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“Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace to those on whom his favor rests.”
- Luke 2:14
President Trump Holds a Bilateral Discussion with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi
President Trump holds a bilateral discussion with Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India. The media questions about Iran and geopolitical events take up approximately 10 minutes of the video below. President Trump took a variety of questions on a variety of subjects. At 10:37 President Trump is asked about Bill Pulte and FISA (702). WATCH: […]
The post President Trump Holds a Bilateral Discussion with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi appeared first on The Last Refuge.
Tom Cotton Barreling Ahead With Hearing For DNI Pick Jay Clayton Despite Trump Blowing Up Nomination Process
President Trump Holds a Bilateral Meeting with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi
Perhaps one of the most consequential voices in all of the Middle-East is Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. Egypt is the intellectual hub of modern Islam, and a very pragmatic President Sisi has been the major opposition to radical Islam for the past decade. President Sisi walks a careful position balancing his opposition to the […]
The post President Trump Holds a Bilateral Meeting with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi appeared first on The Last Refuge.
Judge: Kennedy Center Must Submit Plans for Staying Open
23-Year-Old Arrested in Connection with Delaware Hospital Shooting
A 23-year-old man was arrested Tuesday night in connection with a hospital shooting that left one injured and one dead earlier in the day.
The post 23-Year-Old Arrested in Connection with Delaware Hospital Shooting appeared first on Breitbart.
Dividing Lines on the Baby Boom or Bust Question
Trump Delays Nomination of Jay Clayton for Intelligence Director, Putting Spy Powers Vote in Peril
The Senate was set to confirm President Donald Trump’s new director of national intelligence as soon as Thursday, but Trump threw a wrench into Leader John Thune’s plans by stating nominee Jay Clayton cannot be confirmed until the Senate approves his replacement as U.S. attorney.
Trump posted on Truth Social on Wednesday morning that Jamie McDonald must be confirmed to replace Clayton as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York before the Senate can vote on Clayton to become the new intelligence director.
“Regarding the approval of our great patriot, Jay Clayton, we are cancelling the Senate hearing regarding DNI today and will not be going forward until Jamie McDonald is approved to be U.S. attorney. In the meantime, Bill Pulte will remain as the acting director of national intelligence,” Trump wrote.
However, Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., said the Intelligence Committee will proceed with Clayton’s nomination hearing as scheduled for Wednesday afternoon, barring a directive from the president or the withdrawal of Clayton’s nomination.
Clayton’s nomination could also help secure the necessary votes to reauthorize Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, a program allowing the government to spy on foreign nationals without a warrant. Democrats refused to vote to renew FISA as long as Bill Pulte, whom Trump tapped as acting intelligence director after Tulsi Gabbard resigned, remained in the role.
“The Republicans agreed with Dumocrats to remove very fair, and talented, William Pulte, from serving as Acting DNI in return for getting FISA approved by the Dumocrats,” Trump said. “However, the Republicans moved so fast with the hearings of the great Jay Clayton, current U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, that Pulte would be gone before the Dumocrats would vote on FISA.”
“Now, the Dumocrats are saying they will vote against FISA — so, the Republicans wound up having fulfilled their commitment, but Dumocrats broke the deal,” Trump added. “In addition, the newly nominated U.S. attorney, Jamie McDonald, must be confirmed and blue slipped.”
Trump said he doesn’t want to remove Clayton from the “great job he is doing” as U.S. attorney until McDonald is confirmed to take his place.
Trump also said, to “add a bit of intrigue,” that he will not approve an extension of the FISA program unless his signature voter ID legislation, the SAVE America Act, is attached.
“Not complicated, actually. The Republicans fell into a trap,” he said.
Labor Dept Warns States on Unemployment Fraud
Labor Dept Warns States on Unemployment Fraud
Luigi Mangione Will Assert Psychiatric Defense in Murder Case in UnitedHealthcare CEO's Killing
Elon Musk Vows Legal Action Against German State Media over 'Outrageous Lies' About Belfast Riots
Tesla CEO Elon Musk has vowed to sue German public broadcaster ZDF over a programme in which it accused the X owner of using his platform to encourage rioters in Belfast to "hunt migrants".
The post Elon Musk Vows Legal Action Against German State Media over ‘Outrageous Lies’ About Belfast Riots appeared first on Breitbart.
NATO Boss Rutte Hails Trump's Iran Deal: 'Improves Security For Us All'
NATO Secretary General hailed President Donald Trump's Iran deal for ensuring Iran never becomes a nuclear power.
The post NATO Boss Rutte Hails Trump’s Iran Deal: ‘Improves Security For Us All’ appeared first on Breitbart.
The American Mind Podcast: The Roundtable Episode 322
The American Mind’s ‘Editorial Roundtable’ podcast is a weekly conversation with Ryan Williams, Spencer Klavan, and Mike Sabo devoted to uncovering the ideas and principles that drive American political life. Stream here or download from your favorite podcast host.
America’s Fight Night | The Roundtable Ep. 322
A memo of understanding between the United States and Iran is reportedly taking shape, laying the groundwork for a potential deal that includes $300 billion to rebuild Iran. But can President Trump secure an agreement that serves American interests, and sell it to voters before the midterm elections? Meanwhile, Trump kicks off a summer-long America 250 celebration with a blockbuster UFC event at the White House. Plus, the guys preview upcoming Claremont essays, events, and Fourth of July reflections.
The post The American Mind Podcast: The Roundtable Episode 322 appeared first on The American Mind.
The Long Walking Tour Through the Institutions
There is no better place to hear what America’s historians and history teachers think about the American Founding than in Philadelphia’s historic Old City. While recently on a guided walking tour through the neighborhood, my guide—a prominent scholar of 18th-century Philadelphia—was so overcome with emotion at a particular site that he breezed past a more notable landmark.
The first stop was the Old London Coffee House on the corner of Market and Front Streets, a hub for colonial life since its establishment in 1754. Philadelphians would meet there to discuss politics, hear the news of the day, and conduct business. One such historical detail about the coffee house captured the emotions of my guide: slave auctions used to be held in front of the building.
As he was choking back tears, he led my group right past another landmark just a few doors up the street. A plaque on the building noted the site of John Dunlap’s print shop. The Irish-born Dunlap emigrated to the colonies in the 1750s to apprentice at his uncle’s Philadelphia print shop. His uncle left the business in his care in 1766, and Dunlap eventually bought it outright. He went on to serve in the Continental Army during the War for Independence and saw action at Princeton and Trenton.
Prior to those battles, Dunlap received a printing contract with the Continental Congress, which regularly dispatched printers to produce broadsides, a common way to disseminate information in the Revolutionary era. So the fact that Congress requested Dunlap to print one would ordinarily be routine. Yet on that night, Dunlap worked alongside Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin, painstakingly proofreading a missive for publication.
This evening was July 4, 1776. Dunlap went to his shop to print the Declaration of Independence.
He printed around 200 copies to be distributed throughout the colonies, including one sent to George Washington, who read it aloud to his troops defending New York City against the British. Yet the site of this print shop—where the most treasured document in American history was reproduced—did not merit so much as a mention by this “elite historian.” Nor did the fact that the Declaration’s rhetoric and principles would ultimately bring about the abolition of slavery, a detail apparently deemed insignificant by the prevailing historical orthodoxy.
Near the start of the tour, my guide told an anecdote to establish his credentials. He boasted about angering the right people over the original President’s House site in Philadelphia, which lies across the street from Independence Hall and next to the Liberty Bell Center. The reference was to President Donald Trump’s order to remove 25 panels and plaques from the site that focused exclusively on slavery. Countering the administration’s claim that discarding such inflammatory signage was reasonable, the historian shouted, “We do not cover up history!” But this frames a false choice about how historical sites should be presented.
As Jeffrey Anderson and John Fonte have both argued, the signs offer a one-sided portrait of Washington, who received far harsher criticism than even George III. They have nothing to say about the achievements of George Washington’s presidency and focus almost exclusively on his failures, real or perceived.
The question of what to display at the President’s House is not binary. Does anyone need over 20 signs to know that George Washington owned slaves? Is that fact not already present in virtually every presentation of the Founding Fathers—in Philadelphia, in literature, in the media? Would removing the panels erase the knowledge of Washington’s slaveholding? No. The issue is not the suppression of facts but the placement of emphasis.
In the case of the founding, historians and academics on the Left overemphasize slavery, race, and gender to create an impression that the founders were moral monsters. The principles of the founding receive little to no attention—liberty, equality, and self-governance and the considerable efforts to end slavery, whether begun by the founders or inspired by them.
In reality, Washington worked feverishly to set his finances in order so that his slaves would be legally emancipated upon his death. Thomas Jefferson signed the legislation to ban the international slave trade on the very first day the Constitution permitted. Several founders led the abolition of slavery in their states, as John Jay did in New York. By withholding such key facts and portraying only the negative aspects, museums and other historical institutions amplify one-sided narratives that advance their agenda of discrediting the founding and the country it formed.
As the nation’s 250th anniversary approaches, the way our heritage is presented to the public demands revision. The gatekeepers of our historical memory too often distort the past by overemphasizing the failures of our great American patriots while minimizing their achievements. It is little wonder the country is experiencing a significant decline in patriotism even in this watershed year.
Americans must demand a restoration of context and historical depth in our museums, monuments, and landmarks. Rather than overemphasizing slavery, historical institutions must convey to the American public the nuanced reality: it was the words from Dunlap’s press that would ultimately break the chains of the slaves who used to be traded on the street outside the Old London Coffee House.
The post The Long Walking Tour Through the Institutions appeared first on The American Mind.
GOA Targets Illinois’ ‘Backdoor Handgun Ban’
Gun Owners of America is urging Illinois lawmakers to reject HB 4471, arguing the proposal could restrict some of America's most popular handguns while exposing dealers and manufacturers to steep civil penalties.
The post GOA Targets Illinois’ ‘Backdoor Handgun Ban’ appeared first on The Truth About Guns.
