Archive for June, 2017

Ann Coulter: Hannity ‘would endorse communism’ if Trump thought it was good – The Hill

Firebrand Ann Coulter on Wednesday tore into fellow conservative Sean Hannity on Wednesday, saying the Fox News host "would endorse communism" if President Trumpthought it was a good idea.

Sean Hannity, bless his heart, has the zeal of the late Trump convert, Coulter wrote in a blog post.

He would endorse communism if Trump decided to implement the policies of The Communist Manifesto, she wrote, also claiming that the Senate GOPs healthcare bill actually does fall under that category.

In the post, titled "Even Trump Can't Make Goldman Sachs Popular," Coulter went after Goldman Sachs and Wall Street, claimingTrump is at risk of falling under their influence and that he should stay the hell away from them.

On his show last Thursday, he tried to get me to defend Trump's rich person remarks about Cohn. I wish you could see the segment ..., Coulter said, explaining that the show ran out of time.

With the zealotry of those who came late to the Trump party, Hannity fully endorsed Trump's faith in Cohn, adding, I never got a job from a poor man! She continued.

Hannity did not mince words in his response to the blog, saying on Twitter that Coulterhad fallen "in and out of love" with Trump, among other Republicans.

Ann, u fall in and out of love with Christie Romney Trump and how many others. Frankly you just bore me. https://t.co/ERf1TUUk8U

Coulter said blunt honesty will help the president in the long run rather than people who blindly agree.

The best way we serve the people we admire is to tell them the truth, she added.

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Ann Coulter: Hannity 'would endorse communism' if Trump thought it was good - The Hill

Ann Coulter shreds Sean Hannity: ‘He would endorse communism’ if Trump did – SFGate

Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images

Conservative provocateur Ann Coulter slammed Sean Hannity in a blistering column on Wednesday, saying the Fox News commentator "would endorse communism" if Donald Trump did.

"Sean Hannity, bless his heart, has the zeal of the late Trump convert," Coulter wrote in the column on her website. "He would endorse communism if Trump decided to implement the policies of 'The Communist Manifesto.'"

The two firebrands have been feuding since last week, when Coulter accused Hannity of censoring from his show her comments about Trump's relationship with Goldman Sachs.

Coulter said she had criticized Trump's praise for his chief economic adviser Gary Cohn, the former Goldman Sachs president, whom he called one of the "great, brilliant business minds" on his Cabinet during a rally in Iowa last week.

Trump added that he did not want a "poor person" running the economy, and "that's the kind of thinking we want" a line Coulter told Hannity she objected to.

"On his show last Thursday, he tried to get me to defend Trump's "rich person" remarks about Cohn," Coulter said. "I wish you could see the segment, but, unfortunately, Hannity decided no one would ever see it."

The pre-recorded segment was cut for time, Hannity said. The host has faced criticism for his unceasingly pro-Trump coverage.

But to Coulter, who bills herself an early Trump supporter, it does no good to blindly praise the president.

"Those of us who have been here for a while know how to party responsibly," she said. "The best way we serve the people we admire is to tell them the truth."

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NOW WATCH: 'What you feel isn't relevant': Sen. Angus King grills intel leaders on whether Trump tried to influence them

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Ann Coulter shreds Sean Hannity: 'He would endorse communism' if Trump did - SFGate

Socialism in Color: Aristarkh Lentulov at the Bakhrushin – The Moscow Times

A comprehensive retrospective of Aristarkh Lentulov, one of the most important figures in the Russian avant-garde movement, opened at the Bakhrushin State Central Theater Museum a week ago. Devoted to the artists 135th anniversary, it encompasses works from all periods of his life, from the turn of the century to the 1940s.

The exhibition presents 250 artworks from 20 museums around Russia and 11 private collections, including the artists great grandson Fyodor Lentulov. Its the first exhibition of Lentulovs work of this scale in 30 years, and it was organized in record time: just four months and two weeks.

The title of the exhibition, MysteryBouffe, refers to the play by Russian avantgarde poet Vladimir Mayakovsky. The author himself called it the revolutionary road and set the tone for much of post-1917 art. Although Lentulov did not design the stage sets (they were developed by Suprematist avatar Kazimir Malevich), the idea of a mystery-bouffe or comic opera reflects his ideas about art. Mayakovsky used to say that what he did with literature, Lentulov did with art.

Born into a poor priests family in a small town 100 kilometers from the central Russian city of Penza, Lentulov studied art in Kiev and St. Petersburg before moving to Moscow in 1909. He was one of the founders of the Jack of Diamonds, a group of Moscow avant-garde artists that included turn-ofthe-century greats like Malevich, Robert Falk, Mikhail Larionov and Natalia Goncharova.

Although one of the major figures in Russian avant-garde movement, Lentulov found inspiration in lubok (Russian popular prints), store signs, icons and ancient Russian architecture. Lentulov also had access to the Western art collections of pre-revolutionary entrepreneurs Sergei Shchukin and Ivan Morozov, so you can see some allusions to Van Gogh, Gauguin and early Matisse.

We wanted to show how he changed various styles: Behind every painting exhibited here theres a whole group of similar works that we are just not able to show, says Svetlana Dzhafarova, the exhibits curator. Lentulovs paintings show the influence of styles including Cubism, Primitivism, Fauvism, Expressionism and Futurism. He was a painter who liked to play with light.

Hes most interested in how nature changes due to different light, different positions of the sun. Later he started painting theater floodlights for the same reason. Its his justification for the transformation of reality that we see on his paintings, says Dzhafarova.

Since it is being held at a theater museum, the exhibition draws parallels between Lentulovs paintings and his works for theater stage sets and costume designs. This allows us to see the close connections between the two artforms in the first few decades of the 20th century.

He had a certain theatricality in all of his works, even those that had nothing to do with theater, says Dzhafarova. Russian theater in the early 20th century was different from that in Europe, because Russian theaters started inviting high-profile professional painters to produce backdrops, rather than ordinary set designers.

About 70 costume and stage decoration sketches for 10 theater productions are exhibited, including Hoffmanns Fairytales, Stepan Razin and the model of the set for Lermontovs Demon, for which Lentulov received the Diplme de Medaille dOr at the Paris International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts in 1925.

With time, Lentulov started using decorative elements in his paintings, too, gluing on bits of fabric and pieces of embroidery, or using bronze, silver and even gold paints. This is especially true for his female portraits. One of his favorite subjects was his wife, Maria Petrovna, whom he painted in different outfits and at different ages. Several of these portraits are at the exhibition, including Maria as Venetian socialite Luisa Casati, as well as a Cubist double self-portrait in which he poses with his wife both en face and in profile.

Lentulov liked to paint monasteries. At the exhibition you can see a series of paintings depicting the New Jerusalem monastery complex and the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius in Sergiev Posad, as well as a monastery in Nizhny Novgorod and the Strastnoi monastery in central Moscow, torn down in the 1930s.

During the Soviet era, Lentulov turned to Social Realism. Dzhafarova explains this by his tendency to follow the latest trends in art: Its not like it only happened in Russia. Avant-garde vanished in Europe, too and not because it was destroyed by the government.

His paintings from this period include canvases depicting the building of the metro, new constructivist architecture and factories.

Lentulov was inspired by industry, adds Dzhafarova. You cant paint something like this artificiallyhe was a very organic artist.

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Socialism in Color: Aristarkh Lentulov at the Bakhrushin - The Moscow Times

COD, June 30, 2017: Socialism and free market coexist – Richmond.com

Socialism and free market coexist

In his recent letter, Democrats are teaching the kids, about the divisions we are currently experiencing in the U.S., Bob Baird imparts misinformation and confusion. He states that today, the battle is over whether America continues to exist as a constitutional republic or if we move into socialism. There is no compromise or middle ground between the two. To many, the word socialism means communism or statism. Modern socialism, in contrast to the classic version, is neither.

Modern socialism, at least in most countries such as Denmark or Canada, coexists with a relatively free-market economy. In such countries there is significant government intervention in the economy, but business interests are valued and promoted.

This larger role for government has indeed become a fact of life here in America, especially since the Great Depression. This is not the result of some liberal plot to abolish individual liberty and turn our constitutional republic into an autocratic or tyrannical state.

The measures that led some citizens to decry socialism Social Security, Medicare, food stamps, environmental regulations, etc. were enacted by popularly elected officials. These representatives were responding to the needs and demands of a public that had learned that unfettered capitalism would not lead to a society worthy of our ideals.

Americans value individual liberty, but we also value equality of opportunity and individual dignity. We, like most advanced countries, have chosen that very middle ground that Baird denies.

We will continue to debate and seek the optimum balance between governmental and individual responsibility as we continue to build a more perfect union.

If Baird wishes to ensure the health of our constitutional republic, he might address such real problems as partisan redistricting, the need for constant fundraising, the excessive influence of lobbyists, and extreme inequality.

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COD, June 30, 2017: Socialism and free market coexist - Richmond.com

Tea Party favorite to lead conservative think tank | TheHill – The Hill

Former Kansas Rep. Tim Huelskamp, the conservative who was ousted in his GOP primary last year, will become president of the Heartland Institute, a free-market think tank based just outside of Chicago, The Hill has learned.

Reached by phone on Wednesday, Huelskamp confirmed he will replace Joseph Bast, who has led the conservative and libertarian-leaning institute since it was founded in 1984.

Huelskamp, 48, will start at Heartland next month.

Its a really good fit, said Huelskamp, the former chairman of the Tea Party Caucus and a member of the far-right House Freedom Caucus.

His hiring means there will be no 2018 rematch between Huelskamp and the Chamber of Commerce-backed obstetrician, freshman Rep. Roger Marshall, who ousted him in last years GOP primary in Kansass 1st Congressional District.

A fifth-generation farmer, Huelskamp had also flirted with running for the neighboring House seat being vacated by retiring Rep. Lynn Jenkins (R-Kan.).

Heartland has roughly 40 employees based at its headquarters in Arlington Heights, Ill., and hundreds of advisers around the country.

As the new Heartland president, Huelskamp said the think tank will continue pushing for eliminating Environmental Protection Agency regulations and challenging climate change alarmists like former President Obama and former Vice President Al GoreAl GoreTea Party favorite to lead conservative think tank Budowsky: Dems madder than hell Misreading lessons of an evolving electorate MORE; advocate for school choice and voucher programs; and offer assistance to states navigating ObamaCare and the current healthcare fight.

I have big shoes to fill given the tremendous leadership of Joe Bast and the Heartland team, Huelskamp said in the phone interview.

Huelskamp rode the Tea Party wave to Washington in 2010 and quickly emerged as a thorn in the side of House GOP leadership, particularly then-Speaker John BoehnerJohn BoehnerTea Party favorite to lead conservative think tank Chaffetz calls for ,500 legislator housing stipend GOP super-PAC promises big spending in 2018 MORE (R-Ohio).

After Huelskamp repeatedly bucked leaders on key votes, BoehnerJohn BoehnerTea Party favorite to lead conservative think tank Chaffetz calls for ,500 legislator housing stipend GOP super-PAC promises big spending in 2018 MORE ousted the Kansan from both the Budget and Agriculture committees. Huelskamp tried to get reappointed to the Agriculture panel but was unsuccessful. In 2016, his primary opponent backed by Kansas agricultural interests seized on the issue, arguing that Huelskamp was not properly representing his agriculture-heavy district and state.

His defeat last year created bad blood between Speaker Paul RyanPaul RyanJerry Springer: Trumps attacks beneath the dignity of any decent man The Memo: New GOP angst over Trump tweets NY Daily News: Trump attack on Brzezinski is humiliation for US MORE (R-Wis.) and Huelskamps allies in the Freedom Caucus, the same group that forced Boehner out of the Speakers office in 2015.

Ryan had helped Huelskamp win a Small Business subcommittee gavel and a seat on the influential Steering Committee. But Freedom leaders complained that Ryan had not done enough to stop the Chambers attacks on Huelskamp or reinstate him on the Agriculture panel, and threatened to retaliate against the Speaker.

Huelskamp now seems ready to move on. In a followup statement, Huelskamp said he was honored and excited to join Heartland.

Since I have already been successful at driving innovative policies at both the state and federal level, he said, I am confident that I can lead Heartland toward even greater success in promoting the cause of freedom in every state, and now in Washington, D.C.

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Tea Party favorite to lead conservative think tank | TheHill - The Hill