Archive for July, 2017

Letter: Corrupting democracy – Topeka Capital Journal

I find it odd that President Trump has sent his voter fraud champion, Kris Kobach, to collect social security numbers, dates of birth and party affiliations for every registered voter in the U.S. Trump isnt inclined to do so much as release his tax returns, while Kobach refuses audits of Kansas elections.

Voter fraud, gerrymandering, intimidation, drug laws, mass incarceration - all are tools the right wing uses across the country to deter poor and minority Americans from participating in our democracy.

Widespread voter fraud is a lie perpetuated by the far-right to justify laws that specifically target minority voters to ensure that less of them show up at the polls on election day. This not only favors the GOP, but also white nationalists, white supremacists and the Klu Klux Klan.

Democracy is the most valuable thing the U.S. has to offer in this world. It needs to be vigorously defended against people like Donald Trump and Kris Kobach.

DAVID HEWITT, Topeka

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Letter: Corrupting democracy - Topeka Capital Journal

How Erdoganism Is Killing Turkish Democracy | Foreign Affairs – Foreign Affairs

Turkey was undeniably transformed by last Julys failed coup. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, having barely survived an attempt on this life, has become a Turkish Muslim messiah in the eyes of his supporters: he is the unchallenged leader of the nation, charged with reinvigorating the Muslim umma, the global Muslim community. Opposition has become blasphemous. Those who refuse to support him are anti-Turkish and anti-Muslim and therefore enemies of the state. This is terrible news for Turkeys democracy, which requires a healthy opposition to survive.

Erdogan, a right-wing leader, first came to power as prime minister in 2003 through his Justice and Development Party (AKP). He became president in 2014. In that time, especially during the last decade, he has delivered economic growth, which has helped him increase the AKPs vote share. More insidiously, he also demonized electorates unlikely to vote for him, including seculars, liberals, social democrats, leftists, and Kurds. This strategy built Erdogan a large base made up of conservatives and political Islamists.

After 2014, Erdogan strove to transform the Turkish political system into an executive style presidency in which he, as president, would consolidate the powers of head of state, head of government, and head of the ruling party. This seemed a tall order; Erdogan needed to win a popular referendum to change the constitution before he could become omnipotent, but his AKP had never received more than 50 percent of the vote.

Almost two years later, Erdogans presidential ambitions were reanimated through a crisis that threatened to destroy him entirely: the July 15 coup attempt. Before that, Erdogan had already been one of Turkeys most powerful leaders. By surviving an attempt on his life and subsequently defeating his enemies, especially the Gulen movementa former ally that seems to have played a key role in the couphe only gained in stature, which he then leveraged in a snap constitutional

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How Erdoganism Is Killing Turkish Democracy | Foreign Affairs - Foreign Affairs

Tillerson honors ‘victims & defenders of Turkish democracy’ during failed coup attempt – RT

The US Secretary of State has lauded the courage of the Turkish people who defended their country and democracy during last years military coup attempt, which Ankara pinned on the followers of US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen.

Nearly a year ago, the Turkish people brave men and women stood up against coup plotters and defended their democracy, Rex Tillerson said during a speech at World Petroleum Congress in Istanbul.

READ MORE: US politicians, bureaucrats & academics caught in Turkeys failed coup attempt probe

I take this moment to recognize their courage and honor the victims of the events of July 15, 2016. It was on that day that the Turkish people exercised their rights under the Turkish constitution, defended their place in a prosperous Turkey, and we remember those who were injured or died in that event, he added.

Last July, a rogue faction of the Turkish military attempted to overthrow the government using tanks and attack helicopters. As the night unfolded, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called on his civilian supporters to take to the streets of Istanbul.

Tens of thousands of Turks confronted the armed plotters to prevent the overthrow of the government. At least 265 people were killed, including 104 pro-coup participants, while 1,440 people were injured in military action in Istanbul and Ankara.

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Washingtons relations with Turkey have been strained following the failed coup attempt, which Ankara pinned on political dissident Gulen. Turkey has demanded the extradition of the cleric, but the US has refused to honor the request. Gulen, who has lived in Pennsylvania for many years, repeatedly denied any connections with the coup attempt.

Ankara, has in the past, criticized the US over its attitude to the coup attempt. The Turkish leadership even implied that American intelligence had played a role in the failed plot.

Instead of thanking this nation that quashed the coup in the name of democracy, on the contrary, you are taking sides with the coup plotters, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in reference to the US in July last year. The putschist is already in your country.

My people know who is behind this scheme they know who the superior intelligence behind it is," Erdogan added at the time.

READ MORE: 100s of thousands rally in Istanbul ending 25-day march of Turkish opposition leader

The failed coup attempt led to a massive crackdown in Turkey and saw thousands of people, including military officers, judges, and academics arrested. Critics, however, believe that the plot was used by Erdogans government as a convenient pretext to crush any opposition and dissent.

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Tillerson honors 'victims & defenders of Turkish democracy' during failed coup attempt - RT

Letter: Assault on Trump is assault on Democracy – Times Record

The attacks on President Trump, his family and his cabinet are the results of years of internal communism and socialism in America.

Socialism is a lower form of communism. Both have the identical goal economic control of the people and each is a deadly enemy of freedom.

Some of the weapons and techniques of communism are as follows. Destroy the morals of the people and you destroy that nation. Another being used on President Trump is, tell a lie, tell it long enough, and many citizens will believe it.

This is what is going on regarding the "Russian question," that the Marxist influenced left wing media is using against our president to force him out of office. In addition to the media, many in the Democrat party and their socialist leaders, are attacking President Trump and cannot get over the fact, that they lost the presidential race.

The Democrat Party has been infiltrated by communism, and are dupes to their own programs, to take over America and destroy our Constitution and our freedoms.

A good book to read on the infiltration of communism in our government is: THE ENEMIES WITHIN: Communist, Socialist, and Progressives in the U.S. Congress, by Trevor Loudon. In addition, the author has a revealing DVD, ENEMIES WITHIN: Could your Congressman Pass an FBI Security Check? It is available online at amazon.com.

The problem is that many in congress are not obeying their oath to the Constitution. They have been brainwashed, and are supporting socialist programs that could lead our nation to bankruptcy. This has to be stopped, if our America is to remain free! We Christians, who voted for Donald Trump, must stand up and defend our president, and pray for him, and that our America will return to the biblical principles that we were founded upon.

Fred Coleman,

Americans for Constitutional Government

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Letter: Assault on Trump is assault on Democracy - Times Record

In Venezuela, the destructive force of socialism is at work – Washington Examiner

Where have all the Chavistas gone? Five years ago, every fashion-conscious Western radical was praising Venezuela to the skies. Sean Penn exulted in how Hugo Chvez "did incredible things for the 80 percent of the people that are very poor." Oliver Stone made an obsequious film about South American socialism, whose premiere in Venice was attended by the caudillo himself. Michael Moore hailed Chvez for eliminating 75 percent of extreme poverty. His Canadian equivalent, Naomi Klein, proudly declared her support for the beret-wearing strongman.

Suddenly, they have gone very quiet. In the UK, articles by prominent Leftists have started vanishing from the archive. The leader of Britain's Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn, was a passionate defender of Chvez, as were other senior figures in his party. "Venezuela is seriously conquering poverty by emphatically rejecting neo-liberal policies," he wrote in a piece that has now disappeared from his website. "Conquering poverty?" Venezuela is in a state of unprecedented squalor: blackouts are frequent, food and medicines are running out and most state workers are on a two-day week.

Socialist selective amnesia is not new, of course: Rewriting the past was a characteristic of Soviet regimes, brilliantly dramatized in George Orwell's "Nineteen Eighty-Four." The reason Leftists make such frequent use of what Orwell called "the memory hole" is that their heroes keep failing them.

The pattern is always the same. Socialists take power somewhere. Comfortable, middle-class Western Leftists rhapsodize about their achievements. Then, the regime leads, as socialist regimes invariably lead, to poverty and tyranny. At which point, without a blush, Western Leftists say that it was never properly socialist, and move on to their next Third World pin-up.

First came the USSR. While Stalin was murdering millions in the 1930s through enforced collectivization, the New York Times's Walter Duranty was filing excited copy about the success of Soviet agrarian reforms. In Britain, the dotty socialists Sidney and Beatrice Webb, from their comfortable home in Hampshire, extolled the revolution in their 1935 book, "Soviet Communism: A New Civilization?"

Nowadays, no one defends Stalin anymore. Western lefties will tell you that the USSR was never socialist, but practiced a form of "state capitalism." Yet, they went on to repeat the cycle with virtually every other new socialist regime: China, Yugoslavia, Vietnam, Albania, Cuba, Nicaragua.

The script never varies. We are supposedly witnessing a new dawn until the moment of collapse at which point, overnight, we are told that it "wasn't real socialism". Here, for example, is Noam Chomsky in 2009:

"What's so exciting about at last visiting Venezuela is that I can see how a better world is being created."

And here he is today: "I never described Chavez's state capitalist government as socialist' or even hinted at such an absurdity. It was quite remote from socialism. Private capitalism remained."

But Venezuela isn't remote from socialism. It's a textbook example. Chvez and his successor, Nicols Maduro, set out to replace the market with a system of state production and distribution. Result? Shops are empty, inflation is running at 720 percent and hunger has returned. A few state-run distribution centers offer cheaper food, with rationing by queue rather than by price. Queues, of course, are a feature of every socialist regime.

So is corruption. The bigger the government, the more people's success depends on sucking up to officials rather than on offering a service to consumers. Expanding state bureaucracies offer new opportunities for nepotism. First, Venezuelan jobs were allocated on the basis of political allegiance; now food supplies are.

And so is penury. When I was growing up in South America in the 1970s, Venezuela was a place that people emigrated to. Now, Venezuelans are stampeding to get out. And I still find this almost unbelievable there are recorded cases of death from malnutrition.

It's true that pure undiluted socialism, like pure undiluted capitalism, exists in theory rather than in our complicated world. Still, we can make some rough comparisons. In 1973, when Chile abandoned Marxism and embraced markets, income per head there was 36 percent of what it was in Venezuela; now, it is 151 percent. Or compare West Germany to East Germany, or South Korea to North Korea, or Cuba to Bermuda.

"That's not fair!" say Leftists, "You're citing all the examples of dictatorships!" That's right, comrades. And maybe that's telling you something about the way socialism ends up relying on coercive force.

It is not fair to judge socialism as a textbook theory while judging capitalism by its necessarily imperfect real-world examples. Judge like with like, and every socialist state is poorer and less free than its market-based neighbors. If you know of a counter-example out there somewhere, compaeros, let's hear it.

Dan Hannan is a British Conservative MEP.

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In Venezuela, the destructive force of socialism is at work - Washington Examiner