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Max Ledoux's Posts
Donald Trump at CPAC Over the Years
I watched Donald Trump’s speech at CPAC this weekend. After the video finished playing, one of the suggested videos was, “CPAC 2013 — Donald Trump.” I watched it. The future president said, “make America great again” twice. He talked about North Korea and improving our military strength. He said if illegal aliens gained citizenship they would all vote for Democrats. He criticized our trade policies with “Chi-Nah.” In short, it was a preview of not only his campaign but his presidency.
So then I watched his 2011 CPAC speech. He… talked about our trade imbalance with Chi-Nah, declared himself pro-life and pro-gun, and promised if he were ever president he would not raise taxes and would enact policies to rebuild our country, “so that our country can be great again.” I found the consistency interesting.
Desperate Journalist (the Band) Would Like You Not to Listen to Their Music?
Desperate Journlalist is a British post-punk rock band. Ricochet editor-in-chief Jon Gabriel named the band’s song “Hollow,” off their 2017 album Grow Up, as his song of the week on the most recent episode of The Conservatarians podcast. Jon also added the song to his The Conservatarians 2018 Spotify play list. Caz Helbert, who is the band’s drummer, would like you to please not listen to their music, however. In an email to Ricochet Saturday afternoon, she wrote:
Hi
I’m from the band Desperate Journalist which you mentioned on your website and featured in your Spotify playlist. Can I kindly ask you to remove us from the playlist? We would rather not be associated with a political movement.
Thanks,
Caz
I find this truly amazing. Why wouldn’t she want you to listen to her music? I mean, Desperate Journalist’s music is on YouTube, Spotify, Pandora, and Bandcamp for anyone in the world to listen to. Here’s Desperate Journalist’s official music video for “Hollow,” which is publicly available on YouTube, but that they don’t want you to listen to if you’re, I guess, an American conservative or libertarian?
Member Post
A message “to all the activist bitches supporting bitches” by the inimitable @HillaryClinton. pic.twitter.com/fnUfsJnUN4 — Alex Mohajer (@AlexMohajer) January 27, 2018 Preview Open
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Member Post
Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa gave a speech on the floor of the U.S. Senate detailing his efforts as chairman of the judiciary committee to provide oversight for the American people. Preview Open
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Kate Braestrup Book Reading & Mini Ricochet Meetup
This Is What a Successful Presidency Looks Like
With the one-year anniversary of Donald Trump’s inauguration, it’s worth reflecting on his accomplishments as president. Just the other day I told my colleague Fred Cole that Donald Trump “is a successful conservative Republican president.” That sounds great to those of us who are conservative Republicans; an honest analysis of the past year also shows that it’s a reality.
In a Ricochet post earlier, Fred focused on the failure of Congress to repeal Obamacare or to fund a wall on the border with Mexico as examples of why Trump’s presidency is, in his view, a failure. This is silly, simply put. Those are Congress’s failures, not Trump’s. Fred acknowledges this while trying to brush it aside: “Yes, Congress passes laws, but Presidents set the agenda.” Congress passes laws, period. But John McCain cared more about sticking it to Trump than he did about helping his constituents and other Americans across the country. Despite the failures of Congress, Trump has had many successes. Some he has accomplished through the appropriate use of his executive power alone, and some with legislation passed by Congress that he has signed into law.
Your Doppelgänger in Art
The Google Arts & Culture app (available in Google Play and the iTunes Store) has been sweeping the internet the past few days, due to its “face match” feature that lets you upload a selfie in order to find a portrait of your doppelgänger in art.
The results can be uncannily accurate, as you can see to the right. In the spirit of culture & arts, share your results in the comments below. (But don’t forget that this post is public.)
Member Post
Kate Braestrup, Ricochet’s favorite best-selling author & minister from Maine, will be doing a book talk at my public library on Saturday, January 20, at 11AM. That’s this coming Saturday! The address is 221 Middle Road, Center Tuftonboro, NH. There will be light refreshments afterwards in the library and a local bookstore will be selling […]
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Member Post
JamesOfEngland [8:31 PM] Max, I don’t understand how you can be offended by the establishment (maybe 45 Senators?) actively working against having a majority by not supporting Moore, but be fine with Bannon opposing the vast bulk of the party. If the establishment wins, we’re pretty likely to still have a GOP majority. If Bannon […]
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Attempted Suicide Bomb Terrorist Attack in New York City
According to a live press conference that I just watched, there was a suicide bomb terrorist attack in New York City this morning. Mayor Bill De Blasio described it as “an attempted terrorist attack.” At about 7:20 AM, police responded to reports of an explosion at a below-ground walkway near 42nd Street and 8th Avenue (i.e.., under Times Square). When they arrived, they found a seriously injured 27-year-old Akayed Ullah. In addition, three others who were nearby received minor injuries. Ullah was wearing an improvised, low-tech pipe bomb that was attached to his body with velcro and zip ties. The attack was captured on security footage, and the police say that Ullah intentionally exploded the device, which means he tried to carry out a suicide attack. The video, in the tweet below, shows that Ullah set off his bomb in a crowded passageway with dozens of commuters walking all around him. The potential for death and injury was clearly very high.
BREAKING VIDEO: Moment of explosion at 42nd St and 8th Avenue in Manhattan pic.twitter.com/JwygdnnwNb
Member Post
Recently Mitch McConnell refused to say whether he would agree to seat Roy Moore if Moore is elected in the special Alabama senate race next month to fill Jeff Sessions’ old seat. Could the Senate refuse to seat someone who has been elected? Let’s read the Constitution to find out. Hmm, ok, that was slightly […]
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Member Post
Many of you know that the board of selectmen in my town sued me and another town resident last year because we made Right to Know (Freedom of Information) requests to inspect some government records (that happened to be emails). This is part of a national trend that I wrote about last month, in which […]
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Ricochet Podcasts on NPR
Michael Graham, host of Ricochet’s Michael in the Morning podcast, was on NPR, uh, this morning (he’s a morning person) to talk podcasts with Lulu Garcia-Navarro (with a name like that, she aced the NPR job interview) and Emily Bazelon, co-host of the liberal Gabfest podcast from Slate. Listen below:
Welcome Back
The site was unavailable for most of this evening due to the SSL certificate suddenly not working. It didn’t expire, it just… stopped. I was not aware that was a possibility, but there you go. Most everyone received secure connection error warnings in their browsers, which prevented them from loading the site. I had to install a new certificate, which worked for about 10 minutes, and then the site decided to pretend it was still using the old certificate, which knocked out everyone’s connection once more. We’re back now, but it’s possible you may still see some odd behavior. Let me know in the comments. This was not, as far as I’m currently aware, related to the server problems we’ve been having this past month.
When Governments Sue Citizens to Suppress Transparency
“These lawsuits are an absurd practice and noxious to open government.” That’s how the Associated Press quotes University of Kansas journalism professor Jonathan Peters, speaking about a troubling trend in recent years of government bodies suing citizens who seek disclosure of public documents through open-records laws.
I know all about these types of absurd lawsuits. Last year the Tuftonboro, NH Board of Selectmen (at the time: Carolyn Sundquist, Lloyd Wood, and Bill Marcussen) sued me and another Tuftonboro resident, Bob McWhirter, when we requested to inspect government records. They spent around $20,000 (and counting) in a vain attempt to charge us 25 cents per page to inspect the records, even though New Hampshire’s Right to Know law states that “no fee shall be charged for the inspection or delivery, without copying, of governmental records, whether in paper, electronic, or other form.” The selectmen’s attorney, Richard Sager of Ossipee, argued in court that the law doesn’t make sense because, if read literally, it meant that the selectmen couldn’t charge us a fee. And they wanted to charge us a fee.
They lost their lawsuit when Carroll County Superior Court Judge Amy Ignatius ruled that they couldn’t charge us a fee. But as the AP quotes Mike Deshotels in its article, “You can lose even when you win.” Deshotels was sued by the Louisiana Department of Education when he requested school enrollment data. The DOE lost in court, like the Tuftonboro selectmen, but Deshotels incurred legal costs, like Bob and me, defending himself from an attack on his right to know what his government was doing.
New Hampshire Congressional Candidates Andy Sanborn and Eddie Edwards
Andy Sanborn and Eddie Edwards are declared candidates running for the Republican nomination (to be held in September 2018) to run against (presumably) Carol Shea-Porter for the United States House of Representatives. They both spoke to Republicans onboard the Winni Belle on Lake Winnipesaukee recently. Here are excerpts from their speeches.
Scheduled Server Maintenance Tonight
The Immorality of Abortion Advocates
Liz Harman, a professor at Princeton, is interviewed by James Franco, the movie actor, and his friend Eliot Michaelson, a lecturer at the department of philosophy at King’s College London. Harman explains that there’s nothing wrong about “early abortion” because some fetuses have no moral standing.
Introducing POTUS POD to the Ricochet Audio Network
I’m happy to announce the newest podcast on the Ricochet Audio Network: POTUS POD.
POTUS POD will carry speeches by the President of the United States (POTUS), and the weekly address to the nation, as well as White House briefings and other related events that would make sense to listen to in a podcast format. This podcast is presented as a public service to provide an audio archive of the Donald J. Trump administration.
McCain, Murkowski, Collins Kill Obamacare Repeal; Americans Hurt the Most
When are Republicans in Washington going to find out that they control both houses of Congress? Soon? After years of promising to repeal Obamacare to bring relief to the millions of Americans who have been harmed by skyrocketing premiums, stratosphere-leaping deductibles, and vanishing insurance policies, Senate Republicans abjectly failed to deliver last night. Senators Lisa Murkowski (Alaska), Susan Collins (Maine), and John McCain (Arizona) joined with all 48 Democrats to vote “No” on a so-called skinny repeal of Obamacare, causing the bill’s defeat 51–49. Murkowski’s and Collins’s perfidy was expected, but John McCain’s no vote reportedly elicited shocked gasps from his fellow Republicans. I don’t know why. He apparently hobnobbed with Senate Democrats before casting his vote, so it can’t have been that surprising.
The “skinny” repeal itself appears to be an absurd bill that didn’t really repeal much. But Senate Majority leader Mitch McConnell apparently hoped, we’re told, that it would be amended in conference with the House. So the Republicans — who campaigned on repeal, who voted for repeal bills countless times — have failed to deliver. Murkowski, Collins, and McCain are scoundrels. (I of course have empathy and sympathy for McCain’s medical condition — but he deserves contempt for last night’s vote.) Murkowski and McCain, in particular, deserve our disrespect for having voted for Obamacare repeal in 2015.
