Archive for February, 2017

WSJ: Progressive Tea Party, You’re No Tea Party – legal Insurrection (blog)

Fundamental misunderstanding sends progressives off the radical leftist rails

Kimberley Strassel over at the Wall Street Journal has some good advice for the progressive tea party resistance movement: dont go down the path youre on because its based on a fundamentally flawed understanding of the Tea Party.

Strassel writes:

The conservative tea-party phenomenon is overall one of the more successful political movements in modern American history. Even the left acknowledges it now.

. . . . Consider the recent rallying cry of progressive star Markos Moulitsas. The Tea Party didnt really become a force until it started ousting Republicans it didnt feel represented them, he told the New York Times. Democrats either need to feed, nurture and aggressively champion the resistance, or they need to get out of the way in favor of someone who will.

Message: Get with our agenda, or be purged. The progressives showing up for protests and demanding Supreme Court filibusters are determined to move their party aggressively to the left. Any Democrat who does not sign up for their policies and their resistance will face a primary.

. . . . The tea party erupted for a lot of reasons, but a big one was frustration with Washington business as usual. Activists in the main werent demanding the Republican Party become something new, or ultra-right-wing. They were demanding the partybeset at that time by logrolling, earmarks and corruptionsimply hold true to its stated and longtime principles of free markets and limited government. It was a quest for a better-quality product, not a different one altogether.

. . . . The original tea party was about making conservatives in this center-right country act like conservatives again. The progressive tea party is about making Democrats in this center-right country act like Bernie Sanders. Have at it.

Shes right, and I hope they dont pay any attention to her at all.

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WSJ: Progressive Tea Party, You're No Tea Party - legal Insurrection (blog)

First tea party: Girls learn the poise of socials – Valley morning Star

HARLINGEN Hi, my name is Maggie, so nice to meet you, said Maggie Aguigana, shaking hands with another young girl before they both curtsied with big smiles on their faces.

Maggie, 10, and several other girls were attending a tea party at the LeMoyne Gardens unit of the Boys and Girls Clubs of Harlingen. The girls, ages 9 to 12, were learning table etiquette, the manners of young ladies, and how to maintain proper poise in social situations.

We are trying to teach them the way to speak, said Sophie Cantu, youth development worker at LeMoyne Gardens.

We are trying to teach them how to conduct themselves, how to have poise, the way they present themselves, Cantu said.

She was teaching them such things as how to get someones attention. Instead of yelling, they should quietly approach the individual.

They are transitioning from children to pre-teen, she said.

The girls listened attentively as Cantu spoke to them.

Do you know how to sit in a dress, she asked them. They shifted slightly and she indicated approval.

Do you know how to pull out a chair? she asked. She leaned over and pulled a chair from a table. Several girls stood and tried to copy her technique, only to receive some extended instruction from Cantu.

She now moved to greetings, approaching one girl and shaking her hand.

What was wrong with that? Cantu asked.

She didnt say her name, answered a girl.

Cantu nodded. She didnt even greet me, she said.

Cantu gestured to another girl to stand and practice a greeting.

Hello, my name is Jazmine Ajca, said the 12 year old. Whats your name?

My name is Maggie, answered Maggie, who wore a pink top and a skirt with a bold zig-zag line of magenta and aqua blue.

Then, upon completing the courtesies theyd just learned, they slapped each others hands in a more familiar greeting for good fun.

Jazmine had been somewhat nervous about the event, although most excited at the same time.

I feel nervous and happy, she said.

Maggie was also excited about the event.

Its my first time for a tea party, she said. I just want to have fun, dress up. Were going to learn how to listen and be loyal.

Were going to learn how to hold a tea cup, said Yarely Aguilar, 10.

These basic social skills will serve them well in many arenas, said Hilda Gathright, unit director at LeMoyne Gardens.

I feel its important for them to be able to apply some of these life lessons, she said. They will use them later in life.

twhitehead@valleystar.com

Excerpt from:
First tea party: Girls learn the poise of socials - Valley morning Star

Smith addresses Apple Valley Tea Party – The Winchester Star

WINCHESTER Chuck Smith, a Virginia Beach attorney seeking the GOP nomination for state attorney general, spoke to about 30 people at a meeting of the Apple Valley Tea Party on Thursday.

We need an American attorney general, Smith said, touting his service in the Marine Corps infantryman during the War in Vietnam and, later, his career as a military attorney. We need an attorney general who stands up for Virginia.

Smith, 64, is running against Richmond-based attorney John Adams for the party nomination; they are currently the only two candidates, as Del. Rob B. Bell, R-Albemarle, unexpectedly dropped out of the race in November.

The attorney general post is now held by Democrat Mark Herring who plans to run for re-election this year.

Smith told the group, meeting at the Frederick County Sheriffs Office that he is the most qualified person to ever run for attorney general, citing his 37 years practicing law and his experience heading various groups, including the Virginia Beach Republican committee.

We are 0-7, he said of the state GOP, referring to the fact that Republicans have not won a statewide election since 2009. Weve got to stop voting for money.

According to a November report from the Washington Post, Smith trailed GOP primary contender and Richmond-based attorney John Adams $4,000 to $432,000 in fundraising. Smith said the party consistently chooses the candidate with the most money, which leads to losses.

As a black conservative, hell bring diversity to the ticket, he said. A lack of diversity among statewide candidates could cost Republicans to lose future elections.

We want to win again, Smith said. We dont want to be 0-8.

He said the party has to get God back in the classroom and that 13 million illegal immigrants can be deported from the United States. He said hell protect the state from federal settling of refugees and from Muslim radical terrorists running around our country.

He spoke about the 10th amendment and fighting federal overreach.

The role of an attorney general is not to legislate, he said, citing Herrings refusal to enforce the state marriage law as being between a man and a woman.

Several times Smith mentioned transgender men using female restrooms.

Smith receded from some attendee questions regarding education and protests.

Where in the Constitution does it say education? one person asked.

Nowhere, Smith said, adding that he feels the Department of Education should be abolished but as state attorney general he wouldnt have anything to do with that.

I didnt see one broken head ... lots of broken windows, said another person, apparently referencing civil unrest at the University of California, Berkeley, earlier this week. Would the Marines have let them break windows without breaking a head?

At that Smith segued into a speech about patriotism, military service and defending the laws that are already on the books.

I didnt use a script, he said of his speech, which lasted about 45 minutes. You dont need a script if you believe what you say.

Smith handed out signature sheets after the meeting. He needs at least 10,000 signatures to get on the ballot and a minimum of 500 from each congressional district.

Before Smiths speech, the meeting discussed various issues, including Frederick Countys debt and the concern that new housing developments are not paying for themselves.

Jeff Isaak, a state GOP field operative, spoke briefly about Denver Riggleman, a former USAF Intelligence Officer and co-owner of Silverback Distillery. He lives in Afton and is seeking the GOP nomination for governor in the November election. Riggelman also circulated signature sheets.

Link:
Smith addresses Apple Valley Tea Party - The Winchester Star

UN Ambassador Haley hits Russia hard on Ukraine …

"The United States continues to condemn and call for an immediate end to the Russian occupation of Crimea," said Nikki Haley, President Donald Trump's envoy to the world body. "Crimea is a part of Ukraine. Our Crimea-related sanctions will remain in place until Russia returns control over the peninsula to Ukraine."

Sources told CNN Thursday evening that the White House was aware in advance of Haley's speech. A source told CNN's Dana Bash that Haley didn't get direction from the White House but she wasn't asked not do to it. Another source told CNN's Elise Labott the National Security Council signed off on the remarks.

The first source said Haley made clear in private conversations as well as during her confirmation hearings how she felt about hot spots like Russia, though her point of view clearly differs from some of what the President said during the campaign.

As a candidate, the President hinted he might recognize Russia's annexation of Crimea. In the weeks before and after his inauguration, Trump's refusal to condemn Russian hacking during the election and his attacks on the intelligence community for investigating those hacks raised questions about his ties to Moscow.

At a news conference with British Prime Minister Theresa May last week, he said it was "too early" to discuss sanctions.

On Thursday, the Treasury Department slightly eased a sanction the Obama administration put in place against Russia's Federal Security Service, known as the FSB.

A top State Department official said the move was made as a technical fix to the sanctions that were put in place to avoid "unintended consequences" of US government business with Russia.

While Washington was taking that step, Haley was lobbing verbal grenades. "I consider it unfortunate that the occasion of my first appearance here is one in which I must condemn the aggressive actions of Russia," she said. "We do want to better our relations with Russia. However, the dire situation in eastern Ukraine is one that demands clear and strong condemnation of Russian actions."

"The sudden increase in fighting in eastern Ukraine has trapped thousands of civilians and destroyed vital infrastructure and the crisis is spreading, endangering many thousands more," Haley added. "This escalation of violence must stop."

At one point in the charged meeting, Ukraine's Ambassador to the UN, Volodymyr Yelchenko, held up a photo of a Ukraine serviceman who was killed days ago. Looking at the Russian ambassador, Yelchenko said, "You killed him."

While Haley's remarks echoed many speeches delivered by the Obama administration's UN ambassador, Russia's Ambassador to the UN Vitaly Churkin told reporters that he thinks "there is a change in tone" with the new US administration. He added that he wasn't surprised by Haley's speech.

Some analysts see the surge in fighting as a Russian test of US resolve or perhaps an attempt to send Ukraine a message that after years of Obama administration support, the Trump administration will be more friendly to Moscow than Kiev.

Fighting between Russian-backed rebels from the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic and the Ukrainian army exploded a day after Trump had his first phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Saturday. Russia accuses Ukraine of starting the escalation.

Churkin said that Ukraine was "desperately, frantically trying to achieve a military settlement to the conflict." He blamed Kiev for the recent escalation, saying it was meant to keep the issue "on the international agenda" and "at the same time suck in with their reckless confrontational policy newly elected heads of state."

The UK Ambassador to the UN, Matthew Rycroft, told the UN meeting that "we frequently hear from the Russian government, as we did today, that all the problems in eastern Ukraine are the consequence of actions by the Ukrainian government.This is simply not the case. It is an inversion of reality."

He later tweeted, "Great #UNSC debut speech by @NikkiHaley today. Fully agree that sanctions must remain until #Russia returns control of #Crimea to #Ukraine."

Balazs Jarabik, a non-resident fellow at the Carnegie Endowment who studies Central and Eastern Europe, notes that the rebels used rockets that were in flagrant violation of the Minsk Agreement, a ceasefire pact meant to end the fighting.

"Why did they violate it so visibly?" Jarabik asked. "I think there's merit to the speculation that the Russians wanted to show that Kiev doesn't have the backing it used to have from the US."

And initially, the US response was seen as tepid at best. A January 31 statement from the State Department condemned the violence, but didn't mention Russia or contain the statement of support for Ukraine that was customary during the Obama administration.

"There was panicking" in Ukraine after that statement, Jarabik said, speaking from Kiev. "There were Ukrainian pundits saying it's the end of US support -- because it had such a different tone than the Obama administration. The so-called unwavering support seemed gone. It was sending shock waves."

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have long called for a more supportive approach to Ukraine. They often criticized the Obama administration for its refusal to provide Kiev with defensive weapons.

On Thursday, Republican Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida called again for the US to provide weapons. "Vladimir Putin's continued aggression against the people of Ukraine is outrageous, and further destabilization in the region will have profound negative consequences for us here in America," Rubio told CNN.

He noted that Trump's new Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Secretary of Defense James Mattis both advocated during their confirmation hearings for providing Ukraine with weapons to defend its sovereign territory.

"I hope President Trump will heed their advice," Rubio said. "We must stand with the people of Ukraine during this difficult hour and make clear to Putin that relations will not improve until Russia respects Ukraine's sovereignty."

Democratic Sen. Robert Menendez of New Jersey drew a link between Trump's mollifying approach to Russia and the aggression in Ukraine. "At the mere hint that President Trump would take a softer stance towards Russia, we have already seen pro-Russian forces emboldened and renew fighting" in eastern Ukraine, he told CNN.

Menendez is part of a bipartisan group of senators who have introduced the Countering Russian Hostilities Act, which he said would hold Russia accountable for its international aggression and interference in the US election.

"I sincerely hope both the Trump administration and Congressional Republicans don't make the mistake of walking away from longstanding, responsible policies to counter Russian aggression," he said.

CNN's Kevin Liptak contributed to this report.

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UN Ambassador Haley hits Russia hard on Ukraine ...

Ukraine rebels claim top commander dies in car bombing – 9news.com.au

A top rebel commander in Ukraine has reportedly been killed in a car explosion. (AFP file image)

A top rebel commander in eastern Ukraine was killed along with another person when their car exploded, rebels have reported.

The rebels' Lugansk Information Center reported today that Lugansk People's Militia commander Oleg Anashchenko died in the explosion along with an unnamed person.

Ukraine's military, meanwhile, said three soldiers were killed in shelling over the past day.

Fighting between government forces and Russia-backed separatist rebels has escalated over the past week in eastern Ukraine, killing at least 33 people, including civilians, and wounding several dozen.

More than 9,800 people have died since the war began in April 2014.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko spoke late Saturday with US President Donald Trump, who he said expressed "deep concern" over the escalation.

During the call, a statement issued by Mr Poroshenko's office said the two leaders "noted the urgent necessity of establishing a complete cease-fire."

The Ukrainian president thanked Mr Trump for his "strong support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine."

Mr Poroshenko has cast the outburst of fighting as an argument for continuing Western sanctions imposed on Moscow for its actions in Ukraine.

The White House said Mr Trump had a "very good call" with Mr Poroshenko.

"We will work with Ukraine, Russia, and all other parties involved to help them restore peace along the border," Mr Trump said in a statement.

The government-held town of Avdiivka, just north of the main rebel-controlled city of Donetsk, has been the focus of the fighting.

A temporary cease-fire had been called to allow workers on both sides to restore electricity to freezing residents as shelling eased for much of the day. But the Ukrainian military said rebel forces began a mortar barrage of Avdiivka in the evening.

The daily shelling has left locals in the industrial town of about 35,000 traumatized.

Mr Trump's repeated promises to improve relations with Russia have fueled concern in Ukraine that Washington would back off some of the sanctions.

However, the US ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, has said sanctions imposed for Russia's 2014 annexation of Crimea will remain.

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Ukraine rebels claim top commander dies in car bombing - 9news.com.au