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Tag Archives: Stephen Bannon

If California Wants to Go, Let It Go

23 Monday Oct 2017

Posted by Jim Langcuster in Devolution, Federalism, The Passing Scene, Uncategorized

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American Federalism, Calexit, California secession, Jim Langcuster, South Carolina Nullification, Stephen Bannon, Xavier Becerra

Yes_CaliforniaA year or so ago a liberal friend of mine implied that I was a right-wing kook and crypto-racist for even broaching the idea of disaffected states one day seeking a path out of the Union.

Just this weekend, though, none other than the chief legal officer of the nation’s largest state, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, offered a remarkably tepid response regarding California’s continued formal ties with the American Union.

“California is the economic engine of the United States of America, we on our own, as a state, could be the sixth economic power in the world,” Becerra stated yesterday in a Fox News Sunday interview.

“The U.S. needs California as much as I believe California needs to be part of the United States.”

Talk about a full-throated endorsement of American unity!  It sounded to me more like a Catalan official affirming unity with Spain.

If Bercerra’s statements aren’t intriguing enough, consider the yawning apathy all of this California separatist talk has generated in the nation’s broad red-state hinterland.  More than one friend of mine has stated they they would stand at the Nevada border happily waving off a new California Republic.

I think that goes for a lot of us here in the red heartland.  If our experience with rising levels of divorce over the past 50 years has driven home one thing, it’s that acrimonious marriages are better off terminated.  And, frankly, these federal bonds, which Lincoln extolled as “mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land,” seem increasingly and irreparably frayed.

America is coming to resemble a bad marriage, marked increasingly by acrimony and recrimination.

And all of this is likely to get even more complicated. Indeed, political activist and former presidential Chief of Staff Stephen Bannon is right to compare this growing secessionist sentiment in California with the South Carolina nullification crisis of the 1830’s.

Bannon recently argued that if the federal government fails to stop California’s sanctuary state efforts, California’s leftist leaders  “are going to try to secede from the union” in the next decade to 15 years.

While we may have thought this vexing issue was settled more than 150 years ago, California may be serving up a 2.0 version of secession. We really seem to be closing a very wide and contentious historical circle.  And contrary to my liberal friend’s fulminating, I really think that California may be the portent of a cascading effect among several states.

California presents this union with a special set of challenges- it arguably always has.  We’re talking about a state with several unique characteristics: for starters, its longstanding geographical separation from the other major population centers of the United States  and its location on the Pacific Rim, facing the region of the world where the overwhelming bulk of global economic growth is likely to occur over the next few decades.  Add to that California’s demographic transformation, one factor among many driving its return to its historical legacy as a region intimately linked with the cultural and economic the fortunes of Mexico and Latin America.

Under the circumstances, should we be surprised that California is evolving its own views of law and governance and that it’s begun to strain at its federal leash?

If California wants to go at some point,  let it go peacefully.  And that goes for any other state where a significant segment of the population has concluded that they are better off separate from than a part of the American Union.

Freedom of association should characterize our federal relations every bit as much as it should other facets of American life.   It is integrally bound up with living in a free society.

Our Spoiled, Benighted Ruling Class

30 Wednesday Nov 2016

Posted by Jim Langcuster in American Education, Patriotism, U.S. Politics

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American Higher Education, Culture Wars, Donald Trump, flag burning, Jim Langcuster, Stephen Bannon

burning-flagDespite repeated attempts by the left to depict Trump’s new domestic policy adviser, Stephen Bannon, as a witting agent of the alt-right and white nationalism, I see a different picture emerging.

I perceive an Irish-American patriot from the working class who, in the course of acquiring a Harvard MBA and a large measure of material success as a Goldman Sachs employee, gained intimate exposure to many among this nation’s ruling class and ended up detesting what he saw.

Following the 2008 crash, he saw his octogenarian father, Marty Bannon, a retiree,  struggle financially after he was forced to cash out his AT&T stocks – the bulk of his net worth – to tide himself over the hard times.  The elder Bannon was a self-made man who started out as a telephone lineman and worked his way up  his company’s corporate ladder. For Bannon, his father’s late-life financial crisis drove home a searing lesson in what he had come to regard as the “socialism of the wealthy.”   As the 2008 crisis demonstrated, many among the wealthy class are often insulated from deleterious market effects, while little people like has father are forced to bear the risks.

Other lessons were driven home.  One of Bannon’s proudest moments was when his oldest daughter, Maureen, qualified for West Point.  Yet, he soon discovered that among his daughter’s fellow West Point cadets, not was one supplied from the upper reaches of the country’s wealthiest citizens.

I was reminded of all of this last night watching reports of the desecration of the U.S. flag by snowflakes at many of the nation’s elite colleges and universities.

Virtually none of these kids will ever be forced out of a sense of economic necessity to darken the door of a military recruiter’s office. They will go immediately to a leading graduate school, to an elite investment firm, or to an premiere nonprofit or media entity as a writer or researcher . A few of them will go into national politics, feigning regret over their youthful indiscretion,  even as they formulate the policies that send the next generation of patriotic, working-class kids into the world’s danger zones. Ironic, isn’t it?

Many among the Left are still beating their chests over how an intellectual lightweight, corporate real estate brawler and TV showman who affected sympathy for the beleaguered working-class Americans prevailed over one of the nation’s best and brightest, one who had garnered the support of virtually everyone in this country who really counted.

It think a simple appraisal of what is unfolding among the self-indulgent, self-pitying snowflakes on many of this nation’s elite campuses would supply one compelling explanation for this electoral upset.

Wanted: A Thorough Ellison Vetting

29 Tuesday Nov 2016

Posted by Jim Langcuster in U.S. Politics

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Democratic National Committee, Islamism, Keith Ellison, Nation of Islam, Stephen Bannon

keith-ellison

Congressman Keith Ellison, Dem.-Minnesota, front runner for the DNC chairmanship.

Somebody help me with this. For the past few weeks, Stephen Bannon, Trump’s new domestic policy adviser has been characterized as a white nationalist and even a white supremacist, even though front-page coverage by several mainstream media appears to have turned up only tenuous ties to radical racialist groups.

Yet, Congressman Keith Ellison, the front runner for the position of chairman of the Democratic National Committee, who has garnered the support of several prominent Democratic leaders, including Sen. Elizabeth Warren and and erstwhile Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, has drawn scarcely a mention lately regarding his past ties with radical Islam and black nationalism.

A former practicing Catholic, Ellison  apparently  was drawn as a college student to Islam through his association with the Nation of Islam, though he claims that he never formally joined the NOI.  Even so, while a college student, he wrote at least two articles in support of NOI – a fact reported by the July 6, 2006 edition Bay State Banner. Yet, I have scoured news.google.com and can can find little reporting of this fact within the mainstream media, though, to be fair, The Washington Post cited Ellison’s alleged ties to the Nation of Islam in an article that ran Sept. 11, 2006.

Recently, The Daily Caller, a partisan news site founded by libertarian-conservative Fox News commentator Tucker Carlson, reports that it possesses a couple of columns obtained from the Minnesota Daily indicating that Ellison “was once a proponent of a blacks-only nation carved out of America and cash reparations paid from whites to blacks.” The Daily Caller maintains that “Ellison also called the U.S. Constitution the ‘best evidence of a white racist conspiracy to subjugate other peoples.'”

Yes, simply being a Muslim or associating with an organization like CAIR arguably is not sufficient cause for concern.  But this involvement must be considered within the larger context of Ellison’s previous Nation of Islam ties.

Contrast that to the current media focus on Bannon’s alleged racialist ties. Based on my rather extensive review of mainstream media coverage of  Stephen Bannon, I find his association with white nationalist and supremacist ties difficult to prove. The allegations are connected only to a few single, rather than multiple, sources.  The charges of Bannon’s connection with white nationalism are further complicated by the fact that he worked closely with and acquired Breitbart News from a Jewish conservative and that he employs an African-American executive assistant, which, according to the New York Times, he considers family.

By contrast, Ellison’s past connections with black nationalism and radical Islamism appear to be far more extensive.  And while the DNC chairmanship is arguably not as prominent a position as the as the domestic policy adviser to the president, it is still a position of enormous symbolic influence.  It seems to me that in terms of subjecting Congressman Ellison to the a thorough-going vetting, the mainstream media have failed.

While undertaking a thorough and entirely legitimate investigation of the racists ties of a prominent figure of the American Right, they have largely ignored what once appeared to be the very palpable racist ties of a prominent member of the American Left.

Just What Is The Alt-Right?

15 Tuesday Nov 2016

Posted by Jim Langcuster in Conservatism, U.S. Politics

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alt-right, Breitbart, Donald Trump, Election 2016, Jim Langcuster, Paul Gottfried, Stephen Bannon

stephen-bannonPresident-elect Trump’s appointment of Stephen Bannon as his domestic security adviser has ignited a firestorm of criticism within the predictable quarters, namely mainstream media.

In the interests of providing a broad context for consideration and discussion, I’ve posted the Mother Jones article on Bannon. The whole subject of Breitbart and the alt-right is a complicated one, as most political movements are. The founder of Breitbart, the late Andrew Breitbart, was a Jew, a liberal Democrat who gravitated to conservatism while watching the Clarence Thomas hearings.

I’ll have more to say about this in future posts.  For now, suffice it to say that the alt-right label remains a fuzzy one, reflecting a loose association of many deeply disaffected conservatives of various ideological convictions. And to add an extra layer of complication to all of this, one of the conservative intellectuals singled out as a founder of the movement is Paul Gottfried, a Yeshiva University graduate and an unusually well-published university professor. In fact, Gottfried is acknowledged as having coined the term “alternative right” – or alt-right.

Adding an extra wrinkle to this story, Gottfried appears ambivalent about the role he played in the formation of this loose movement.

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