Archive for the ‘Ann Coulter’ Category

No Constitutional Right To Honk Your Car Horn, Federal Court Says – Reason

A federal appeals court says honking isn't First Amendmentprotected activity. There's no constitutional right to honk your car horn, according to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit.

The case involves Susan Porter, who repeatedly honked her car horn while driving past protesters in California in 2017. A deputy with the San Diego County Sheriff's Office issued Porter a ticket, saying she had violated a state law against misuse of car horns.

Porter pushed back, filing a federal lawsuit in 2018. In it, she alleged that honking her horn in solidarity with the protesters was protected First Amendment activity and that the California law used to ticket herwhich prohibits using a car horn except "when reasonably necessary to insure safe operation" or when used "as a theft alarm system"was unconstitutional.

A U.S. district court ruled against Porter, and now the 9th Circuit has upheld that lower court's ruling. For "the horn to serve its intended purpose as a warning device, it must not be used indiscriminately," wrote Judge Michelle Friedland for the majority.

But 9th Circuit judge Marsha Berzon thinks her colleagues got it wrong. In her dissent, Berzon noted that California cops are taught to use discretion when enforcing the horn-honking law, which could lead to selective (and discriminatory) enforcement. And Berzon scoffed at the idea that Porter honking while driving past a protest would be confused for anything but political speech.

"A political protest is designed to be noticed," wrote Berzon. "Political honking was hardly a significant source of noise or distraction in that environment. There is no basis for supposing that anyone was confused or distracted by the honking. Instead, Porter's honking was understood as political expression by the protesters, who cheered in response."

"Berzon also blasted the lower court's reliance on expert testimony by California Highway Patrol Sgt. William Beck," notes Courthouse News:

Beck said that car horns can startle and distract drivers and, if they're used indiscriminately, can "dilute the potency of the horn as a warning device." Berzon said Beck's testimony and the examples he gave amounted to opinion, not scientific fact.

"In none of these examples did Beck report any actual danger created by the honk. And, in any case, those examples were based on Beck's personal experience, no different from anyone else's experience with horn honking and so unrelated to any 'scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge' or experience," Berzon wrote.

Plus, Berzon added, the point of a protest is to make noise to call attention to a cause or an issuemaking it a free speech issue.

First Amendment Coalition legal director David Loy told The Washington Post that the court's decision "punishes a very common and ordinary form of political expression that people engage in every day."

"I was shocked that [California] law prohibits a common and widespread means of political, social, and personal expression," Loy said in a February interview on his group's website. "The government should not be stifling a critical form of expression, especially when public-health restrictions can curtail other means of assembly and protest, as we've sometimes seen during the COVID-19 pandemic. The statute at issue, Cal. Vehicle Code 27001, allows horn use to give a warning but prohibits it to communicate any other message. As applied to expressive horn use, that is the essence of unconstitutional content-based discrimination."

California isn't alone in restricting expressive honking. Court rulings on these laws have been mixed, as Belmont law professor David L. Hudson, Jr. points out.

In a 1998 case, the Montana Supreme Court said protest-oriented honking "did not constitute a protest to government of government acts which would be entitled to protection under the First Amendment." A federal court in New York has also rejected the idea that horn honking is protected expressive conduct.

"However, at least one lower court has recognized a free expression challenge to a horn-honking law, albeit on state constitutional law grounds," Hudson notes. "The Oregon Court of Appeals, in City of Eugene v. Powlowski (Ore. App. 1992), ruled that a city law prohibiting horn honking for purposes other than a reasonable warning to another vehicle violated the free expression guarantee of Article 1, section 8 of the state constitution."

DeSantis does better than Trump in swing-state poll. A new poll from Public Opinion Strategies suggests Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis is more popular among swing-state voters than is former President Donald Trump. The poll suggests that in Arizona and Florida, DeSantis (who has not announcedyetthat he is running for president) could beat President Joe Biden but Trump could not.

In a hypothetical 2024 presidential matchup, 48 percent of Arizona poll respondents preferred DeSantis to President Joe Biden, who was preferred by 42 percent. In Pennsylvania, the divide was 45 percent to 42 percent.

In a hypothetical contest with Trump, Biden was victoriousthough it was very close. In Arizona, 46 percent said they would vote for Biden and 42 percent said they would vote for Trump. In Pennsylvania, 45 percent said they would vote for Biden and 44 percent said they would vote for Trump.

A FiveThirtyEight analysis of Biden's approval ratings shows that the current president isn't much more popular than his predecessor. Biden's average approval rating is currently 43 percent, which is just one point above Trump's average approval rating in April 2019.

Most Americans say the abortion pill mifepristone should remain available. In a CBS/YouGov poll conducted April 1214, poll respondents were asked, "With regard to the abortion pill, would you like to see this medication continue to be available in states where abortions are legal or become unavailable, even in states where abortion is legal?" Sixty-seven percent said it should remain available in states with legal abortion, while just 33 percent said it should not.

At the same time, most respondents think the Biden administration should comply if a federal court tells the Food and Drug Administration to withdrawal its approval of mifepristone. But the divide was small: Fifty-two percent of those polled said the administration should "follow the ruling, and withdraw approval of the abortion pill," while 48 percent said it should "ignore the ruling."

Asked about the effect of a mifepristone ban on U.S. abortions, only 20 percent said it would be likely to "stop a lot of abortions." Around a third said it would not stop any abortions, while 47 percent said it would stop some.

The poll also asked whether states with abortion bans should "criminally punish women who travel to other states to have an abortion." The response was overwhelmingly negative, with 76 percent of respondents saying they should not.

How to watch today's rocket launch by SpaceX.

Why is the State Department taking months to review passport renewal applications?

"The Supreme Court on Friday dealt the administrative state another blow with a 90 decision holding that individuals and businesses harpooned by an independent agency don't have to suffer a torturous government adjudication to challenge its constitutionality in federal court," reports The Wall Street Journal.

Video shows New Mexico police knocking at the wrong door during a domestic disturbance call and then fatally shooting the man who answers the door.

DeSantis has signed a six-week abortion ban in Florida. Republican pundit Ann Coulter is critical:

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No Constitutional Right To Honk Your Car Horn, Federal Court Says - Reason

Wisconsin’s Supreme Court election is a bad omen for the GOP – MSNBC

Even staunch right-wingers are admitting that the results in Wisconsins Supreme Court election are a bad omen for Republicans electoral chances going forward.

Janet Protasiewicz shellacked conservative Dan Kelly by 10 percentage points Tuesday, claiming victory and a seat that swings Wisconsins high court from a conservative majority to a liberal one.

Kelly was a deeply flawed candidate, both because of his connections to former President Donald Trumps efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election and his opposition to abortion rights.

The latter was a particularly salient issue in the Wisconsin race, with the states Supreme Court likely to rule on a host of abortion-related matters, including on the legality of a 19th-century abortion ban reauthorized last year by the states GOP-controlled Legislature.

After the drubbing Republicans took in the 2022 midterms, amid a backlash over the U.S. Supreme Courts rescission of federal abortion rights, one might think thered be more widespread recognition on the right that anti-abortion crusades are unpopular. Even the chair of the Republican National Committee, Ronna McDaniel, seemed to essentially admit this in a Fox News interview on Tuesday.

Setting aside McDaniels gross lies about Democrats true policy goals with abortion, her comments about the GOPs messaging issue showed pretty remarkable self-awareness. Which is evidently a sin in most conservative circles.

As the quote tweets and Twitter replies responding to the above clip indicate, many conservatives reacted angrily to McDaniels remarks. (Note: McDaniel has faced plenty of backlash from ultra-conservative Republicans who claim she and the RNC havent been rabid enough in advocating their far-right talking points.)

One such response came from conservative conspiracy theorist Kyle Becker, who had some mansplaining to do.

To hear him tell it, the real issue in Wisconsin was that McDaniel and the RNC didnt use scare tactics well enough to persuade people to vote for Kelly.

Even conservative commentator Ann Coulter sees the writing on the wall for Republicans electoral chances if the party keeps pursuing anti-abortion legislation.

The demand for anti-abortion legislation just cost Republicans another crucial race, she tweeted Tuesday.Pro-lifers: WE WON. Abortion is not a constitutional rightanymore! Please stop pushing strict limits on abortion, or there will be no Republicans left.

This tweet, like McDaniels, was met with scorn from many conservatives.

When Ann Coulter is advising you on how not to be completely detestable, youve probably gone too far.

Nonetheless, dont expect Republicans to reverse course on this culture war.

Ja'han Jones is The ReidOut Blog writer.

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Wisconsin's Supreme Court election is a bad omen for the GOP - MSNBC

What if they gave a riot and nobody came? Conservatives arent marching to Trumps tune | Mulshine – NJ.com

Arise, you young Republicans! You have nothing to lose but your salt shakers!

That thought occurred to me last week when Donald Trump urged his supporters to descend on the Manhattan courthouse to protest, protest, protest his impending arrest on Tuesday on a charge of having paid hush money to a porn star.

That arrest hadnt happened by weeks end. Good thing for the Donald. Only about 50 pro-Trump protestors showed up outside the courthouse. The most prominent was a contingent from the New York Young Republican Club.

As it happens, I somehow got on the NYYRC mailing list and I receive invitations to all their events.

On April 17 is The Return of Margarita Monday. For a mere $15, the members can avail themselves of complimentary cocktails from south of the border.

It all sounds quite civilized. These are not the sort of people who storm barricades. Someone should tell The Donald hes in the wrong political party, even the wrong country.

In France, the people take to the streets to protest any policy they dont like. The other day the protestors set fire to a police station, which is their equivalent of winning a referendum. More than 150 police were injured.

This is all over a proposed rise in the retirement age from 62 to 64.

Its common for the French government to capitulate to such mobs.

Thats not so in America and particularly among Republicans.

The motto of conservatives is, We do not march, said Mike Carroll, the former Republican assemblyman from Morris who has perhaps the longest pedigree among New Jersey conservatives.

Liberals love to march. Its a social thing for them, he added. Thats how they interact.

A good example was the Womens March of 2017, he said. It was held the day after Trump was inaugurated. Trumps crowd barely filled up the lawn area directly in front of the Capitol. But the Womens March filled the city with protesters for as far as the eye could see.

As for conservatives, they do not resort to taking to the streets to get their will, Carroll said. I have never carried a sign, I dont know any conservative who has.

No, they dont. Trump attracted a lot of populists to the party who liked to turn out by the tens of thousands. But theyre not turning out to protest his prosecution.

Trump found that out last week when his call to arms failed to attract big crowds in New York. In Florida, there were a handful of pickup trucks with Trump banners parked on the causeway that leads to Mar-a-Lago. But it was a beautiful day, perfect for enjoying the view over Lake Worth toward Trumps compound.

Earlier in the week there was chatter among the MAGA crowd about erecting a patriot moat around Mar-a-Lago to keep the cops at bay. But by weeks end Trump was saying he actually wanted to be hauled off in handcuffs. Apparently he figures the visual would make a great fund-raising tool.

I suspect hes about to find out. Late last week he put up a post showing him aiming a baseball bat in the direction of a photo of prosecutor Alvin Bragg. (Trump later deleted the post.)

Legal experts cited several statutes making it a crime to threaten a prosecutor. For good measure, Trump predicted death and destruction if hes arrested.

Heres my prediction: There wont be any death or destruction in Manhattan. Thats a liberal haven and last week the anti-Trumpers outnumbered the pro-Trumpers.

And in Manhattan, even the Republicans are not Trumps brand of Republican. A good example is Ann Coulter, a purebred WASP who grew up in Connecticut before moving to the Upper East Side.

Coulter was a big pro-Trumper when he first emerged on the scene. But after his botched leadership in the midterm elections of 2018, Manhattanite Coulter turned on the rube from Queens, calling him, a complete moron and a blithering idiot among other choice insults. (The New York Post turned on him as well.)

Trump proved her correct last week. He began the week accused of a crime that arguably should have been a misdemeanor. But instead of making that argument in court, he seems to have committed a felony by weeks end.

Trump still seems to be working on the theory that this and the three other prosecutions he faces will cause Republicans to make the streets run with rivers of blood.

In Manhattan, Republicans are more likely to encounter rivers of tequila.

Dont forget the shakers of salt.

BELOW - ITS THE DEMOCRATS WHO LOVE MARCHES AND PROTESTS:

I shot this video at the Womens March in Washington the day after Trumps inauguration in 2017. The crowd was said to have reached a million but there were so many people that they couldnt even march. It might have made them feel good, but it didnt reverse Hillary Clintons loss to the Donald.

More: Recent Paul Mulshine columns.

Paul Mulshine may be reached at pmulshine@starledger.com.

Follow him on Twitter @Mulshine. Find NJ.com Opinion on Facebook and on Twitter

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What if they gave a riot and nobody came? Conservatives arent marching to Trumps tune | Mulshine - NJ.com

Ann Coulter: Heavy D don’t tweet, he acts – Northwest Georgia News

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Ann Coulter: Heavy D don't tweet, he acts - Northwest Georgia News

Singh 24: Nikki Haley’s attempt to transcend race is a major setback … – The Brown Daily Herald

Nimarata Randhawa was like many second-generation immigrants. She was often bullied at her predominantly white elementary school and grew up in a family of practicing Sikhs. Her parents, Ajit Singh and Raj Kaur Randhawa, initially struggled to find someone who would rent a home to them in Bamberg, South Carolina. They ran a small boutique called Exotica where Nimarata helped out with bookkeeping. The Randhawas replaced the bare ceiling of the shop with rows of red and blue tiles in honor of the American flag they even bought fifty glittery white stars to adorn it.

At first glance, Nimaratas story appears to be a familiar one echoing the tale of many immigrant families that have an unwavering belief in elusive vignettes of the American dream. But today, Nimarata Randhawa is known as Nikki Haley, and her story is largely unfamiliar to many immigrants. Haley, the former United States Ambassador to the United Nations, has made headlines for her once-staunch support of Donald Trump and defense of his many contentious policies, such as the infamous Muslim Ban. Now, shes risen to new heights as the first woman of color to be a major contender for the Republican nomination for president. Unfortunately, Haley does not want you to know that. She has spent years distancing herself from her Indian background in order to fit in with her conservative allies who let's face it couldn't care less about her experiences as a person of color. Though Haleys candidacy is historic, the precedent that it sets for identity in elections is problematic.

In some ways, Haley employs her Indian background to absolve herself of what she perceives to be thorny identity politics. I was the proud daughter of Indian immigrants not Black, not white. I was different, she says in her campaign announcement video released last month, marketing herself as transcending some sort of national Black and white divide. This thinly veiled attempt to appeal to the racist undertones of todays Republican Party is part of Haleys effort to fit in with a political base that struggles to engage with nuance on issues of identity. Her rhetoric is reminiscent of some twisted form of satire: During the 2020 Republican National Convention, Haley said My father wore a turban. My mother wore a sari. I was a Brown girl in a Black and white world.

This complicated racial dance, as POLITICO has called it, has always advantaged Haley, who is able to accentuate her identity when it best serves her and abandon it when it does not. This dynamic can be traced back to the beginning of her political career, when she made history by becoming the second Indian governor elected in America. Then, she promptly signed legislation that authorized police forces to check the immigration status of arrestees and favored major abortion crackdowns, calling pro-choice feminism not real feminism.

If Haley thinks this fence-sitting approach will let her ride a wave of Indian American support to the Republican nomination, shes probably wrong: The National Asian American Survey has revealed that Indian American voters overwhelmingly identify as Democrats or independents. Despite the fact that Haley continues to attempt to win over the South Asian community through staged photo-ops making roti at a Sikh temple in New Delhi and frequent references to her Punjabi heritage she has previously listed herself as white on her voter registration card and is no longer Sikh. She converted to Christianity at age 24.

But will Haley be able to employ her identity to occupy the moral high ground on issues of race and politics in the post-Trump era? The answer is unclear. Haleys campaign strategy attempts to cater to both voters excited about diverse leadership and those who reject the existence of modern racism. But what is certain is that Haleys effort to win over Republican primary voters by rejecting America's racist history will ultimately cause more harm than good for marginalized communities in the United States.

Haleys political approach is especially bleak considering her own struggle with discrimination in the political realm. In a South Carolina runoff election, her opponent sent out mailers emblazoned with pictures of her dad in his turban and revealed her birth name to voters. After her recent presidential announcement, conservative pundit Ann Coulter asked Why don't you go back to your own country? Left without the support of her fellow conservatives Haley polled at 4% in a Morning Consult poll of likely contenders for the Republican primary nomination and unlikely to win over the Indian American community, it is unclear what Haleys contributions to history will be in this election. In the likely scenario that Joe Biden runs with Kamala Harris as his vice president, there could potentially be two South Asian women on the 2024 ballot. The interesting thing here to note is the ambiguity of this identity neither of these women are socially read as being South Asian. This raises questions about the ways in which South Asian identity is perceived and valued in American politics, and whether the potential successes of these politicians truly represent progress for all Indian American women.

2024 had the potential to be a watershed moment for Indian Americans in politics, with both Haley and tech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy entering the Republican primary. But neither of these candidates are interested in using their platforms to boost Indian voices in fact, Ramaswamy is running on a so-called anti-woke platform. This is a sobering reminder that mere representation will never be adequate progress, making it difficult to decide whether this new wave of Indian identity in American politics can be framed as a positive development for the community.

Although many predict that Haley will most likely be relegated to a pool of potential vice presidential candidates, her campaign is a defining moment for candidates of color. But while her resume may make her an eminently qualified Republican to run for president her unique brand of hypocrisy will make it impossible for her to appeal to her own community or to MAGA Republicans. Despite her best efforts, Haleys back-and-forth relationship with her own identity has begun to shine through the cracks, most likely sinking her own presidential bid and setting back Indian Americans.

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Singh 24: Nikki Haley's attempt to transcend race is a major setback ... - The Brown Daily Herald