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L'histoire comme arme de guerre

C'est comme le jeu des sept différences, mais à l'envers. Plutôt que de chercher des dissemblances sur deux dessins presque identiques, il faut repérer des points communs sur des images disparates, mais qui comportent tant de détails qu'on peut toujours y trouver certaines similitudes. Les temps de (...) / , , , - 2024/04

« L'Autriche est morte, et l'Europe la regarde »

En septembre 1938, au moment des accords de Munich, comment pouvait-on encore imaginer que l'Allemagne interromprait ses conquêtes et que la paix serait sauvée ? L'Autriche était tombée comme un fruit mûr en mars, les nazis tchécoslovaques présentèrent un ultimatum à leur gouvernement dès le mois (...) / , , , , - 2023/08

‘You Can Hear a Pin Drop’: The Rise of Super Strict Schools in England

Inspired by the academic success of schools like the Michaela secondary school in northwest London, some principals are introducing tight controls on students’ behavior.

Students in class in December at London’s Michaela Community School. The school, which enforces strict behavior policies, has the highest level of academic progression in England.

‘You Can Hear a Pin Drop’: The Rise of Super Strict Schools in England

Inspired by the academic success of schools like the Michaela secondary school in northwest London, some principals are introducing tight controls on students’ behavior.

Students in class in December at London’s Michaela Community School. The school, which enforces strict behavior policies, has the highest level of academic progression in England.

Le legs des Manouchian

Missak (1906-1944) et Mélinée (1913-1989) Manouchian ont été panthéonisés le 21 février 2024, quatre-vingts ans après la mort de Missak, fusillé au Mont-Valérien. Cette cérémonie officielle commande un exercice de mémoire, qui peut emprunter le chemin de la littérature. « L'Honneur des poètes », recueil (...) / , , , - 2024/03

Change Healthcare Ransomware Attack: BlackCat Hackers Quickly Returned After FBI Bust

Two months ago, the FBI “disrupted” the BlackCat ransomware group. They're already back—and their latest attack is causing delays at pharmacies across the US.

'Battle of Britain' Memorial Charity Claims to Have Been Debanked

A charity established for the preservation of a Battle of Britain memorial has claimed to be the latest casualty in the debanking scandal.

District Judge: Billy Clubs Protected by Second Amendment

Judge Roger T. Benitez issued a decision Thursday striking down California's ban on billy clubs, noting the less-lethal weapons are protected by the Second Amendment.

Thousands Get Emergency Alert Texts Ordering Evacuation After Half-Ton WW2 Bomb Found

There was a rare activation of the emergency alert system in the UK as thousands of residents were evacuated from a Second World War bomb.

Linda Yaccarino Says X Needs More Moderators After All

X CEO Linda Yaccarino told US senators she’s hiring more trust and safety staffers. She didn’t mention that Elon Musk fired most people policing content on the platform when he acquired it in 2022.

Morris: Ukraine Seeks Billions from U.S. as It Desecrates Jewish Cemetery to Build Condo

As Congress debates President Joe Biden's request of $64 billion for Ukraine, following the $113 billion that has already been sent, the eastern European nation is acting in violation of international human rights law, and a bilateral agreement with the United States, by desecrating a Jewish cemetery — and is refusing to respond to congressional inquiry about it.

George Santos Is Now on Cameo

Ousted congressperson George Santos, accused of multiple scams and grifts, is now selling videos of himself on Cameo for $200 a pop.

Judge Strikes Down Federal Ban on Handgun Sales for 18 to 20-Year-Olds

On Friday, Judge Thomas S. Kleeh issued a decision striking down the federal prohibition against 18 to 20-year-olds purchasing handguns.

Apocalypse Trump

Politics

Apocalypse Trump

What to expect in the second term, per the fourth estate.

Bedminster,,New,Jersey,-,19,November,2016:,President-elect,Donald,Trump

One of the fads in the liberal media is Trump horror stories—Apocalypse Trump, should he be re-elected president.

The Los Angeles Times gets you the inside baseball action with an article headlined “Trump promises vengeance and power grabs if he wins in 2024. Here’s the plan.” Save yourself the trouble of looking; there are no named sources to almost any of these descriptions of Trump 2.0, though they are presented as certainties.

The Times begins with Inauguration Day, stating as fact “anticipating widespread protests against his second term, Trump and allies reportedly are drafting plans to invoke the Insurrection Act in his first hours back in the White House—thereby confirming the expected protesters’ likely point: Trump is a danger to liberty and constitutional governance.” The author doesn’t seem to remember how the Insurrection Act, last used in 1992 to quell riots in L.A., did not end liberty and/or the Constitution. (But it wasn’t Trump, you see!)

And that’s just one of many MAGA plans in the works, as the Washington Post reported, all aimed at making good on what the writer feels is Trump’s central promise of the 2024 campaign: retribution. According to the Post, Trump allies are “mapping out specific plans for using the federal government to punish critics and opponents,” even naming individuals to be prosecuted. Ironic, given Trump has been double-chin–deep in five legal battles, two with the federal government, since he left office, and that the FBI was used even while he was in office to spy on him in an effort to prove he was a Russian agent.

It’s ironic Trump has all these supposed plans to use the judicial system against his enemies. First, of course, because, having declared himself something of a dictator, you’d think Trump could bypass all that innocent-until-proven-guilty stuff that bogs down trials to just kick in doors. Why would Dictator Trump bother with “justice” at all? After all, wrote the Los Angeles Times, “His obnoxious outbursts this week in his New York civil trial over financial skulduggery were just the latest evidence of his disdain for the law and the judicial system.”

No one will be immune from his attacks. Jen Psaki warned MSNBC viewers that if Trump regains office, he will “unravel the rule of law as we know it.” Jamelle Bouie of the New York Times said that “it looks an awful lot like a set of plans meant to give the former president the power and unchecked authority of a strongman.”

One cornerstone of Apocalypse Trump theories is that he controls a zombie army of MAGA believers he can direct against adversaries—“targeting,” in the words of one judge. Another reason to question his “planned” use of the court system. Why not just release the hounds? After all, why not make good on his claim that, under the Constitution’s Article II, “I have the right to do whatever I want as president”?

Nonetheless, the system it is. Trump has vowed to appoint a special prosecutor to “go after” President Biden and his family. The Washington Post reported Trump told advisers he wants the Justice Department to investigate his former chief of staff, John Kelly, his former attorney general Bill Barr, as well as his ex-attorney Ty Cobb and former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman General Mark Milley. Trump also talks of prosecuting officials at the FBI/Justice Department.

Here’s how it will work, using justice to commit unjust acts. The Post, to the rescue of the confused, said, “To facilitate Trump’s ability to direct Justice Department actions, his associates have been drafting plans to dispense with 50 years of policy and practice intended to shield criminal prosecutions from political considerations.” 

“It would resemble a banana republic if people came into office and started going after their opponents willy-nilly,” Saikrishna Prakash, a constitutional law professor at the University of Virginia, told the Post. “It’s hardly something we should aspire to.”

If irony were water, we’d all have drowned by now.

It wouldn’t be a party unless the New York Times weighed in. They succinctly stated, “Donald J. Trump and his allies are planning a sweeping expansion of presidential power over the machinery of government if voters return him to the White House in 2025, reshaping the structure of the executive branch to concentrate far greater authority directly in his hands. Mr. Trump intends to bring independent agencies under direct presidential control.”

He’ll do this by “stripping employment protections from tens of thousands of career civil servants, making it easier to replace them if they are deemed obstacles to his agenda. He plans to scour the intelligence agencies, the State Department and the defense bureaucracies to remove officials he has vilified as ‘the sick political class that hates our country.’” 

In turn, the New Republic offered an article headlined “Inside Trump’s Fascist Plan to Control All Federal Agencies if He Wins.” Tom Nichols wrote in the Atlantic that there are “plans for a dictatorship that should appall every American.”

Let’s not forget everyone’s favorite Apocalypse Trump subject, immigration. There, according to the New York Times, Trump is conjuring up “sweeping raids, giant camps and mass deportations.” 

The Times claims, “If he regains power, Donald Trump wants not only to revive some of the immigration policies criticized as draconian during his presidency, but expand and toughen them.”

Trump supposedly plans to ban people from Muslim-majority nations and reimpose a Covid-era policy of refusing asylum claims based on his feeling migrants carry other infectious diseases like tuberculosis. He plans to deputize local police officers and the National Guard voluntarily contributed by Republican-run states to carry out sweeping raids. And to get around any refusal by Congress to appropriate funds, Trump would redirect money in the military budget.

Are you not entertained? That may be the only purpose of the Apocalypse Trump genre: garnering clicks. It stands to reason that to keep the snowball rolling, the claims toward the Apocalypse, the tall tales, need to become increasingly dramatic, topping yesterday’s dopamine hit. Do a quick Google search using the phrase “Trump will seize control” to see the latest alongside the greatest hits.

These types of stories were popular during Trump 1.0, putting words into his mouth and distorting those that came out, assigning nefarious intent to even the simplest Executive Order. A favorite fretted over Trump seizing control of the FEMA emergency broadcast system and the whole Internet to disseminate propaganda and control his minions. NBC News helpfully uncovered the fact “Trump can’t use FEMA’s wireless alerts to send personal messages” a question which apparently had not come up previously in the 70-odd-years the original Cold War system has been in place.

A second driver of all this “journalism” is a desperate attempt to convince on-the-fence voters to not vote for Trump. After all, the Los Angeles Times made their intent for this advocacy pretty clear: “Too many voters are disengaged, grumpy that their choice seems to be coming down to Trump vs. Biden. As if those choices were comparably distasteful when, in fact, one is vanilla and the other is nitroglycerin.”

The idea is to use the tools of the media to scare the proles into not voting for Trump for fear of bringing on the end of Constitutional government in the United States. You’d think people would be tired by now of these “sky is falling” pronouncements, but apparently you’d be wrong given the sheer bulk of them, and the crazier-than-last-time feel most have.

The possible effectiveness of this strategy assumes most Trump voters, something close to 50 percent of the entire country, are too dumb to see what is right in front of them—fascism itself. But since Trump has not been kind enough to write out a Mein Kampf–like manifesto of all the dastardly deeds he intends to do, America’s liberal media has to do it for him. 

Never mind that Trump is the only recent president not to start or join a new war; he is a war monger. Never mind Trump tried to restart relations with North Korea via old-fashioned diplomacy; we are on the verge of nuclear disaster. Never mind the state of the economy or the decisions on Covid that resonate well in hindsight; he is wrong, clownishly wrong. Never mind that Trump has participated according to the law in every legal action against him; he does not believe in the rule of law. 

Oh, and former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen is so scared about what will happen in Term 2.0 that he is planning to leave the country. So there is an upside, anyway.

The post Apocalypse Trump appeared first on The American Conservative.

Millions of EV Batteries Could Retire to Solar Farms

A Southern California company is showing how repurposing EV batteries for solar storage can extend their usefulness for several years.

Ohio House Weighs Bill Barring Enforcement of Federal Gun Control

The Ohio House is expected to pass legislation this year barring in-state enforcement of federal firearm and ammunition laws. 

The Beached Philippine Ship That Is Angering China

After multiple maritime clashes, the Philippines invited journalists on a mission to resupply the Sierra Madre. A reporter for The Times was given rare access.

Gun Fight at Supreme Court: Free Speech for NRA and ATF Says Bump Stocks Are Machineguns

Guns are back at the Supreme Court, as the justices announced on Friday they will decide on free speech rights for the National Rifle Association (NRA) and whether the federal government can ban bump stocks, which are a firearm accessory, by calling them machineguns.

Abandoned Farms Are a Hidden Resource for Restoring Biodiversity

A billion acres of old farmland—an area half the size of Australia—has fallen out of use. Ecologists say the lands and degraded forests are neglected resources for rewilding and for capturing carbon.

Walker High School Principal Apologizes for Punishing Student for Dancing

Jason St. Pierre cited religion to discipline a 17-year-old for what he deemed inappropriate dancing at an off-campus Homecoming after-party.

Jason St. Pierre, principal of Walker High School, asked for a leave for the rest of the school year.

Le nazisme, spécificité allemande

Le premier ouvrage du sociologue Norbert Elias (1897-1990), publié à Bâle en langue allemande en 1939, dut attendre plus de trente ans pour se voir traduit en français, de surcroît, semble-t-il, de façon incomplète : Sur le processus de civilisation parut en deux volumes, La Civilisation des mœurs et (...) / , , , , - 2018/01

Le nazisme, spécificité allemande

Le premier ouvrage du sociologue Norbert Elias (1897-1990), publié à Bâle en langue allemande en 1939, dut attendre plus de trente ans pour se voir traduit en français, de surcroît, semble-t-il, de façon incomplète : Sur le processus de civilisation parut en deux volumes, La Civilisation des mœurs et (...) / , , , , - 2018/01

Avoir plus d'une idée

De tous les ouvrages consacrés à la critique de l'Union européenne, et il n'en manque pas d'éruptifs, le plus dévastateur pourrait bien être l'un des plus discrets. L'un des plus décalés aussi. Travail méticuleux d'historien, « Les “Collabos” de l'Europe nouvelle », de Bernard Bruneteau, a de quoi faire (...) / , , , , , , , - 2017/12

Qu'y a-t-il de commun entre Tamerlan, Oradour et le Prince Noir ?

Les massacres de masse ont ensanglanté le monde, à toutes les époques et en tout lieu. Mais tous non pas la même postérité. La sélection n'est pas seulement historique, elle est aussi géographique, politique et culturelle. / Afrique, Asie centrale, Caraïbes, Palestine, Rwanda, Colonialisme, Génocide, (...) / , , , , , , , , , - 2008/12

L'art d'interviewer Adolf Hitler

L'histoire des médias a ses mythes. Celui du grand reporter toujours prêt à défier les puissants y occupe une place de choix. La réalité s'avère souvent moins romantique, surtout lorsqu'on se penche sur les années 1930. Les conditions dans lesquelles Adolf Hitler a été interviewé avant la guerre à (...) / , , , , , - 2017/08

En Ukraine comme en Tchécoslovaquie ce n'est pas le socialisme mais l'égalité réelle qui est en question

Aux confins de la Pologne, de la Tchécoslovaquie et de la Roumanie, l'Ukraine offre un visage ambigu. Est-ce un pays slave qui, face à l'Occident, joue le rôle de sentinelle de l'URSS, centre du monde slave ? Est-ce un pays qui cherche encore son destin personnel ? Une histoire séculaire commune, (...) / , , , , , , , , , - 1968/10
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