Archive for May, 2020

Less government is the solution – Pueblo Chieftain

In a political first, Pueblo County delegates played a part in the Libertarian Party's first online convention recently.

This convention marked the first time that any American political party that is organized and active in all 50 states has held all or part of its national nominating convention online.

About 1,000 Libertarians from across America convened in the first 3-hour session to determine who will be the Libertarian presidential candidate in the November election.

I am John Pickerill, one of the registered Coloradans from the area who took part.

Some parts of this session were difficult since the whole online process was entirely new to all of us, but today, we established our schedule and procedures for the rest of the weekend and got to practice how to interact with each other online.

Everything was uncharted territory -- all of our partys previous 20 national conventions since 1971 were conducted face-to-face.

I am a Libertarian because I want people to be left alone to live their lives peacefully in whatever manner they choose. A vote for a Libertarian is a way to tell the world that you dont consent to the theft of your liberties or wallets by the parasitic political class.

Whenever our ideas are given a fair hearing, we win. Thats why the Democratic and Republican parties never allow Libertarians into debates -- because they know that on the day the philosophy of limited government is allowed to be heard, that is the day their grip on the American voter will slip away.

The daunting odds dont deter Libertarians. There are two times as many Libertarians now than five years ago. There are now almost half a million voters registered Libertarian across the country.

In another five, years we will be even bigger.

The big-government parties will eventually have to deal with us. And when they do, they will lose.

We will continue to persuade more of their supporters that less government is always better. The contributors and voters they depend on are going to continue abandoning them to join us.

In the last century, all of the ancient ideas for governing societies with huge, bloated, bossy, expensive governments have been tried. They have all failed.

Big governments dont protect their own people very well; nor can big governments and their teeming bureaucracies be trusted to mind their own

business. In the last century, governments were the biggest killer of people -- with about 200 million deaths to their credit -- most of those being their own citizens.

Its time to turn away from that Leviathan. Time has proven that only a frugal, limited government that is asked to do almost nothing is the only kind that brings about more justice, more peace, and more prosperity.

Only Libertarians are working toward those things.

Voters interested in learning more about the Libertarian Party are invited to visit the website at http://www.LP.org.

Those interested in finding out more about libertarianism in general can find several bibliographical resources at https://lpedia.org/wiki/List_of_Books.

Here are the top seven Libertarians who have been seeking the Libertarian Party nomination for president:

Jim Gray http://www.GraySharpe2020.com/

Jacob Hornberger https://JacobForLiberty.com/

Jo Jorgensen https://JOJ2020.com/

Adam Kokesh https://KokeshForPresident.com/

John Monds https://Monds2020.com/

Vermin Supreme https://VerminSupreme2020.com/

Arvin Vohra https://www.VoteVohra.com/

John Pickerill is a Pueblo County resident who has run for public office.

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Less government is the solution - Pueblo Chieftain

Will: The rise of conservative authoritarians – Roanoke Times

WASHINGTON From Harvard Law School comes the latest conservative flirtation with authoritarianism. Professor Adrian Vermeule, a 2016 Catholic convert, is an integralist who regrets his academic specialty, the Constitution, and rejects the separation of church and state. His much-discussed recent Atlantic essay advocating a government that judges the quality and moral worth of public speech is unimportant as a practical political manifesto, but it is symptomatic of some conservatives fevers, despairs and temptations.

Common-good capitalism, Sen. Marco Rubios recent proposal, is capitalism minus the essence of capitalism limited government respectful of societys cumulative intelligence and preferences collaboratively revealed through market transactions. Vermeules common-good constitutionalism is Christian authoritarianism muscular paternalism, with government enforcing social solidarity for religious reasons. This is the Constitution minus the Framers purpose: a regime respectful of individuals diverse notions of the life worth living. Such respect is, he says, abominable.

He would jettison libertarian assumptions central to free-speech law and free-speech ideology. And: libertarian conceptions of property rights and economic rights also will have to go, insofar as they bar the state from enforcing duties of community and solidarity in the use and distribution of resources. Who will define these duties? Integralists will, because they have an answer to this perennial puzzle: If the people are corrupt, how do you persuade them to accept the yoke of virtue-enforcers? The answer: Forget persuasion. Hierarchies must employ coercion.

Common-good constitutionalisms main aim, Vermeule says, is not to minimize the abuse of power but to ensure that the ruler has the power needed to rule well. Such constitutionalism does not suffer from a horror of political domination and hierarchy because the law is parental, a wise teacher and an inculcator of good habits, wielded if necessary even against the subjects own perceptions of what is best for them. Besides, those perceptions are not really the subjects because under Vermeules regime the law will impose perceptions.

He thinks the Constitution, read imaginatively, will permit the transformation of the nation into a confessional state that punishes blasphemy and other departures from state-defined and state-enforced solidarity. His medieval aspiration rests on a non sequitur: All legal systems affirm certain values, therefore it is permissible to enforce orthodoxies.

Vermeule is not the only American conservative feeling the allure of tyranny. Like the American leftists who made pilgrimages to Fidel Castros Cuba, some self-styled conservatives today turn their lonely eyes to Viktor Orban, destroyer of Hungarys democracy. The prime ministers American enthusiasts probably are unfazed by his seizing upon COVID-19 as an excuse for taking the short step from the ethno-nationalist authoritarianism to which he gives the oxymoronic title illiberal democracy, to dictatorship.

In 2009, Orban said, We have only to win once, but then properly. And in 2013, he said: In a crisis, you dont need governance by institutions. Elected to a third term in 2018, he has extended direct or indirect control over courts (the Constitutional Court has been enlarged and packed) and the media, replacing a semblance of intragovernmental checks-and-balances with what he calls the system of national cooperation. During the COVID-19 crisis he will govern by decree, elections will be suspended, and he will decide when the crisis ends supposedly June 20.

Explaining his hostility to immigration, Orban says Hungarians do not want to be mixed ... We want to be how we became eleven hundred years ago here in the Carpathian Basin. Ivan Krastev and Stephen Holmes, authors of The Light that Failed, dryly marvel that Orban remembers so vividly what it was like to be Hungarian eleven centuries ago. Nostalgia functioning as political philosophy Vermeules nostalgia seems to be for the 14th century is usually romanticism untethered from information.

Last November, Patrick Deneen, the University of Notre Dame professor whose 2018 book Why Liberalism Failed explained his hope for a post-liberal American future, had a cordial Budapest meeting with Orban. The Hungarian surely sympathizes with Deneens root-and-branch rejection of classical liberalism, which Deneen disdains because it portrays humans as rights-bearing individuals who can fashion and pursue for themselves their own version of the good life. One name for what Deneen denounces is: the American project. He, Vermeule and some others on the Orban-admiring American right believe that political individualism the enabling, protection and celebration of individual autonomy is a misery-making mistake: Autonomous individuals are deracinated, unhappy and without virtue.

The moral of this story is not that there is theocracy in our future. Rather, it is that American conservatism, when severed from the Enlightenment and its finest result, the American Founding, becomes spectacularly unreasonable and literally unAmerican.

Will is a columnist for The Washington Post Writers Group.

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Will: The rise of conservative authoritarians - Roanoke Times

Mike Pence says he supports peaceful protests. Here’s how he’s responded to them before. – IndyStar

The Notre Dame student organization WeStaNDFor led a walkout during Vice President Mike Pence's address during the school's commencement.

Vice President Mike Pence's response Friday to unrest in Minneapolis following the police-involved killing of George Floyd is putting a spotlight on his past actions.

Pence said in a tweet, "Ourprayers are with the family of George Floyd and our prayers are also with the family of Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia. We have no tolerance for racism in America."

A follow-up tweet continued:

"We believe in law and order in this Country. We condemn violence against property or persons. We will always stand for the right of Americans to peacefully protest and let their voices be heard."

Former Minneapolis police officerDerek Chauvin, who is white,was arrested Friday, days after video circulated of him holding his knee to Floyd's neck for at least eight minutes before Floyd, a black man,died.

The arrest came after Minneapolis residents awoke Friday to smoke billowing, fires burning and police lining their streets after another intense night of protestsfollowing Floyd's death.

But in the past, Pence has turned his back on peaceful protest. In October 2017, the former Indiana governortweeted that he walked out ofLucas Oil Stadiumafter a group of San Francisco 49ers players knelt during the national anthemto protest racial inequality and social injustice.

"I left today's Colts game because President Trump and I will not dignify any event that disrespects our soldiers, our Flag, or our National Anthem, Pence tweeted minutes after leaving the stadium.

According to documents released by theHuffington Postfrom the Department of Homeland Security a year after the walkout, the estimated cost of Pence'svisitwas about $325,000. The numbers includehotel, travel and additional security measures.

Earlier that same year, he seemed to take another silent protest in stride when roughly 100 University of Notre Dame graduates walked out during Pence's commencement speech.

The vice presidentspent a chunk of his 15-minute address discussing his support for freedom of speech at universities and said, sadly, when free speech and civility are waning on campuses across America, Notre Dame is a campus where deliberation is welcomed, where opposing views are debated, and where every speaker, no matter how unpopular or unfashionable, is afforded the right to air their views in the open for all to hear.

Pence didnt acknowledge the walkout directly,but continued to discuss expression on college campuses..

The increasing intolerance and suppression of the time-honored tradition of free expression on our campuses jeopardizes the liberties of every American, he said. This should not and must not be met with silence.

Contact IndyStar reporter Elizabeth DePompei at 317-444-6196 or edepompei@indystar.com. Follow her on Twitter: @edepompei.

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Mike Pence says he supports peaceful protests. Here's how he's responded to them before. - IndyStar

Mike Pence predicted the pandemic would be ‘behind us’ by Memorial Day – Business Insider – Business Insider

Vice President Mike Pence, ignoring the experts, predicted on April 24 that the US would "have this coronavirus epidemic behind us" by Memorial Day weekend.

"If you look at the trends today, that I think by Memorial Day weekend we will have this coronavirus epidemic behind us," Pence, who is spearheading the administration's pandemic response, told conservative commentator Geraldo Rivera in April.

In fact, US deaths from the virus neared the devastating milestone of 100,000 over the holiday weekend, and US hospitalizations are ticking up again after two weeks of decline.

While new cases are on the decline in 14 states, they have plateaued in 28 states and are on the rise in eight states, according to data published by The New York Times. Puerto Rico is also seeing increasing case numbers, while Guam is seeing its numbers level off.

Scott Gottlieb, Trump's former Food and Drug Administration chief, noted on Twitter that hospitalizations have risen over the last week outside of the epicenters of the crisis in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut.

A White House Coronavirus Task Force official told Insider that the nation's overall declining daily death toll and infections, increased testing capacity, and overall downward trend in hospitalizations are evidence the pandemic is largely over.

Experts say the crisis is far from over and the World Health Organization on Tuesday warned that regions that reopen too quickly could experience an "immediate second peak" in infections.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease expert who is helping lead the administration's virus response, in late March warned against making predictions about the virus' future toll.

"I just don't think that we really need to make a projection when it's such a moving target that we could so easily be wrong and mislead people," he told CNN.

Many experts say they can't accurately predict what the US's infection rate and death toll will look like going forward, in part because much depends on how quickly and safely states reopen.

Pence's April statement is just one of a slew of predictions and declarations Trump administration officials have made downplaying the pandemic threat over the last few months.

Trump infamously predicted in late February that the US's virus cases would drop to zero "within a couple of days." On April 10, he said the total US death toll would be "substantially below" 100,000, predicting "50, 60, 65" thousand deaths. He repeatedly revised those numbers upwards in the following days, still putting the upper limit of deaths at 110,000.

Over the weekend, Trump misleadingly claimed "cases, numbers and deaths are going down all over the Country."

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Mike Pence predicted the pandemic would be 'behind us' by Memorial Day - Business Insider - Business Insider

At Cape Canaveral, Trumps Search for a Heroic Narrative Is Thwarted – The New York Times

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. For President Trump, it was a chance to rewrite the story line from tragedy to triumph. Even as the United States reached the grim milestone on Wednesday of 100,000 dead from the coronavirus pandemic, he would help mark the nations trailblazing return to human spaceflight from American soil.

But Mr. Trumps hopes of demonstrating that America was back with the verve of a rockets red glare were doused by lightning-filled storm clouds that forced flight controllers to scrub the long-awaited launch of the SpaceX rocket even as the president watched helplessly from the Kennedy Space Center.

Only minutes after heralding what was to be the first launch of NASA astronauts into orbit from the United States in nearly a decade, a disappointed Mr. Trump scrapped planned remarks and made a hasty retreat to Air Force One to fly back to Washington and the misery of the health crisis. Still, just as the countrys reopening after months of lockdown proceeds with fits and starts, Mr. Trump vowed not to give up, promising to return this weekend when the launch will be tried again.

The scheduled launch of the Crew Dragon capsule aboard a Falcon 9 rocket was to herald a new beginning in Americas odyssey in space nine years after NASAs shuttle fleet was retired, which forced the United States to rely on Russia to ferry astronauts to the International Space Station. In returning to space, the country is now turning to private sector transport, led by SpaceX, the company founded by the billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk.

For Mr. Trump, the excursion to Florida was a family affair. In addition to the first lady, Melania Trump, he brought his eldest daughter, Ivanka Trump, and her husband, Jared Kushner; Donald Trump Jr. and his girlfriend, Kimberly Guilfoyle; Eric and Lara Trump; and several grandchildren.

While Ivanka Trump and her children wore masks, her brothers and the president and first lady did not. Mr. Kushner wore one getting on and off the plane but not during a tour of the space center. Vice President Mike Pence and his wife, Karen Pence, who flew in separately, wore masks when seeing off the astronauts, but not later when in Mr. Trumps presence.

The president made no public mention of the virus death toll as it passed 100,000, in keeping with his habit of not focusing on those who have been lost to the pandemic. But before taking off for Cape Canaveral, he erupted on Twitter at criticism of his administrations initial response.

The Radical Left Lamestream Media, together with their partner, the Do Nothing Democrats, are trying to spread a new narrative that President Trump was slow in reacting to Covid 19, he wrote, referring to himself in the third person. Wrong, I was very fast, even doing the Ban on China long before anybody thought necessary!

The juxtaposition of the two milestones the toll of the pandemic and the promise of a new space future was a matter of happenstance, but they intersected in other ways, as well. NASA was forced to enact measures to ensure that the two astronauts did not take the virus with them to the space station. And the agency told fans who would normally turn out in large numbers to stay home and instead tune in online.

Mr. Musk has been a prominent voice against the economic restrictions imposed to curb the coronavirus, defying California authorities who told him to keep his Tesla plant closed to protect workers against spreading the virus. Mr. Trump two weeks ago publicly backed Mr. Musk in his fight with the states Democratic leaders.

At the space center on Wednesday, Mr. Trump hailed Mr. Musk, calling him a friend of mine for a long time. The two shared the excitement of the moment as the president asked Jim Bridenstine, the NASA administrator, about the flight status.

We are a go for launch right now, Mr. Bridenstine told him optimistically, as it turned out.

Just 16 minutes and 54 seconds before the scheduled 4:33 p.m. liftoff came word over loudspeakers that the launch had been scrubbed because of weather.

Since Apollo, presidents have embraced the space program as a manifestation of the American ideal, a rockets-roaring, television-friendly expression of national determination, ingenuity and the spirit of adventure. But only some occupants of the Oval Office backed that with a real commitment of political will and resources, resulting in a stutter-step journey that has had impressive progress at times even as humanity has remained restricted to low-earth orbit for nearly 50 years.

Mr. Trump is the latest to promise to end that, embracing an ambitious goal of returning to the moon as a way station for an eventual mission to Mars. While demonstrating no particular affinity for the science or engineering of the enterprise, he has eagerly associated himself with the image of space heroism, inviting Apollo 11 moon-walker Buzz Aldrin to his State of the Union address and creating a Space Force within the military. Only two weeks ago, he happily displayed the new Space Force flag during a photo opportunity in the Oval Office.

Before the scrub on Wednesday, Mr. Trump boasted that he had revived NASA. They had grass growing in the runways between the cracks, the president said of the launchpads that have sat unused for NASA crewed flights for nine years. Now we have the best the best of the best.

Mr. Bridenstine said the administration had backed up its commitment with large budget requests. Were bringing America back as it relates to human spaceflight, he said, adding, Todays a big day for the nation.

But independent analysts said Mr. Trumps enthusiasm was not enough, recalling the old Mercury-era adage, no bucks, no Buck Rogers.

Trump is a bit of a spaceflight fan, of course, said Roger D. Launius, a former NASA historian. But, he added: Im not sure how much Trump desires to make his moon landing announcement a reality. There is not much of a reflection of this initiative in the budgets he has proposed.

Nor has Congress jumped on board. Thats not a partisan issue, Mr. Launius said. Neither party seems to be lining up to support it.

Attending a launch in person has always been fraught for presidents. They would happily share the glory of a landmark launch, but they recognize the risks of being on hand if something were to go wrong. As a result, only two sitting presidents have personally attended. President Richard M. Nixon was there when Apollo 12 took off in 1969, and President Bill Clinton witnessed the astronaut John Glenns return to space aboard the shuttle in 1998.

Lyndon B. Johnson, who did more for the space program than any president other than perhaps John F. Kennedy, attended the historic Apollo 11 launch in 1969 as a private citizen, only months after leaving office. Otherwise, presidents tend to send vice presidents. Spiro Agnew witnessed four Apollo launches.

While Mr. Trump was happy to take credit for this weeks prospective launch, it has its origins under two previous presidents. After President George W. Bush ordered an end to the shuttle program, he initiated the development of new rockets with the goal of returning to the moon, while turning to the private sector for cargo launches. President Barack Obama canceled Mr. Bushs rocket program, judging it too expensive, but signed contracts with SpaceX and other private companies to transport crews to the space station.

Dava J. Newman, a former deputy NASA administrator under Mr. Obama who now teaches at M.I.T., said the achievement of this new phase in Americas space program was really a result of all of the great work over the past decade across multiple administrations and Congresses.

Once it happens, that is.

Peter Baker reported from Cape Canaveral, Fla., and Michael D. Shear from Washington.

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At Cape Canaveral, Trumps Search for a Heroic Narrative Is Thwarted - The New York Times