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Become a Supporter and join our community of Irregulars, we can't promise you perfection, but we have authentecity in spades! Come as you are, just don't be a jerk. 😁
Today marks the three hundred and thirtieth birthday of the Frenchman François-Marie Arouet, better known by his nom de plume, Voltaire (1694-1778).
Born into a bourgeois family during the reign of Louis XIV, the “Sun King” (r. 1643-1715), Voltaire suffered tragedy at a young age when his mother died. Never close with his father or brother, Voltaire exhibited a rebellious attitude toward authority from his youth. His brilliant mind was fostered in the care of the Society of Jesus, who introduced him to the joys of literature and theater. Despite his later criticisms against the Church, Voltaire, throughout his life, fondly recalled his dedicated Jesuit teachers.
Although he spent time as a civil servant in the French embassy to the Hague, Voltaire’s main love was writing—an endeavor where he excelled in various genres, including poetry, which led to his appointment as the royal court poet for King Louis XV. Widely recognized as one of the greatest French writers, and even hyperbolically referred to by ...
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Vance Speech: A Rhetorical D-Day LandingAnd: David Starkey, Unreformed; Letter From An Angry Soldier; Wheaton's Travails
Good morning from London, and the first day of the ARC conference. Big opening dinner for speakers and donors last night; as a speaker, I got to go. Was so, so great to see many old friends there, Ran into Jonathan Pageau last night standing around talking to folks after dinner (had to filter the party pic selfie; the original was even more orange, thanks to the lighting): Just now, after breakfast, I walked out of the hotel restaurant, and there sat two of my favorite people in all the world, James Orr and Martin Shaw, kibitizing. Oh happy day! Oh happy next three days! Everybody from this side of the pond last night was talking about the J.D. Vance speech, I only heard one negative comment, and that was from an eminent writer and speaker who thought Vance said the right thing, but delivered it too bumptiously. (My response: “There is no way to say what needs saying to these European elites without coming upside their collective head with it.”) Everybody else — and I mean everybody — was over the moon with joy. The basic attitude from the Brits and the Europeans I talked to last night was, “Finally, someone is going to shake our ruling class out of its complacency.” I cannot say it often enough or strongly enough: if you are depending on the mainstream media to give you an accurate impression of how the speech was received in Europe, you are deceived. They will tell you how European officials, policymakers, and talking heads received it — but that’s not at all the same thing as how ordinary Europeans do. Matt Taibbi takes apart the way American elite journalists, and some UK and European ones, characterized the speech. The NYT, in particular, glommed on to the “Vance normalizes Nazis” line. Here’s Taibbi: I watched the damn thing. You can too, right here — and I hope you will, so you can see and hear for yourself the difference between an event that happened, and the same event as filtered through the mainstream media. More Taibbi:
These people have no credibility anymore. I don’t think they are intentionally lying at all. This is truly how they see the world. This is why Europe is in the awful state that it is: its ruling class, in country after country, and across borders, lives in a bubble. I don’t remember if I posted this the other day, but an English expatriate friend and reader of this newsletter sent me this short-ish commentary by an American man, summing up where Britain went wrong. The Englishman said this is the best single explanation for the crisis that has gripped his homeland: In it are strong echoes of what the woke in power have done to America too, though the sickness is much further advanced in Britain. Similar stories can be told about the major countries of western Europe. The ARC conference is designed to come up with a better story, a life-giving story, to stimulate cultural and social recovery. Listening to J.D.’s landmark speech, and assessing the hysterical negative reaction to it from the European leadership, I thought of that famous line by historian Arnold J. Toynbee: “Civilizations die by suicide, not from murder.” This is what the prophetic French writer Renaud Camus has been trying for many years to say to his fellow Frenchmen. For his trouble, he has been roundly vilified by the ruling class, including the media. But he was right, and he is right, about the Great Replacement. It’s not even mostly about ethnic replacement. It’s about generations of postwar European political and cultural leadership wishing to erase all cultural particulars and cultural memory from the European mind, to replace it with a placeless, progressive, Houellebecqian pudding.
More:
As I wrote the other day — and as many European fans of the Vance speech with whom I spoke last night agreed — the philosophical core of the vice president’s address was in these lines:
That’s exactly right! Europe doesn’t know what it’s for, only what it’s against (namely, everything that came before, everything that is not progressive, that is not an expression of managerial liberalism. Along those lines, here is an interesting Free Press essay from the retired CIA analyst Martin Gurri, writing about masculinity. Excerpts:
Sure — but another way of saying this is: what are men supposed to protect? Gurri meditates on unfiltered masculinity, and the figure of the Hero. The Hero is messy. It is he who confronts the “Man-Beast,” the nihilistic and violent figure that is masculine energy unbound. Gurri:
The Hero became domesticated into the Gentleman — and this, says Gurri, was a good thing. More:
Yet since mid-century, the Gentleman has become an object of contempt. Our culture has lost sight of the important distinction between the Gentleman — the civilized form of the Hero — and the Man-Beast. The Gentleman stood condemned as an archaism. Daniel Penny was a New York hero and gentleman who protected fellow subway riders by restraining a violent and insane black predator. Yet the state put him on trial, and the progressive cretins of Black Lives Matter turned him into a villain. So, the Gentleman was sent away. Then, says Gurri:
If you won’t have the Gentleman, you will get eventually the Man-Beast. And in that case, only the Hero will save you. The core problem of contemporary Europe is that it rejected both the Hero and the Gentleman, and has accommodated itself to the welfare state and managed therapeutic liberalism. Result: No young man in Europe will fight for Brussels, or for a social and political order that believes in nothing higher than shopping, screwing, and DEI. It was possible for Europeans to live in denial about this as long as the United States military was willing to play the Heroes manning the front lines against the Soviet Man-Beast. In its long descent into decadence, Europe became entirely feminized, in the sense of preferring safety, care, and its own idea of compassion over all. And it won’t even stand up for itself against the Man-Beasts it has invited to live within its borders: Muslim male fanatics who stab people in the UK and across Europe almost every day now. Its decadent leaders — Viktor Orban an honorable exception — won’t lift a finger to stop the madness (this happened over the weekend in Austria). When figures like Giorgia Meloni in Italy try to do something meaningful, the ideologically charged courts stop them on “human rights” grounds. Pope Francis is eager for Europe to roll over and die for the sake of “compassion”. Doing something meaningful about this crisis would force Europe to reckon with the bankruptcy of its own progressivism. One gets the idea that most of its leadership class would sooner die than abandon its ideology and fight for the survival of its own civilization. The chairman of the Munich Security Conference cried like a baby over Vance’s speech! C.S. Lewis saw it all coming many decades ago. In The Abolition Of Man, he wrote:
Europe is now a Man Without A Chest. And the new government in Washington is telling the Continent: Man up, become the heroes of your own story. J.D. Vance’s speech was the rhetorical equivalent of the D-Day landing. Now European patriots are preparing to fight to save their civilization from the enemies within. David Starkey, Irrepressible As EverHere’s how Tim Stanley’s wonderful Telegraph interview with the irascible historian David Starkey begins:
“Impertinent old bugger” is funny because Starkey is gay. He is also infamously politically incorrect, which got him massively cancelled a few years ago for an unwise racist remark.
Well, it was an obnoxious remark — but then, as Stanley avers, this is how Starkey always rolled. His acidic judgments are part of what made him such a provocative and popular broadcaster and public intellectual. As I see it, this is why it was so great to see J.D. Vance push back hard at Rep. Ro Khanna a couple of weeks ago, when Khanna demanded that Vance seek the firing of a young DOGE Wunderkind who was discovered in the past to have made a racist remark about Indians (Vance’s wife Usha is Indian, and, of course, their children are half-Indian.) Vance obviously didn’t like what the kid had tweeted, but he said we have to quit driving otherwise talented people out of public life for stupid and ugly things they might have said. What Vance did not say, but could have, is that for many years now the Left has not only tolerated figures from its side who say extremely bigoted things, but even valorized that bigotry. Seems to me Vance was simply arguing for common-sense tolerance: yes, when someone says something ugly, call them out on it — but don’t demonize them and make them unemployable. If we do that, we will deprive ourselves of the wisdom and talent of worthy people who are, like everybody else, flawed, but still worth having around. Letter From A Fed-Up SoldierA reader who is active duty in the US military, and who comes from a “very blue milieu,” socially and intellectually, writes to say that watching what wokeness has done to so many institutions of American life — including the armed forces — has driven him rightward. “I am just at the absolute end of my patience with what the left has done to once-vital institutions that may or may not retain the capacity to sustain and transmit civilization,” he e-mails me. “I'm still center-left on some social issues, but my 'lived experience' has caused the scales to fall from my eyes regarding the postmodern, identitarian left.” He gave me permission to share this with you, on the condition that I obscure certain identifying details, which I have done (I shared this with him first, to make sure it passed muster for protecting his identity. I know his name.) Take the matter of women in combat.
N. says that most people outside the military have no real idea of how physically intense the infantry is. The women he observes in his military life “get injured at much higher rates and are in an impossible situation because they do not want to draw attention to themselves but simply can't keep up.” He goes on: “The cost of gender integration is not worth any benefit, and any benefit is entirely ideological.” N. mentions that men in the military skew more conservative, the opposite is true for women, especially female officers. He mentions one unit that he knows in which a female was given the top NCO position. This person leapfrogged over more competent males, and has proven to be grossly incompetent. Her continued presence — she apparently is not being allowed to fail — is causing tremendous moral problems. “It’s terrible for morale and, frankly, the legitimacy of the command's authority,” N. says. More broadly, says N., every time women are moved into combat infantry, “the level of drama and interpersonal conflict ramps up and creates distractions.” It is especially difficult for infantry members who are mothers.
N. says you will hear from progressives that this is just the natural extension of the principle that led to the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, and the subsequent normalization of gays in the military. N. believes that was the right thing to do.
As N. sees it, the US armed forces have traditionally been a “true meritocracy.” In his part of the infantry, a large number of soldiers, even in leadership positions, are non-white — and are entirely deserving of their positions, because they are good at what they do. But now that the social engineers have gained control of the Pentagon, that’s all changed.
What Is Wheaton College For?Some of you will have heard of the controversy raging around Wheaton College, long the standard-bearer of Evangelical higher education. Recently the college issued an anodyne congratulation to Russ Vought, a Wheaton alumnus who just rose to a prominent position in the Trump administration. When progressive alumni screamed bloody murder, the school backed down. Daniel Davis writes in First Things:
Davis goes on to cite several examples, concluding:
Well, a group of alumni have launched For Wheaton, an initiative calling on the trustees of their alma mater to repent.
If you are a Wheaton alumnus or parent of a Wheaton student, I encourage you to read and sign the open letter. |
Does Chucky Schumer really believe that $20 million for Sesame Street in Iraq will somehow benefit the U.S.? Or $7 million to promote LGBT advocacy in Jamaica and Uganda? Uganda enforces the death penalty for gays.
The list goes on and on and on. I don’t need to bore you with the recitation. But it is extremely important to understand that $1.5 million promoting DIE in Serbia isn’t about DIE. It’s about something much more sinister.
President Eisenhower coined the term “military-industrial complex,” referring to a revolving door between the Defense Department and manufacturers of bombs and bullets. This revolving door saw the DoD ask for munitions and shovel the money to manufacturers, and those manufacturers made handsome profits. Gratitude for those profits led the war industry to reward its patrons with campaign contributions and other “private” benefits.
World War II filled this feed trough to overflowing. Of course, after the war, the profits of the defense industry would shrink as the money in the feeder dried up. Is it any surprise that the Korean War started not long after V.J. Day? Given this obvious fact, it’s not hard to make a case that the U.S. has been in a nearly constant state of war for a very long time. And it’s even more obvious why certain political persons (NeverTrumps? RINOs? pro-war lefties?) are so adamant that we need to support the cause du jour with our hard earned wealth. The war industry in their state would suffer if they didn’t, and they might lose votes. That may also be why Joe Biden and the Democrats were somewhat “soft” in their opposition to Israel’s war of liberation from Hamas in Gaza. Their patrons in the war industry would be harmed by full opposition, while paid protests would be enough to establish their Jew-hating bona fides.
USAID was created by President Kennedy through Executive Order 10973, after the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 allowed him to do so. Notice that key fact. USAID was optional. Left-wing apologists claim that the Foreign Affairs Reform and Restructuring Act of 1998 (also here, not identical!) turned it into a congressionally mandated organization. A text search of both versions of the act revealed a pot full of “Agency for International Development” instances. And a curious thing failed to show up. All of those pointed to various funding and management prescriptions for USAID. Not one of them said, “We establish USAID as an agency of the State Department” or something to that effect.
When the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare was split in 1980 under President Carter, it was accomplished by the Department of Education Organization Act, which says, “There is established an executive department to be known as the Department of Education.” No such language exists anywhere regarding USAID. Arguing that an act of Congress is required to get rid of it is like saying you can’t pull out that tree you planted without first getting my permission. The fact that I gave you the fertilizer is irrelevant. You chose to plant it, and now you want to get rid of it. It’s in your power, not mine.
DOGE is another case of gaslighting by the left. Tom Renz (@RenzTom on X) has done yeoman work exposing this scam by the frightened swamp. It seems that DOGE is not a new government entity at all. Trump’s executive order masterfully changes the name of the “United States Digital Service” into the “United States DOGE Service.” It doesn’t even change the letters of the government software development agency created under Obamacare. It just changes it into something useful.
Of particular importance, because DOGE is inside the government, it doesn’t have to answer questions about how its employees have access to government computers. President Trump has full authority under Article II, Section 1, Sentence 1, to give access to anyone he wants. Being inside at the beginning just makes it easier. But wait! There’s more!
Trump and Musk had to have carefully planned every step of this. Recall that Elon dismissed the majority of the workforce for X and still gets everything done. I’m sure that the whiz kids who are doing the algorithmic audits all over the government had their software all refined by doing the same job at X. So when it took them hours to expose all the corruption in USAID, that was no surprise. They had refined their skills, allowing their computers to collate and reorganize the financial records into meaningful results. And no one’s personal data were revealed...yet. If money for USAID programs was diverted, the term for that is “misappropriation of funds,” punishable by up to ten years under 18 USC §641. I’m certain that there will be many songbirds who will prefer supervised freedom to three hots and a cot with monthly visitation.
Finally, federal employee unions are screaming that Trump’s buyout offer is illegal. The fact that he can eliminate the unions entirely with a stroke of his pen is lost on them. But the judge issued his temporary injunction under the rule that the plaintiff’s lawyers’ presentations are presumed true at the outset. But once each case is properly briefed, any honest judge (Will we find one?) will find for Trump.
Let’s go back through the key issues. First, DOGE is inside the Executive Branch of the government, with full access granted by the president. Unless its employees reveal privileged information, as that IRS employee did with Trump’s tax returns, they aren’t breaking any laws when they do their automated audits. The screaming about “Who elected Elon?!” goes nowhere. Who elected the two million or so employees of the federal government? Are you upset because they aren’t your guys? Thought so.
Second, because USAID was created by an E.O., it can be uncreated by an E.O. I know, this one will have a bit longer arguments in front of a judge, but there is no “establishment” language for USAID in any statute that I know of. Without that, the swamp is just ooze.
Third, we have the issue of standing. Article III §2 starts with “The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases, in Law and Equity ...” The key for those in Rio Linda is the word “Controversies,” which pops up several times a bit later in the same section. For a legal controversy to exist, at least two parties must have a “cognizable” disagreement. That other word identifies an argument that the Court has authority to settle. And this is where the swamp must take the bull squarely by the tail and face the situation (apologies to W.C. Fields). Trump’s attorneys really did their homework.
None of these “cases” gives any federal employee or Congress any cause to complain. Congress is boxed out because these are policy decisions by the Executive, and no Congresscritter was harmed in the making of the decision. No federal employee has a property interest in the existence of his job. The Civil Service Act provides procedural protections for firing from a job, but if the job no longer exists, the employee is simply out of luck. Pressing “Delete” on USAID is that sort of situation. Offering someone a buyout is even harder to challenge. When you get to decide whether to check or not check the box, there is no case. You either did or did not. End of story.
I’m skipping the popcorn on this one, going straight for the cake and ice cream. Celebrations are in order.
What a weekend for real justice in America. The Left is reeling, grasping for their fainting couches as President Trump does what every Republican before him was too cowardly to attempt: firing the entrenched bureaucrats who think they run the country.
Trump doesn’t have to play nice anymore. There’s no “bipartisanship” charade. This time, he’s not just draining the swamp—he’s demolishing it.
Remember how every Republican administration since Reagan kept Democrat holdovers like prized antiques? That’s over. The so-called ‘uniparty’ was a revolving door, swapping out figureheads while the real power stayed put. But Trump? He’s tossing these relics onto the street like yesterday’s garbage.
Jen Psaki had a meltdown over the latest firings, calling it an “unprecedented purge.”
But that’s false. It’s just unprecedented for a Republican to have the backbone to clean house. Democrats have done this for decades. Obama didn’t hesitate to purge Bush-era officials. The difference? Trump is making sure the ones who stayed to sabotage him are gone for good.
One of his most strategic moves? Firing the highest-ranking remaining FBI officials—the very people who led the witch hunt against Trump and persecuted January 6 protesters. David Sundberg, the FBI Assistant Director for Washington, D.C., is out. Sundberg led the phony J6 ‘investigations’ while conveniently failing to solve the mystery of the pipe bomber. Who could have predicted that?
A total of 88 FBI agents, the same ones who worked on Trump’s cases, were physically escorted out of the Washington Field Office. These weren’t routine resignations. These were operatives caught red-handed, trying to turn America into a banana republic. If they had any dignity left, they’d walk themselves straight to a confessional.
Meanwhile, a whistleblower dropped a bombshell to Senator Chuck Grassley’s office, revealing that Jack Smith’s federal investigation into Trump’s 2020 election case was launched by a fired FBI official who violated the Hatch Act. His name? Timothy Thibault. A rogue bureaucrat who had no authority to start criminal investigations yet somehow orchestrated a federal case against Trump.
The very foundation of Jack Smith’s investigation was laid by someone who wasn’t even allowed to open a criminal probe. You can’t make this up.
Remember the 51 former intel officials who falsely claimed Hunter Biden’s laptop was “Russian disinformation”? Their reward for brazen election interference? A permanent ban from entering federal buildings.
No more cushy consulting gigs. No more lobbying paychecks. They’ll have to go grift somewhere else. Maybe MSNBC needs more “experts” to push conspiracy theories.
One of the most delicious eliminations? 50 bureaucrats at USAID.
For years, USAID has been a thinly disguised money laundering operation for the Left. Here’s how it works:
It’s a brilliant scam—until someone like Trump pulls the plug. Now, USAID, which helped flood our country with illegal immigrants and pushed radical gender ideology abroad, is being gutted.
The Left is terrified that Trump will shut it down entirely. And he should. If it’s such a noble organization, why do its alumni keep showing up as Biden donors?
Trump’s new hiring policy is simple: No traitors. The banned list? GOP establishment hacks who betrayed him. So anybody associated with the following won’t work in the Trump administration:
Trump put it bluntly on Truth Social:
“In order to save time, money, and effort, it would be helpful if you would not send, or recommend to us, people who worked with, or are endorsed by [the above] … or any of the other people suffering from Trump Derangement Syndrome, more commonly known as TDS.”
Translation: If you’ve ever spent time at a Lincoln Project fundraiser, don’t bother sending your resume.
The Left’s coup against Trump may go down as the biggest political miscalculation in history.
They thought they could remove him in 2020 and secure permanent power. Instead, they unleashed something far worse: Trump 2.0. A Trump unshackled, unfiltered, and unwilling to tolerate the saboteurs who hijacked his first term.
With four more years, the destruction of the Deep State will end on a note of brutality. And they never saw it coming. Even if they manage to see it now, they can’t stop it.
This time, there’s no do-over for Democrats. Trump is playing for keeps.