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Why Wokeism is a Religion

I cannot think of much worse than having a Landrieu in  charge of anything in Washington. Biden appoints former New Orleans mayor to lead infrastructure plan  After all New Orleans has always done so well.

New infrastructure bill found to be ripe for fraud It’s not as if any of the people who voted for it actually read the entire thing, but it’s going to take time to sort through a monstrosity of that size.

Open letter to Tucker Carlson: the real opioid story Scott Adams has been targeting China as the source of the opioid/fentanyl crisis since his stepson died after trying it.

Trump ally Bannon surrenders to authorities after contempt indictment Remember when we didn’t have to be afraid of the FBI?

Why The Fifth Circuit Is Likely To Rule Against The Mandate

ACLU Speaks Out — Finally — Against FBI Raid on James O’Keefe  It is way past time for them to speak out against the Jan 6th political prisoners.

Kamala Harris camp leaks to press about racism among the Bidenites Even though they may be racist, I can understand why they don’t like her, why they think she might be their biggest mistake.

Friends, something is happening’: Longtime Texas Democrat cites DC policies in becoming a Republican State Rep. Ryan Guillen explained why he made the move. “Friends, something is happening in South Texas, and many of us are waking up to the fact that the values of those in Washington, D.C., are not our values, not the values of most Texans. The ideology of defunding the police, of destroying the oil and gas industry and the chaos at our border is disastrous for those of us who live here in South Texas,” the lawmaker said, according to the Houston Chronicle.”

U.S. says Russian space weapon debris puts space station in danger
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Trump Was Right: Secret Tapes Released by Omarosa from the White House that Were Scoffed At in 2018 Show President Trump Knew Hillary Paid Millions for Her Russia Collusion Hoax When will the truth be found that he is right about a stolen election?

A Menace in the Courtroom District Attorney Thomas Binger pointed an AR-15 into the crowded courtroom gallery with his finger on the trigger.  I’m shocked a bailiff would not react to this. Maybe he did.

I do not subscribe to the Atlantic but I do read an occasional article.  Apparently they have captured my email address because this one came addressed to me. I am copying it here including it’s links which I suggest you read.

In The Atlantic’s new cover story, Anne Applebaum, a Pulitzer-Prize-winning staff writer for our magazine, explains how modern dictators have joined forces to undermine democracy around the world. Applebaum, who has just returned from reporting at the Poland-Belarus border, shares her thoughts with our readers about this new axis of autocracy. To support vital journalism like this, subscribe to The Atlantic.

All of us have in our minds a cartoon image of what an autocratic state looks like: There is a bad man at the top. He controls the police. The police threaten the people with  violence. There are evil collaborators, and maybe some brave dissidents.

But in the 21st century, that cartoon bears little resemblance to reality. Nowadays, autocracies are run not by one bad guy but by networks composed of kleptocratic financial structures, security services, and professional propagandists. The members of these networks are connected not only within a given country but among many countries. The corrupt, state-controlled companies in one dictatorship do business with their counterparts in another. The police forces in one country can arm, equip, and train the police forces in another. The propagandists share resources—the troll farms that promote one dictator’s propaganda can also be used to promote the propaganda of another—and themes, pounding home the same messages about the weakness of democracy and the evil of America.

That’s the subject of my Atlantic cover story this month: the new autocrats, the links they share, the impunity they enjoy, the world they have created. It’s a world in which ideology no longer matters, where Iranian theocrats work happily alongside Russian nationalists and Chinese Communists. Sometimes, the welfare of their fellow citizens doesn’t matter either. This generation of autocrats is focused on money—their own money—and on retaining power at all costs. Modern autocratic elites will do what it takes to stay in control, even if it leads to the destruction of their countries, as it has already in Venezuela and in Syria, and perhaps will soon in Belarus.

I wrote this story because I have been trying to understand why so many dictators now get away with so much, not only inside their own borders but abroad, inside the democratic world. The Belarusian dictator hijacked a Ryanair plane flying from Greece to Lithuania, the Russians have murdered people in the United Kingdom and Germany, and yet they pay no price. Our old diplomatic tools—sanctions and human-rights investigations—now seem weak and ineffective. We are still reacting to each outrage as if it were a separate event.

The only meaningful response to a network of autocracies will have to come from a network of democracies, but we have a lot of work to do before we can create one that is fit for purpose, for the values of the autocratic world are also corroding our own systems. If we are to fight back against them, we need to change our own laws and financial practices to make it harder for kleptocrats to take advantage of them, find new ways to counter disinformation and propaganda, and redesign international institutions for the needs of the 21st century. But I hope you’ll read the article and begin thinking about solutions too: Reinventing the democratic alliance is a project that will need the contributions of all kinds of citizens, from many kinds of backgrounds, for at least a generation to come.
Read The Cover Story  Read. Think. Grow.

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