on us to get the right people and make sure they have the right ethos."
That strategy was on display in July with Trump's selection of Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance as his running mate. The pick stood in contrast to 2016, when Trump chose then–Indiana Gov. Mike Pence to balance the ticket and calm any misgivings that evangelical Christians and other traditional conservatives might have had about voting for a philandering TV star. Today, the only truly important qualification is loyalty. After the 2020 election, Pence refused an order from Trump to interfere with Congress' certification of Joe Biden's victory. Vance, a power-hungry populist who once mused to a friend that Trump might be "America's Hitler," later said publicly that he can be counted on to do what his predecessor would not.
This explosion of activity has caused agita in Democratic circles and among the press, and there are a number of real causes for concern in these developments. Yet a clear-eyed analysis of the situation offers at least one source of comfort: Many of the things that prevented Trump from putting his worst impulses into action during his first term would likely do the same in a second one."
The point of the article was that there’s no need to worry about Project 2025 because, if this term is anything like last term, the incompetent sycophants he surrounds himself with won’t be able to get it done. Go drink some more whine.
Ooohhhh, so they’re incompetent? Now do Harris.
Which still, you dumbfuck son of a bitch, implies that P2025 is bad and objectionable.
Sarc will make some nonsensical response, or just run away at this point. He’s a gutless shitweasel.
I just hope keeping him occupied here keeps him away from playgrounds.
He went the nonsensical response route.
The first 2 words in the title of the article are literally "Project 2025". Project 2025 was the point.
My only objection is to the last paragraph "Improving Education". State education is an abomination and must be ended. It has always been a force to standardize children and infuse them with adoration of the state.
Education and State must be separated just as Church and State have been and for the same reason: ideas are too important to be turned over to politicians and bureaucrats.
Agenda 2025 simply wishes to enlist the power of State Propaganda in the service of non-Woke ideas. You would think that the terrible result of Woke propaganda would have taught conservatives something, but apparently not.
I think the feds need to get out of education entirely and leave it 100% to the states... like Canada does.
I doubt that you live in California. State education there is nothing but indoctrination.
All education must be private. I, as an atheist, would rather see religious schools free to promulgate any irrational ideas, than to see the state decide what is rational. Here, the religious and the non-religious have a common interest, that is, in the free exchange of ideas. I hope that both sides recognize who their friends are.
Leave California to California. If they want to self-immolate or sacrifice their children to Molech, so be it.
And if Texas wants to eliminate education as a bureaucracy entirely, so be it.
The problem with this is that to get into college you need some basic level of proficiency because it is assumed by the time you get to college you already have been taught the basics.
If you take anthropology 101 and all the 'private religious' idiots spend all day arguing about how a fossil can't be more than 6k yrs old your going to have a bad time.
If we leave it up to the states entirely; there will be whole swaths of the country that put out nothing but idiots. Which maybe is the goal? Sounds like collective child abuse to me.
People who believe in young earth creationism probably shouldn't go into fields like that. That doesn't mean they are idiots and can't be productive elsewhere.
People who believe in young earth creationism don't go into fields like that, which is a pity because that is precisely the sort of person who should take an anthropology course.
Whoever holds the 'windycityattorney' sockpuppet account was offering a red herring and a strawman and nothing more.
The theory that the earth is 6,000 years old stands up to more rigorous investigation than "a man can become a woman."
I don't believe either, but the second is more clearly preposterous.
“If we leave it up to people, they won’t make the decision I think is correct!”
The cry of authoritarians throughout history the world over.
"The problem with this is that to get into college you need some basic level of proficiency because it is assumed by the time you get to college you already have been taught the basics."
And you are living proof that isn't true; brain-dead assholes like you can get a degree.
Gosh, how about leftist morons indoctrinated into woke ideology by 200 lb. blue haired non binary arguing with their biology professor about what a woman is? See? As much as you disparage your conservative betters, they’re always going to superior to your kind.
The fossil fuel stuff is red meat to the money lenders at big oil. Big oil does not need subsidies. Neither does solar or wind or anything else. Let the market decide. The big data centers for AI are going to need small nuclear plants so I foresee a lot of lobbying for that.
The big data centers for AI are going to need small nuclear plants so I foresee a lot of lobbying for that.
Can't tell if sarcasm.
Yeah. I love the scare mongering over Project 2025. I read most of it or at least skimmed it and it's not scary at all. It's pretty much the same as 100 other game plans a group would like to see the government go in either right or left.
The dishonest part is trying to tie it to Trump when he had nothing to do with it and when asked said so and that he wasn't implementing anything in it because he had never seen it. The corporate media Dem shills pumped it for weeks much like Charlottesville egged on by Dems. Total shitshow.
They painted a picture of an organization that has, in the 14 years since launching its lobbying arm, Heritage Action for America, come to care less about getting conservative policies into law and more about getting friendly Republicans into power.
Talk about the fucking pot calling the kettle black. It has been amazing watching Reason drift from libertarian to libertine in considerably less time.
Power is the ability to get things done. Republicans, and to a lesser extent conservatives, have a seat at the table. Libertarians have moved from principled opposition to clown show.
Someone else came up with it, but I like LiberTeen Magazine as a description for Reason. It combines the Teen Reason moniker with libertine.
Once again, anyone who uses "MAGA" as a descriptor needs to be ignored. It's nothing more than a disingenuous hit piece written by a TDS sufferer.
Once again, anyone who uses “TDS” as a descriptor needs to be ignored. It’s nothing more than a disingenuous hit piece written by a MAGA sufferer.
That doesn’t even make sense, trollboy. A comment isn't a "piece".
A distinction without meaning, to all but lawyer-types. An "opinion piece" is a bunch of comments. The comments make the "piece".
Are You PervFectly gonna tell us, next, that a tree isn't a forest?
Your single neuron does NOT make "brain", sorry to tell ya!
Fuck off, retard. You don't even believe what you just typed.
OK, Your PervFectly Infected (with tribalist bullshit) brain might actually have TWO neurons! The rest is eminently in accordance with common understandings of English! Do You PervFectly speak it?
Why can only TDS sufferers write "MAGA"? Seems like a pretty well accepted slogan.
Slade?? FOAD, steaming pile of TDS-addled shit.
Slade worries about the next Trump administration being concerned with "demanding absolute fealty to the big man and his desires"
This is pretty funny when the Democrats vote as block and immediately excommunicate all who deviate from the "narrative" (fairy tale) of the left.
"He can have people who are true believers or he can have people who are competent." Seriously, look at Karine Jean-Pierre, Pete Buttigieg, General Milley and SecDef Austin and then tell me that the opposition favors competence.
"There's something unsettlingly Soviet about the image of a president hunting for thought criminals to cast into the darkness". Bear in mind that the law forbids partisan enforcement of laws, but Slade is only bothered by the thought that this existing law might be enforced, not by the blatantly unconstitutional transfer of legislative and judicial function to bureaucracies.
The former president apparently decided he'd had enough. "I know nothing about Project 2025," he posted on his Truth Social platform. "I have no idea who is behind it. I disagree with some of the things they're saying and some of the things they're saying are absolutely ridiculous and abysmal."
How much better is this than a denial by his opposition of everything their candidate said prior to her beatification and elevation to sainthood.
Slade, either you're an idiot, or a tool. Pick one and announce it here on Reason.
Alternative narrative: many people in Trump's orbit and from his past administration are involved in project 2025 and the groups who contributed to it....he knows exactly who they are and what they are doing... but project 2025 is polling terribly among the voting public so in a *political* move Trump wants to distance himself from it. SHOCKING THAT TRUMP WOULD TELL A LIE I KNOW
By 'alternative narrative' you mean - my tribe tells me to put this out there... Well - those are the lies that the 50 cent people are paid to disseminate anyhow. Your transparently mendacious propaganda is so as to be a vile thing to behold. Oh... unless you can claim mind reading... can you ? are you?
Shocking! that you could be so brazen in your douchery.
That Democrat uniformity of party isn't new, either. It has been going on since Pelosi took over during the Bush administration.
That's how the liberals got purged or brought on board the progressive lunacy. That's how you got a deeply unpopular ACA passed -- look how many Democrats lost their seats afterward. From that point, if you didn't toe the party line they'd pull all your campaign funding, or even fund an opponent in the next primary so you'd lose your seat to someone with greater fealty.
It's always strange when press talks about a party or party leader being weak when they don't vote 100% for some bill or other, but the Ds have been like that for so long most of the children writing "news" these days don't remember the ideal of candidates supporting their constituency before party unity, or deal making within blocs across the aisle that had shared objectives for their state, the region around their districts, or national interests.
¿Por que no los dos?
¿Por que no los dos?
Sí, es posible.
What’s worse about modern Democrats is their willingness to lose their seats before defying their party. Obamacare cost them a dozen congressional seats. The former legislators know that there is always a job in an NGO for those whose toeing of the party line cost them their seats.
Unstick yourself from California, you obviously don’t belong there.
reason
FREE MINDS AND FREE MARKETSALL WITHIN THE STATE, NOTHING OUTSIDE THE STATE, NOTHING AGAINST THE STATE
A new hero for Reason: Benito Mussolini.
Nah. He's too competent for the modern Democrat party. The old reasoning for why people liked him, "he made the trains run on time." The Democrats (or Communists as I prefer) have turned San Francisco into an open sewer with aps that tell you where there is more human shit on the sidewalks than usual.
In the old days, the US Navy was admired for its damage control teams. Now, with Commie DEI, ships burn and sink in port.
I'd love to have Mussolini over this crowd of cross dressing retards.
I guess we could rationally discuss whatever Project 2025 advocates, but then we'd have to do away with "Scary MAGA extremism" or "TDS sufferer" comments. But, let's face it, the voters that decide this coming election are more attentive to how dreamy one candidate is vs. how cleverly the other can insult enemies.
I just posted the whole thing up above.^
https://reason.com/2024/08/29/only-the-best-people/?comments=true#comment-10704412
But Sarcasmic has told us that discussing what it actually says "misses the whole point".
I've been asking for this for so long. They keep using it as a scary buzz word but have taken zero time actually relating what it says or debating the merits
Congress did statutorily establish the civil service system with an eye to shielding career employees, who are supposed to be nonpolitical subject matter experts, from rank electoral considerations. If things haven’t worked out as intended, it ought to be Congress’ responsibility to pass a structural fix.
The challenge is – how to force Congress to do what it should be doing. Instead it really appears that the MAGA/R types (and the domestic enemies of the constitution on the SC) (and their think tank buddies) here are solely interested in finding the right king – or hell just handing all power to them and hoping they’re the right king.
It doesn’t seem to me that anyone is paying attention to constitutional first principles. We don’t give a shit what Hayek wrote about the bureaucratic/administrative state (rechtsstaat) and hey maybe that does require more if a constitutional amendment (which will never happen). Ok.
But we could at least pretend that the bureaucracy that executes the laws is more akin to the militia (meaning the population) than to anything else in the Constitution. It is drawn from the people – not elected by them. There are enumerated rules re how the militia is called into and employed in the service of the United States and what the role of both Congress and Prez is in governing them.
I have to beg to differ with the commenters suggesting that Ms. Slade suffers from Trump Derangement Syndrome (TDS). TDS implies that the person in question was previously or is otherwise rational, but the appearance of Trump on the scene or his presence in a discussion makes them deranged and veer off into total irrationality and psychosis. But, in all actuality, I really don't see much evidence that Ms. Slade is, absent the presence of Donald Trump, particularly rational or sensible.
Fair point.
so many incorrect premises this would receive zero scratch & sniff stickers. try again. or better, don’t.
So which is it, Ms. Slade? Trump’s bad because he won’t take advice from advisers? Or bad because he takes advice from advisers?
I can’t get over how unrestrained the bloggers here are in coming up with new ways to denigrate Trump. But almost as bad, if much less creative, are the commenters who accuse Trump sympathizers here of putting the Donald before the cart, having transferred their basis to this man instead of libertarian analysis. Libertarians are some of the most independent thinkers around. Aside from those who were captured by the cult of Ayn Rand, who really did fall into this trap (see “The Rational Dancer” chapter of It Usually Begins With Ayn Rand) but whose influence has by now considerably faded, libertarians have been remarkably resistant to this sort of faddery, and that we tend not to go for leaders. So if libertarians favor Trump, you can trust that we’ve examined things pretty well, and that we continue to re-assess the situation constantly, and that it’s because we think Trump presidencies are about the best things going in a long time in the USA. And, given this very well considered opinion, we see the current orientation of HyR bloggers on presidential politics as about something very much at odds with “free minds and free markets”.
Trump is far from the perfect libertarian. I don't think anyone here really doubts that. It may not even be outlandish to say he has some anti-libertarian inclinations. And, if I were ever faced with a choice between Donald Trump and Ron Paul, there's no doubt I'd back Paul. But, of course, the choice isn't Donald Trump or Ron Paul. It's Donald Trump or the corrupt establishment. And the corrupt establishment is as or, I'd argue, much more anti-libertarian than Donald Trump. Donald Trump's anti-libertarian inclinations seem to stem from a particular policy goal ("Liberty is nice and all, but I really want this."). The corrupt establishment's anti-libertarian inclinations stem from a belief in power as an end in itself. What's more, Donald Trump is just one man, in one moment in history. The corrupt establishment is a machine, organized over multiple institutions, organized to perpetuate itself and its authority. A threat to liberty from Donald Trump is transitory and fleeting, especially in light of the array of powers arraigned against him by the establishment. A threat to liberty from the corrupt establishment is self-perpetuating and limits the ability to challenge the corrupt establishment. If the establishment wins, you may be able to avoid getting a Donald Trump, but you also assure you never get a Ron Paul.
these two comments > the piece.
Amd the establishment isn’t even competent. It’s now Harris. An incredibly stupid woman who is such a drooling moron she doesn’t dare give a press conference, and the only interview she’s giving is prerecorded, with Walz there to hold her hand.
Yep, the great ‘feminist icon of color’ can’t give an interview without a white man to hold her hand, and who got where she is now by fucking a man thirty years her senior.
Harris isn't running things any more than Biden is (or was). There's a reason Biden didn't resign, even though he's clearly incapable of serving as President.
You’re not wrong. The clear ineptitude showcases what happens when a bunch of neo Marxist staffers are running things. With ‘guidance’ from neo Marxists like Obama.
That's it in a nut shell. When Trump announced his candidacy in 2015, my thought was, that's interesting, he's said some good things over the years — but it's not like he moved instantly to my #1 on my "druthers" list. Rand Paul was my 1st choice then, and it looked like he had a reasonable chance. After him, I'd've picked someone who doesn't look as good in retrospect: Ted Cruz. After he fell by the wayside, my preference went to Trump, who still looked pretty good. But after he got elected, he turned out to be even better than I'd anticipated.
I wouldn't go so far as to say the Establishment's anti-libertarian inclinations arise from a lust for power as an end in itself, though! That's actually a pretty rare sentiment among people in the world, AFAICT, because extremely few see themselves as ultimately in that position of power. And if you subtract even lust for power from the equation, being anti-liberty as an end in itself — "I don't care who holds the reins, I don't care what policies are pursued, just as long as individuals don't get to choose for themselves!" — is simply perverse. You might as well throw them in with misanthropes, who simply prefer everyone, including themselves, be miserable.
I wouldn’t go so far as to say the Establishment’s anti-libertarian inclinations arise from a lust for power as an end in itself, though!
I'd agree with you that no one individual's end is a lust for power. But the end of the machine itself is a lust for power. Nothing in the system is set up to weaken the power and authority of the system. And the system fails if power is removed. And it's not just this establishment, it's any establishment. It's why we keep finding ourselves giving more power to the machine in the name of solving some problem and find the machine has more power and the problem isn't solved.
People like Pelosi live only for power. It's an end in itself even if she gains financially. The money is only a tool for more power. Her forcing Biden out of the race was for Pelosi better than a dozen orgasms.
...
Except, I didn't write that, and don't believe it. I think there are such individuals, but not enough to matter.
What practically does not exist, however, is a desire for there to be specifically a lack of individual liberty — a preference that people not be allowed to choose for themselves, even though the person with this preference doesn't care what they are made to do and to provide for. Get it? There's practically nobody who thinks, "I wish everybody were ordered around, regardless of what orders they're given."
You went the same direction I did. Paul then Cruz then Trump. I also was pleasantly surprised by Trump. Get past the rhetoric and hitjobs by the Dems and their media lapdogs and his record on what he did or tried to get done is actually not bad. Good enough for me to vote for him again as I have compared his record to Biden/Harris. Biden throwing open our borders then murdering 13 service members while arming the largest terrorist group in the world was enough for me if the rampant inflation and trying to force me to get injected with an experimental gene therapy shot were not. I imply can not vote for Harris on those grounds but also because I have no idea where she stands on the issues or what her policy platform is because she won’t tell anyone or do a press conference where someone will ask her.
The choice is between endorsing freedom with law-changing spoiler vote clout and endorsing the looter Kleptocracy. Looters--who come here to ordurama the other looters--fail to grasp the barest notions of logistics replacement curve math. Yet history shows 16A and 18A were added to the Constitution by ideological parties averaging under 2% of the vote. Blank THAT out!
I see the commenters here as almost entirely cult of personality. I hear words about getting rid of the deep state or the machine or whatever thing is believed to be the real mastermind behind all the things that are conspiring against us.
I completely agree that Trump has based his entire shtick on being the ONE person who can solve whatever ails us. But I see not one thing that is ever mentioned here about how that what will happen or what will replace it or what problems are being caused or really anything that isn't simply faith in the magic man that is Trump. No explanation whatsoever about the end that is purportedly to be achieved by Trump.
So Trump is not the means to an end where the end is what's important. Trump IS the end. This is a cult in the truest sense. With Trump as the leader and whatever Trump says is the goal. Even Trump knows that with his I could shoot somebody in public and wouldn't lose any voters Certainly none here.
The commenters here see you as a neo Marxist democrat shill, a buffoon, and a vicious anti semite Islamist sympathizer. You’re also a moron.
So really, no one gives a fuck what you think.
Recall that there was basically no platform in 2020 other than "vote for me again".
Hmm, that was "bad" in 2020 but it is now "good politics" in 2024 for Kamala to do it.
Weird.
She has a platform copypasted from Trump's, but of course Diet Shrike doesn't want to talk about that.
That’s absolutely true, except for how it’s completely false. You’re getting really lazy Shrike. Tired from watching too much kiddie porn?
Aren’t most reelection campaigns just running on “give me 4 more years of the policies that I was actually able to make happen and time to try and do the ones I couldn’t.”? Seems like that would cover their policies just fine.
It’s like you’re not even trying bruv.
1. Trump’s most egregious error in 2020 was listening to the biggest idiot in the GOP, McConnell. The KY senator has been in the back pocket of the democrats for years, and why the GOP allows this POS to stay in their party is a mystery for the ages.
2. What ideas Trump has is moot because I don’t foresee him getting re-elected with all those illegal immigrants and dead people voting for him.
Harris doesn't need any illegal votes as long as she can keep out of sight. She gives a whole new meaning to the phrase "Silence is golden."
I've said it before and I'll keep saying it: This election is between an Insult Comic and the Invisible Woman. Unless someone can remove her cloak of invisibility, Trump will lose.
This election is between an Insult Comic and the Invisible Woman. Unless someone can remove her cloak of invisibility, Trump will lose.
She's not invisible. She's a Wizard of Oz projection. As long as people keep pulling back the curtain on the media's portrayal and the 'fortification' and quit telling everybody they know she'll win because she doesn't have to do anything to get votes, just like the MSM shills generating the projection, she'll lose.
You wouldn't know it from reading Reason and several other media outlets but...
-Trump made more money at the RNC than Kamala did at the DNC.
-Trump got a slight bump to no change at all from the RNC, Kamala got no bump and has dropped since.
-Mark Cuban aside, tech VCs who were skittish about Biden have only had their skittishness reinforced by Harris' flip-flopping and the Party's deprioritization of their big-ticket issues.
Silence is golden if you're a boisterous kid in the back of your kindergarten class. Otherwise, the Deep State transitioning power quietly and efficiently without anyone else's input is creepy as fuck and all the people who throw money at talk, intelligently or not, don't part with their gold for a curt "You have to elect the candidate to find out if you're going to see an ROI." (lack of) policies.
Both looters lose if Oliver spoiler votes decide the election as in 2016. Then they HAVE to change some planks.
Trump actually has moderated his insults a bit at least from when he ran in 2016 which I found endlessly entertaining. Harris is invisible in that no one knows what her policies or platform is since she won't tell anyone, put it on her website or do interviews. All you get is JOY, JOY, JOY. I said JOY, Damnit. You Will Be Joyful. She is going with what worked for The Lightbringer. Don't be specific about anything, come up with a catchy slogan and let the media do the rest.
1. You may be right.
2. If the democrats do that again, it may be irrelevant because there’s a good chance they will be overthrown by force if they pull that again.
According to Project 2025 (or проект/Projekt 2025), the true priority of politics is the well-being of the American family.
I expect to see Nazi or Soviet style posters of smiling white families with suitable captions extolling "progress" pretty soon.
No Shrike, that’s you democrats.
lol, ok guv’nah.
Like this one? https://expatriotas.blogspot.com/2023/11/infiltradores-anarco-fascistas.html
The blog explains to foreigners how caudillo fascists now impersonate libertarians. Google will give you a free blogger blog.
That would be Harris and her "white dudes for Harris", "white women for Harris" and the other silly groups.
"I spoke with multiple people formerly associated with Heritage, from research fellows to senior staff. They painted a picture of an organization that has, in the 14 years since launching its lobbying arm, Heritage Action for America, come to care less about getting conservative policies into law"
Given DECADES of failures in doing so, I cannot blame them.
The only conservative you support is one who is unable to conserve anything.
It is now time to take the country back.
It is now time to take the country back.
From whom, and by whom?
Them. By us.
Are you with us or them?
I await the enemies list culling with barely disguised glee.
You Marxists could save America a lot of trouble by committing mass suicide. Come on, see what all the fuss is about.
From you. By us.
Not exactly responsive. I mean, I assume that I'm in the "you" group as I'm Jewish, British, and educated, and you're in the "us" group (d - none of the above), but some more definition would be appreciated.
Very pro-Jewish. Jesus was Jewish so I do not comprehend the sheer concept of anti-Semitism involving Christianity at all.
Britain has become a fascist state so fuck that shithole of an island. Going to jail for posting online? Either overthrow your government entirely or just sit back and take it.
"Education" is laughable these days.
"You" means the people who lap up whatever the government decides to shit on you and says "thank you, sir. May I have more?"
so I do not comprehend the sheer concept of anti-Semitism involving Christianity at all.
Never come across the idea that Jews killed Jesus? Never heard of John Chrysostom’s or Martin Luther’s anti-Semitic writings?
“Education” is laughable these days.
I received my education in the 60s and 70s – in private school and university, and moved to the US in 1997.
Your definition of “us/you” seems oblivious to the extent to which you – the “us” here – want to the state to shit on other people.
In one of the pithier rhymes I came up with, I wrote,
Our acts we praise, and theirs condemn
For we are “us” and they are “them”.
Why not link your sockhandle to the blog at which you explain these things to unwashed ku-klux hillbillies? We could use some educated men here.
I am not a sock and don't have a blog.
I" agree that more educated people here would be a good idea.
Jesus was Jewish so I do not comprehend the sheer concept of anti-Semitism involving Christianity at all.
So the inability to comprehend the near entirety of anti-semitism in Europe. And the incomprehension of the anti-semitism present in dispensationalist Christian Zionism.
And the more recent anti-semitism of replacement theory (Zionist or not) - which is I suspect the main form among commenters here. Which isn't Christian in any theological sense but seriously masquerades as such among the crowd that calls itself Christian nationalist and loves dividing the world into us and them.
So either your lack of comprehension is do to a lack of trying or lotsa lying.
"...which is I suspect the main form among commenters here..."
Which is I suspect, is your justification for your antisemitism, asshole.
FOAD.
Arabs are semites too. That whole region is so categorized by soi-disant "Caucasians." All these brushstrokes merely identify the brusher as a collectivist of the racial persuasion, usually also mystical.
Arabs are semites too.
Well, "Semitic" is generally used to apply to a specific group of languages, not an ethnicity (though that secondary meaning was occasionally used), and the term "anti-Semite" was coined (by a German anti-Semite) to refer specifically to Jews.
You might just as well deny that Trump is anti-Semitic by saying that he's a Hebephile. 🙂
If you have to tell people how educated you are, you probably aren't.
"In contrast, Roberts, who succeeded James in late 2021, has seemed unbothered by Trump's continued insistence that the 2020 vote was stolen."
Are their OTHER beliefs that should be verboten amongst conservatives, Ms Slade?
Well, it would be hard to hire worse people than Biden did:
VP Harris, do-nothing/accomplish nothing, making her border czar was like putting a guy with a flame thrower in charge of putting out fires.
Sec Trans Buttigieg: took vacation during supply chain meltdown, presided over multiple literal (toxic) train wrecks
AG Garland: hid evidence of Biden stealing classified documents, the same charge they brought against Trump
Sec Treas Yellen: wants to see any transaction over 600 bucks, what do we have to hide?
SS Director Cheatle: let the assassin take the best shooting perch because it wasn't completely flat.
Comptroller of Currency Omarova: even Congress balked at appointing an actual Soviet Communist in charge of our money
Disinfo Czar Jankowicz: why not just call it the Ministry of Truth, if you're going to pick someone whose claim to fame was quashing true news stories?
"VP Harris, do-nothing/accomplish nothing, making her border czar was like putting a guy with a flame thrower in charge of putting out fires."
They finally found something for her to do: Be a poor substitute for a demented piece of shit.
I will say that people like me have been saying, for years, that you're REALLY not going to like these rules when they are applied to you.
Any that would ALLOW an article they wrote to have this headline attached is not even REMOTELY objective.
Pick up on the Turd Sandwich looter sockpuppet suddenly concerned over objectivity!
I actually think that Schedule F would be a good thing. It will reduce the unyielding bureaucracy (think Yes, Minister), replacing it with people who are at least theoretically answerable to the public, or perhaps even empty positions.
The Supreme Court's repudiation of Chevron will help moderate some of the worst aspects an increase of partisan executive influence would have, although there is certainly some concern.
If Trump is elected and issues Schedule F, the mass firings I would expect will clear out long term bureaucratic cruft, which is good. It may also enable him to do do damage to the country with those he puts in place. However, I, 'm not particularly afraid of this.
I am convinced that MAGA will crumble post-Trump. Like Ross Perot three decades ago, it was held together as a cult of personality. Trump, like Ross, has no intention of grooming anyone to succeed him, and that will strongly limit the long term damage to the country.
In this sense, I view Trump as a form of political chemotherapy. It is a poisonous and dangerous, but is necessary to eliminate the fast growing and at best useless cancerous tissue. It also damages good, healthy tissue, but hopefully not so much that the patient cannot recover. It's bad, but not the worst.
In contrast, I view Harris as a form of political narcotic. It is touted and sold as a "feel good" solution, but it is simply palliative, while the underlying cancer grows and metastasizes the patient does not feel it (or feels it far less than they should).
If it comes down to Trump vs. Harris, it's a matter of picking your poison. I suggest that the one which will best lead to the patient's survival would be Trump.
Another Trumpanzee sent here with no knowledge that there is a Libertarian candidate competently running for president... and ruining Kleptocracy egg counts. Review question for Lewsers: 4.3 million Libertarian votes cover the looter gap in 13 states. How many electoral votes are retasked by libertarian competition?
This actually illustrates the problem with first-past-the-post elections, though. Say that libertarian voters = 5%, Republican voters = 47% and Democratic Party voters = 48%. If all of the libertarians would prefer the GOP candidate over the Dem candidate, but vote for their own nominee, the Dem candidate wins (48%-47%) This is the spoiler effect, and just about all voters recognize this problem. (See Arrow's Impossibility Theorem for how even alternatives to first-past-the-post, like ranked choice voting, fail to completely eliminate this problem). That is why the true preferences of voters for minor party and independent candidates is probably masked by the default two party system.
Winston Churchill famously said that democracy was the worst form of government, except for all of the other types that humans have tried in the history of civilization. Until someone comes up with a better option, voting in elections is the best we can do. But that means that it falls to us to correct the problems with representative government. The people we put in there (and the people that the winning candidates appoint) have the incentive to make government less responsive to what we want, not more responsive.
I’d rather see first past the post than ranked choice. In your example above the Dem did actually win. Fortunately our Founding Fathers were smart enough to not make our country a Democracy but a Republic and built in safeguards against pure mob rule. This is why popular vote is not the only thing electing anyone in the Presidential election. The Founders saw the danger of a couple of large cities forcing their will on the entire country disenfranchising the majority of territory. We are seeing some of this right now with large Dem strongholds like LA/SF, Chicago, NYC, KC etc running their entire states. This is the genius of tying the popular vote to the electoral college and giving small states like Maine 2 Senators and an equal say to large states like Texas or California.
Heritage is so much a part of the swamp that it leases wharves on both sides of K Street.
FOAD, asshole.
That's the street where the Republicans kept a little green house for private parties with hookers during the Harding Administration, no?
Is that actually how K Street got it’s name or did you make that up. Did the Republicans frequent hookers while the Democrats were out of town attending their KKK Rallies?
The idea of Heritage 'ensuring Trump's will is realized' is a bit bizarre in view of the fact that Trump has nothing that can properly be called a 'will'. What he has is whims.
Gee TDS-addled shitpiles will make any claim at all regarding Trump and hope someone else buys their lies.
FOAD, asshole.
Ooohhhh….. now do Harris.
Wow, that's a really long-winded screed there. Maybe just say "I have TDS" and save us the time?
I'm not even a fan of the guy, but if he wins again I'm hoping that a lot of really irritating people end up on the medication they need.
-jcr
"religious organizations to opt out of paying for contraceptives and not force employers to cover "potential abortifacient" drugs, two pre–Trump GOP views supported by many if not most Americans" Trumpanzista shills Steph and Lizard both recite the "many if not most Americans" meme when trying to imply that someone other than Jesus Caucus Christian National Socialists and Islamic Jihadists support killing pregnant women by banning birth control or simply stoning them in the public square.
Yet a clear-eyed analysis of the situation offers at least one source of comfort: Many of the things that prevented Trump from putting his worst impulses into action during his first term would likely do the same in a second one.
No. This should not be comforting. If a President and his or her appointees were regularly violating the law and/or the Constitution, then voters returning that administration to power has to be viewed as an increased danger. If you think about the the things that prevent the executive branch from abusing its power as guardrails, then we should recognize that guardrails get weaker each time something crashes into them.
When it comes to institutional checks and balances in government, the "guardrails" get stronger if they are tested and then voters punish the ones that pushed too hard. But if the voters instead punish the people that resisted, then those institutional protections become weaker, just like actual guardrails that had a car crash into them. Sooner or later, someone will keep pushing and the institutions will cave to the abuse of power.
"This is our moment to demand that our politicians use the power they have"
There's a difference between using the power that you have to undo previous socialist programs implemented in violation of the Constitution by Democratic Congresses, Democratic - and some Republican - Presidents, and legislation-from-the-bench progressive Supreme Courts; and using the power that you have to impose your own social agenda on The People in violation of the Constitution.