Media Search:



Opinion | This Is a Moment for America to Believe in Itself Again – The New York Times

Central to much of the skepticism regarding Americas involvement in the crisis in Ukraine is the question, Who are we?

Who are we, with our long history of invasions and interventions, to lecture Vladimir Putin about respecting national sovereignty and international law? Who are we, with our domestic record of slavery and discrimination, our foreign record of supporting friendly dictators, and the ongoing injustices of American life, to hold ourselves up as paragons of freedom and human rights? Who are we, after 198 years of the Monroe Doctrine, to try to stop Russia from delineating its own sphere of influence? Who are we, with our habitual ignorance, to meddle in faraway disputes about which we know so little?

Such questions are often put by people on the left, but theres a powerful strain of the same thinking on the right. When Bill OReilly asked Donald Trump in 2017 how he could respect Putin when the Russian president is a killer, the president replied: Weve got a lot of killers. What, you think our countrys so innocent?

Trump aside, theres something intrinsically virtuous about this kind of thinking: Who is it who tells us to first cast out the beam in our own eye before we cast out the mote in the eye of another? Countries, like people, are better off when they proceed with more self-awareness, less moral arrogance, greater intellectual humility and an innate respect for the reality of unintended consequences.

But neither people nor countries are well served by the defects of those virtues: self-awareness that becomes a recipe for personal or policy paralysis, intellectual humility that leads to moral confusion, a fear of unknown risks that becomes an asset to an enemy. These are some of the deeper risks we now face in the contest with the Kremlin.

Why has Putin chosen this moment to make his move on Ukraine? As many have pointed out, Russia is an objectively weak state Upper Volta with nuclear weapons, as someone once quipped with a nominal G.D.P. smaller than that of South Korea. Outside of energy, minerals and second-rate military equipment, it produces almost nothing that outsiders want: no Russian iPhone, Lexus or Fauda. Putins problem with Ukraine, starting with the Maidan uprising of 2014, is that Ukrainians want nothing to do with him. If he were a Disney character, hed be Rapunzels mother.

But Putin has advantages his opponents dont, which go beyond the correlation of military forces in the Donbas.

One advantage is the correlation of appetites: Putin wants Ukraine under his thumb much more than the West wants to keep Ukraine in its orbit, and hes willing to pay a higher price to get it. Another advantage is the correlation of attention spans: Putin has methodically set his sights on returning Ukraine to his fold since at least 2004. For the West, Ukraine is another complex crisis of which it will eventually tire. A third advantage is the correlation of wills: Putin wants to change the geopolitical order of Europe and is prepared to take large risks to do it. The Biden administration wants to preserve a shaky and increasingly lifeless status quo. Fortune tends to favor the bold.

But Putins greatest advantage is self-belief. Serious historians may scoff at his elaborate historical theories about Ukraines nonexistence as a true state. But he believes it, or at least he makes a convincing show of it. What, really, does the West believe about Ukraine, other than that it would be a shame, and scary, if Putin were to swallow large chunks of it? Certainly nothing worth fighting for.

Most of us understand that history has a way of turning into myth, but the reverse can also be true: Myths have a way of making history. Fortune also tends to favor fervent believers.

The United States used to have self-belief. Our civilization, multiple generations of Americans believed, represented human progress. Our political ideals about the rule of law, human rights, individual liberties, democratic governance were ideals for all people, including those beyond our borders. Our literature spoke to the universal human experience; our music to the universal soul. When we fought wars, it was for grand moral purposes, not avaricious aims. Even our worst blunders, as in Vietnam, stemmed from defensible principles. Our sins were real and numerous, but they were correctable flaws, not systemic features.

It goes without saying that this self-belief like all belief was a mixture of truth and conceit, idealism and hubris, vision and blindness. It led us to make all sorts of errors, the acute awareness of which has become the dominant strain of our intellectual life. But it also led us to our great triumphs: Yorktown and Appomattox; the 13th and 19th Amendments; the Berlin Airlift and the fall of the Berlin Wall; the Marshall Plan and PEPFAR.

These victories were not the result of asking, Who are we? They came about by asking, Who but us? In the crisis of Ukraine, which is really a crisis of the West, we might start asking the second question a little more often than the first.

See the original post here:
Opinion | This Is a Moment for America to Believe in Itself Again - The New York Times

Rand Paul denounces Trudeau’s ‘dangerous’ Emergencies Act …

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said the Emergencies Act that Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau recently invoked to quell the trucker convoy protests is "very, very dangerous" and warned against similar legislation that exists in the United States.

"I think statutes that allow presidents or heads of state to invoke emergencies are very, very dangerous," said Paul during an episode of the BASED Politics podcast that aired Sunday. "We have the same sort of statutes here, and I have long-time been an opponent of these. We actually have in the United States an Emergency Act that allows the president to shut down the internet."

Several Canadian civil liberties groups have also spoken out against Trudeau after he invoked the Emergencies Act to cut off funding for "Freedom Convoy" truckers, freeze their bank accounts and crack down on the lingering demonstrations in Ottawa. The trucker protest has been largely cleared from the Canadian capital, but Trudeau has not yet relaxed the state of emergency.

Paul explained how he failed in his attempt to corral anti-Trump Democrats into an alliance with libertarian-leaning Republicans to strike down such emergency power legislation during the Trump administration.

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., arrives for a Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee hearing to examine the federal response to examine the federal response to COVID-19 and new emerging variants on Jan. 11, 2022, at Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. GREG NASH/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

"[Sen.] Mike Lee had some reforms that he put forward on the Emergency Act, and it's something we should look at, because these things go on and on," Paul continued. "There are some emergencies in the U.S. that have been going on for many, many decades. And the president can just renew them every year. There's no real stopping him."

CANADIAN CLERGY REBUKE TRUDEAU FOR INVOKING EMERGENCIES ACT, OTHER TYRANNICAL ACTIONS'

Paul pointed out how he tweeted on Feb. 16 that Canada had become Egypt, where Paul said President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi has repeatedly extended emergency powers and arbitrarily detained people.

"And so the emergency edict that Trudeau has done in Canada allows him to do some horrendous things, allows him to stop travel, allows him to detain people without trial. Now we don't know that he's going to do that, but it is very, very worrisome what he might do," Paul added.

Justin Trudeau, Canada's prime minister, speaks during a news conference in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, on Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2022. David Kawai/Bloomberg

The Canadian Civil Liberties Association said the truckers protests did not meet the standard for Trudeau to have invoked the Emergencies Act, which exists for "the ability of the Government of Canada to preserve the sovereignty, security and territorial integrity of Canada" and only for actions that "cannot be effectively dealt with under any other law of Canada."

The rest is here:
Rand Paul denounces Trudeau's 'dangerous' Emergencies Act ...

Rand Paul Inadvertently Tells The Truth About Republican …

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, one of the Republican Partys staunchest devotees to the lie that the 2020 election was stolen from former President Donald Trump, continued to spread such claims this week and in the process delivered one of the more honest statements about voter fraud and stolen elections any Republican lawmaker has made this year.

How to steal an election, Paul tweeted Monday night, before quoting an article from The American Conservative. Seeding an area heavy with potential Democratic votes with as many absentee ballots as possible, targeting and convincing potential voters to complete them in a legally valid way, and then harvesting and counting the results.

The attached piece, which purportedly described Democrats and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerbergs efforts to steal Wisconsin for President Joe Biden last year, failed to provide any proof of nefarious behavior: Instead, it documented efforts to encourage and Increase Absentee Voting and dramatically expand strategic voter education & outreach efforts, particularly to historically disenfranchised residents.

As Pauls tweet helpfully noted, all of these efforts were perfectly legitimate: The phrase legally valid is prominently featured in the sentence he chose to excerpt. Routine audits of Wisconsins elections, meanwhile, produced no evidence of fraud or irregularities in last years contest.

But proof of fraud is not the point of this claim or any other Paul, Trump and various Republicans have made over the last year or, really, over the last decade. As Pauls tweet stated more clearly than Republicans typically do, their claims about voter fraud, stolen elections and election integrity are merely euphemisms for the GOPs actual belief that people voting for Democrats is enough to render an election entirely illegitimate. A Democratic victory is, by definition, the result of theft.

This is the core belief of the modern Republican Party, which reacted to the 2020 election by spreading lies about election fraud, attempting to overturn Trumps loss, and fomenting a riotous insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, all because Trump lost what numerous Republican, Democratic and independent election observers have repeatedly called the safest, most secure and most audited election in American history. When that didnt achieve their desired result, they institutionalized the aims of the insurrection, passing more than 30 new laws to restrict voting rights and asserting new levels of partisan control over local and state election systems ahead of the next presidential contest.

Story continues

Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) has routinely spread lies about the 2020 election. (Photo: Pool via Getty Images)

These efforts have all primarily targeted voters that tend to favor Democrats Black people, Latinos, Native Americans, college students, people with disabilities, and anyone who lives in cities or other localities that typically vote blue. And they are all obviously rooted in Republican anger that too many voters voted for Democrats, not that anyone mightve cast ballots illegally.

In Georgia, Republicans added stricter voter ID requirements to absentee ballots, tightening access to a vote-by-mail program the GOP created more than a decade ago in a way they never felt was necessary until Biden became the first Democrat to win the state since 1980. In Arizona, the GOP-controlled legislature made similar changes to absentee ballot laws they originally enacted, after Biden notched Democrats first presidential victory there in more than two decades. In Texas where its already harder to vote than in most other states they barred drive-through voting and imposed other new voting restrictions in an effort to ward off potential Democratic victories in the near future.

Republicans and their conservative allies have also targeted election officials and offices in key states, purging or stripping power from those who made it too easy to vote or refused to go along with Trumps election gambit, part of a broader effort to bend the 2024 election to their liking or try to overturn the result if they need to. In Wisconsin, the subject of Pauls tweet, Republicans have sought to undermine the electoral system they just reformed less than a decade ago and are attempting to forcibly replace the states top elections official.

None of this will prevent the sort of nefarious behavior their countless utterances of voter fraud are meant to evoke, both because that sort of behavior is exceptionally rare in American politics and because actual voter fraud has never been the target of their ire. But neither will insisting to Republicans, or to conservative voters who believe their claims, that voter fraud doesnt actually occur succeed in thwarting the GOPs attempts to suppress votes and subvert American democracy.

Its painfully obvious what Republicans are trying to do, and why. Paul was simply, if perhaps inadvertently, candid about it: To the modern GOP and an increasingly large share of its conservative base, theres no such thing as a legally valid vote for a Democrat, and no such thing as a legitimate election if a Democrat wins it.

This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated.

More here:
Rand Paul Inadvertently Tells The Truth About Republican ...

Rand Paul says Ukraine joining NATO is a ‘dumb idea’, that would provoke ‘pariah nation’ of Russia – Fox News

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

FIRST ON FOX: Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., doubled down on his opposition to Ukraine joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), saying it would be an extremely provocative action toward the "pariah nation" of Russia.

Fox News Digital asked the senator on Thursday about his prediction on if or when Russia will invade, to which he responded that no one knows, but that it would be a "great downside" for "pariah nation" Russia.

RUSSIA-UKRAINE: BLINKEN TELLS UN WHAT US THINKS WILL HAPPEN NEXT: LIVE UPDATES

"I think nobody knows, I'm still hopeful that they won't invade. I think there's a great downside for Russia. They are already somewhat of a pariah nation, but I think they become more excluded from things, and I think there will be significant repercussions from the Europeans who buy a lot of natural gas from them if they invade Ukraine. So I think they need to know this is not going to, they're not going to get just a pass on this."

Rand Paul on Hannity. (Fox News)

The senator also doubled down on his criticism of Ukraine joining NATO, saying it would likely provoke and anger Russia and isn't the United States' problem to solve.

"On the other side of the coin, though, I do think it would be good, and it was at least a statement from the Ukrainian prime minister and the German saying there is no imminent call to put Ukraine in NATO. They should have been saying that for a decade or more. It's a dumb idea to put Ukraine in NATO, and it's a very provocative one. I asked the secretary of state the other day, Blinken, I said, What do you think our response would be if Mexico were joining a military alliance with Russia against the United States? We would be hopping mad."

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Ukraines President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said recently that Ukraine's NATO membership is not on the table for the alliance, at the current moment.

United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks as he greets embassy staff at the U.S. embassy, in Kyiv, Ukraine, Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2022. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool)

These statements come after President Biden and the State Department have expressed support for NATO's "open door" policy when it comes to Ukraine. However, State Department spokesperson Ned Price said during a press briefing recently that it will be up to Ukraine to fulfill membership requirements in order to join the alliance down the road, if the country decides to do so.

RUSSIA-UKRAINE: PENTAGON CALLS REPORTED SHELLING OF VILLAGE 'TROUBLING'

"So we have to understand that asking countries right on the border of Russia that used to be part of Russia to be in a military alliance against Russia is just a foolhardy idea. Kissinger said this, many others have said this, and I think we should offer them the carrot of that, that they won't be in NATO and at the same time, tell them, though, that if you invade there, the repercussions will be very, very costly and these will be economic repercussions. But all of that requires the cooperation of Europe because we don't buy that much from Russia," Paul told Fox News Digital.

Henry Kissinger, the former secretary of state and national security advisor under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, held similar views as the Kentucky senator.

WASHINGTON, DC - MAY 11: U.S. Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) questions Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, during a Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing to discuss the ongoing federal response to COVID-19 on May 11, 2021 in Washington, D.C. (Greg Nash-Pool/Getty Images)

In a recent op-ed, Paul points out that Kissinger advised that Ukraine should remain neutral to survive due to its geographical location. Kissinger previously wrote, "For Ukraine to survive, "it must not be either sides outpost against the other it should function as a bridge between them."

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Paul threatened on Thursday to block a quick passage of the Senate resolution pledging support for Ukraine. The resolution required unanimous consent, meaning every senator had to agree in order to pass it in a timely manner.

"We have some amendments to it. We believe that it should say nothing in this resolution is to be construed as an authorization of war and nothing in this resolution is to be construed as authorizing the use of troops into Ukraine," Paul reportedly said.

Paul's amendment, that nothing should be construed as a declaration of war, was accepted and included in the resolution, which passed Thursday evening.

Go here to read the rest:
Rand Paul says Ukraine joining NATO is a 'dumb idea', that would provoke 'pariah nation' of Russia - Fox News

Dr. Rand Paul Sends Letter to SBA Requesting Information on the Restaurant Revitalization Fund | Senator Rand Paul – Senator Rand Paul

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:February 18, 2022Contact: Press_Paul@paul.senate.gov, 202-224-4343

WASHINGTON, D.C. Yesterday, U.S. Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, sent a letter to Isabella Guzman, Administrator of the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), requesting information on the Restaurant Revitalization Fund (RRF), which provided grants to some eligible restaurants, bars, and other businesses impacted by COVID-19.As you know, the RRF obligated nearly $28.6 billion to more than 100,000 eligible entities. As reported by the SBA, more than 278,000 eligible applicants requested grants accounting for more than $72.2 billion. Despite the program window closing seven months ago, this Committee does not have sufficient information regarding the current applicant queue and their funds requested to aid business losses, Dr. Paul stated in the letter.Dr. Paul is requesting the following data no later than February 23, 2022.

In addition, Dr. Pauls office previously requested the following information on the RRF on May 18, 2021.

You can read the full letter HERE.

###

Link:
Dr. Rand Paul Sends Letter to SBA Requesting Information on the Restaurant Revitalization Fund | Senator Rand Paul - Senator Rand Paul