Tag: #NeverTrump

Holy Voters, Christianity, and the Bible

There are many Christians out there that are espousing the view that voting for Donald Trump is not allowed by the Bible for the Christian. They contend that because Donald Trump does not hold the values, the lifestyle, or the character of a Christian, we cannot vote for him, no matter what. They are advocating that a third party, write-in, or no-show are the only viable options for the Christian in this presidential election. They are willing to sacrifice the election to the left-wing liberal candidate in order to stay true to their biblical principles. They contend that there exist nothing in the Word of God to justify a vote for Trump. From here on out, I will call them Holy Voters.

It must be said, that though this view sounds good, noble, and Christian on the outset, it is a very simplistic view of the matter at hand. It is dishonest, manipulative, and it is most definitely not Christian. There is Bible that is relevant in this matter. When tackling a matter like this, like tackling all Bible matters, one must always becareful to keep things in their context. All this is not as simple as Donald Bad, Hillary Bad, Me No Vote. We have to remember that all this has been a long process; and that there’s two phases to all this. First, we were in the nomination process, and second, the general election. We also have to remember, that these choices we have to deal with are within the constructs of a party system.

This is basically the way the party system works. People of like principles will enter into a pact where they coalesce their votes together in order to advance a platform that represents a consensus of the people’s principles. No one person’s principles dominate the platform. There has to be a consensus. Therefore, there has to be compromise. God forbid, right? These Holy Voters hear the word compromise and recoil, lament, and prophecy. No. Compromise is good in this context. Compromise is necessary. Husbands and wives compromise. Employers and employees compromise. Buyers and sellers compromise. There is nothing abnormal about compromise. So right off the bat, the Holy Voter’s concept of principles over party that they use to jusitfy themselves is simply deception. It’s called being a liar. It’s agreeing to coalesce their vote, agreeing to participate in the process, and then pulling out, breaking the deal, pact, understanding, word, etc.

#1 Revelation 21:8 …and all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone…

[Disclaimer: Apparently a lot of Holy Voters don’t like me suggesting that they are liars and then quoting this verse. Before you blow a gasket, let me assure you that I am not condemning anybody to hell. That’s between you and God. I am only establishing how serious lying is to God.

I DO NOT believe that it’s my way or the highway. I DO respect other people’s Biblical viewpoints. This article is a reaction to the leaders of the #NeverTrump movement that are using the Bible to shame people into not voting for the Republican nominee. I am trying to demonstrate that their reasoning is flawed, they are not near as righteous, biblical, or credible as they think they are, and there is Bible to refute their claims. So before, you get all mad at me, please direct your anger to Deace, Beck, and Erickson for doing what you think I’m doing.

Please, I am well aware that Trump is a sinful man. I have never (I repeat) never defended Mr. Trump nor will I in this article. This is not a defense of Trump. It is a defense of the Bible. And don’t get so mad at the liar thing. Chill out. Remember the Bible says to let God be true and every man a liar.  Join the club.]

When one begins the process in a party, he is by definition putting party over principles. So at the end of it when the Holy Voter says, “Hey no we shouldn’t put party over our principles”, they are making themselves out to be liars, and going back on their word. They are disingenuous and fraudulent. You see, there are many commentators out there that boast that they are independents, and that they weigh the pros and cons of all sides and make a healthy choice. But in the process, they are commentating, complaining, and coercing in respect to the different party’s candidates. That’s a very dishonest place to put yourself. For example, one of the main reasons Trump is now the Republican nominee is because the GOP through the years have allowed democrats and independents to participate in our nomination process. This is the same folly as allowing these independent commentators in the process. These people have not entered into our agreement. These people have not pledged their vote and support. They don’t want to make the commitment, but they want to make the decision. These commentators have hypocritically participated in the entire nomination process, have discussed the candidates, vetted the candidates, and pushed their candidate, yet claim when it’s no longer convenient that the whole time that they’re registered independents and left the republican party years ago. The Holy Voter is just as deceptive and disingenuous. In their denunciation of Trump’s character to justify actions, they’ve exposed their own character. The Independent Holy Voter is a liar because he’s misrepresented himself the entire time. The Republican Holy Voter is a liar because he said he’d do one thing and did another. You might not think this a big deal. Just hold on.

The process of nominating a candidate eventually comes to the convention floor. Usually, at that point one candidate will have coalesced enough delegates to win the nomination outright. At that point, it is incumbent upon the losing candidates to endorse and throw their full support to the winner. It is also incumbent upon the supporting constituents to follow suite. That is the way a party is supposed to work. That is the advantage of parties. But when things get nasty, like they did in this 2016 cycle, the normal operation of a party becomes uncertain. Trump won, and many of the supporters of the other candidates, especially Cruz’s, held their support, and waited and contemplated exiting the party. This reaction was anticipated and condoned because of the debased manner in which Trump won, and he did nothing to span the bridge. However, in the end, a deals a deal. If Cruz would have won, he also would have needed all the supporters from the other candidates to get on board. Trump needs that today to win.

#2 Matthew 7:12 Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them: for this is the law and the prophets.

Yes, it’s the golden rule. This is where the rubber meets the road. Nobody may even care how you vote. There may be absolutely no one on this green earth that gives one iota of a thought as to whether or not you stuck with your word. God does however. “The eyes of the LORD are in every place, beholding the evil and the good.” Pro 15:3 Be warned however, it may be tempting to cast these scriptures and applications aside, but God might not. Consider the sins of Saul and the sins of David. Saul, after God told him to kill everything, saved some of the best of the spoil to honour God with in sacrifice. He was still going to kill them! But God rent the whole kingdom from him. David however raped a woman and murdered her husband. That seems worst to most, but God did not rend the kingdom from David. Why? It’s because of what’s inside. God judges the inside. David repented and Saul made excuses. What is the Holy Voter’s response to breaking this little simple golden rule? The Independent Holy Voter that engaged in the entire Republican nomination process is just a liar. But the Republican Holy Voter is not only a liar, but has placed himself against “the law and the prophets” in breaking the golden rule.

Of course, in the Holy Voter’s mind, they are not the one breaking the rules. It is everybody else that is wrong and they are the ones that are right. Why is that? This deception is rooted in their simplistic view of the Bible which takes them to such extremes. They may know their Bible, but their interpretation and application of it lacks sound critical method. For example, the most frequently used passage is in Exodus:

#3 Exodus 18:21 Moreover thou shalt provide out of all the people able men, such as fear God, men of truth, hating covetousness; and place such over them, to be rulers of thousands, and rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers of tens:

The Holy Voter insists that this is the end-all law of God advising his people how to vote in an election. In typical literal interpretation of the bible, the interpreter must first understand the context of the passage. First acknowledge what is going on, who, what, where, why, etc. Then, if the context allows, we can derive a more spiritual application or meaning. Let me warn you, if you go any further in reading this and you are beholden to Deace and Erickson and Beck, what you hear will initially irk you. I beg you to please keep reading. You cannot afford to be wrong. If you are a seeker of truth, a rational human being, and respect the Word of God, I beg you to prayerfully consider these next few points.

  1. WHY? In this passage, Moses is overwhelmed by the work and needs relief. This advice is given to Moses in order for him to get relief, “so shall it be easier for thyself, and they shall bear the burden with thee.” So the primary reason the advice is given is to help a leader in his duties. So right off the bat, the Holy Voter has abandoned the primary reason for the advice in this passage. He is definitely not trying to help alleviate you. It almost as if they’re using this verse to put a yoke on you that you or themselves cannot bear.
  2. WHAT? The people of Israel did not have free elections like we do here in the United States. Moses was not voted into office. Moses was appointed (for lack of a better word) by the Lord God himself. The people of Israel had no choice in this matter. So, the passage is regarding appointments, not elections. This is an important distinction because this only deals with the judgement and heart of one man, particularly Moses who was hand-picked by God, not a massive body of people of many hearts and many minds. That is a totally different matter. The Holy Voter has ignored the primary matter of which the advice was given in this passage.
  3. TO WHO? This advice was given to Moses, not the people of Israel. A more direct application of this passage would possibly be to a President, not about a President. Or perhaps instruction on the form of a government. This advice is to a single person that appoints many people into leadership positions, not a body of people that elect a single person into a leadership position. The Holy Voter has got this backwards and cares not as to who this advice was primarily given in the passage.
  4. FROM WHO? This advice was not given to Moses directly from God. It was given to him by his father-in-law, Jethro. This was not written on tables of stone up on Mount Sinai by the finger of God, nor spoken from the fire and smoke as the mountain quaked. In fact, this advice was given to Moses before Moses went up the mount where God actually gave him the Law. In the passage, this was simply man’s advice (good advice), and soon Moses would ascend the mountain, and get God’s advice, the Law of Almighty God. Exodus 18:21 is the inspired Word of God and profitable for doctrine, reproof, for correction, and for instruction in righteousness, but not the expressed moral Law of God. The Holy Voter cares nothing for this primary distinction.

So before the Holy Voter even opens his mouth, in his mind he has got why, who, and what all mixed up. These basic primary things must be recognized and established before we start trying to apply the verse and extract spiritual meaning from the passage. I’m not making this up. These are basic tenants of literal interpretation of the Bible. I’m no theologian, but I want to be an honest student of the bible in order to rightly divide the Word of truth. So the primary meaning of the text alone really takes the wind out of the Holy Voter’s viewpoint on this passage of scripture. I’ve really offered no interpretation to this point nor have I made application. I’ve simply addressed the  plain elements of the text as to who, why, and what. That alone is sufficient to prove that the Holy Voter is on shaky ground in his doctrine.

I am in no way, shape, or form saying that this verse is not applicable, or that we as Christians are not responsible to the clear implications of this passage. God forbid. I emphatically declare that every Christian must take heed to this verse, Exodus 18:21. Later on Jethro says, “If thou shalt do this thing, and God command thee so, then thou shalt be able to endure, and all this people shall also go to their place in peace.” (v23) And of course we know Moses did it, and there is no recording in the Bible of rebuke or dissatisfaction from God, or that it didn’t go well. So, what we can get out of this is the mind of God in these matters. Exodus 18:21 tells us primarily what God wants, what pleases God, which is for “…able men, such as fear God, men of truth, hating covetousness…” to be put in leadership positions. There’s other verses in the Bible that back that up. I’m sure the Holy Voters can quote a few.

Bring your attention, however, to the beginning of the passage. The bible says “Moreover, thou shalt provide out of all people able men…” First of all, it says thou shalt provide. Did you get that Holy Voter? It does not say thou shalt symbolize a potential for it. It says to provide it. What is the mechanism which is available to us in this country to do just that?

Remember, we cannot provide that outright as a single person. We do not have the authority like Moses did to do such a thing. Holy Voters are under the delusion that somehow we do. The mechanism in which God has seen fit for us in this day and age is an election, where not one but many people are tasked with determination of one single leader. And even then, these many people do not appoint anybody.  They nominate and then they vote. And the one person that wins the election (He does not win an appointment. Nobody wins and loses in an appointment), this person is now tasked with appointing THOUSANDS of leaders that will rule in this land. It is through this process that we as Christians can provide out of all people able men. You ought to praise God we even have a process.

So the question is: How through this mechanism, our vote, can we best provide out of all people able men to fill these THOUSANDS of leadership positions? How, through our vote, can we best please God? To play along with the Holy Voter and make this all about Trump is to ignore every word that you have just read. Take a good look at the following list of Presidential appointments and ask yourself this question. Ask this question because truly that is the question at hand concerning Exodus 18:21:

On November 8th, how will my vote affect the provision of all these appointments that will be made by the next President?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_positions_filled_by_presidential_appointment_with_Senate_confirmation

I have more scriptures I’d like to deal with, but I don’t have all day for this. I’ll cover more later. Yes, there’s more. God bless you all for taking the time to read this. I truly appreciate it. I love you Holy Voters. I was one of you, but I smelled death in the camp. This blessed book has got all the answers. I love this old bible. It’s the thrill of my soul. It’s a light unto my path and lamp unto my feet.

 

 

What is a Christian to do?

I feel compelled once again to let my sentiments known regarding the recent turn of events. Apparently there’s a recording going around now about some pretty lewd stuff that Trump said over ten years ago. The media is all ablaze about it, and the #NeverTrumpers are told you soing. And the Trumpsters are deflecting and defending. I personally have not listened to this recording. One does not have to hear it to understand what was said. There’s enough in the comments and articles to piece together what was said. There are some things that trouble me through this; and it’s not Trump. This doesn’t change my views on Trump one iota. This does not make him a more crude, lewd, bad dude than he was forty-eight hours ago. Honestly, I’m not sure what everyone is up and arms about. None of this is a surprise. There was enough about the guy out there that most people know that this is how a person of his character normally conducts himself. So there is no new revelation here about Mr. Trump. There are a few things that do bother me.

#1 Here we go again, for nought

There was a point in the primaries that Ted Cruz could have won the nomination out right.  If he could have pulled off certain states, there was a possibility that he could have overtaken Trump in the delegate count before the convention, but he didn’t. I don’t remember when exactly, but it was clear at one point that he could not win this outright.

Then it was believed that it was possible that if we could just stop Trump from getting to the magic number, Cruz could take it at the convention on the 2nd or 3rd ballot.  Once Indiana rolled around. It was clear that Trump could not be stopped and this would never happen.

Then there was the free the delegates discussions and everybody got there hopes up again. Once the rules committee met at the convention, it was clear that none of anything was going to take place. On the floor, once again, nothing happened. It was 2012 all over again, drowned out and shut out.

Then Cruz told the convention to vote their conscience. And the true blue #NeverTrumpers said YEAH and dug in. Then it was maybe French, maybe Libertarian, maybe Sasse, maybe, maybe, maybe… Nothing happened. Then Cruz told the world what his conscience was, and some were okay with it, and some were not. The Deaces, Becks, and Ericksons threw their friend under the bus and doubled down on their NeverTrumpness.

Now, we must again play the fool. The media does exactly what most people knew they were going to do, and here we go again!  “Step down, Trump!” Mike Lee, Sasse, and others are now calling for him to step down. One month away from the election, and we’re gonna do this again. Blah Blah Blah and nothing is going to happen different. This is very tiring.

#2 Self fulfilling prophets

What we’re witnessing is exactly what was predicted by the #NeverTrumpers.  They said the media has got the soft gloves on. After the primary they’re going to take the gloves off and bring out the swords and they’re going to completely slice and dice Trump. So everybody knew this was going to happen. So now that it happens, what do the #NeverTrumpers do? They do exactly what they predicted the media would try to accomplish. They throw up their arms and say “Aaahhh man, listen to this guy! You see, he’s not fit for office! He’s a reprobate! He’s horrible! He ought to stand aside!” They are accomplishing what they predicted the media would try to accomplish. Way to go. They are fulfilling their own prophecies.

#3 Incessant Complaining

It’s amazing that someone that is not going to make a choice between the two can have so much to say and complain about.  I’ve heard it many times in my life, “If you’re not going to vote, then shut up!”  Those who have made it their duty to shame everybody that will make a choice obviously don’t see any difference between the two candidates. They’ve stated so. “Hillary or Hillary’s donor?” Their denial of the choice at hand, though it be littered with convictions, is truly no different that the clown at the water fountain that boasts, “I don’t ever vote! They’re all the same.” Those clowns, of course, a year later when they start complaining about the person that made it into office, they deserve that sharp rebuke, “Wait a second, you didn’t vote? Then shut up!” Oh, but not the #NeverTrumpers. They’re principled. They’re credible. They can not vote (or vote for nothing that can win) yet complain and complain and complain and complain.

#4 So-Called Christian Behavior

Since when has it been standard practice for Christians to rail on a sinner? Sure Trump is not a god-fearing moral man, that is clear. But there is something wrong when all you can do is bad mouth him all day long, bring up all his faults over and over, try as hard as you can to paint him in the worst possible light. There’s nothing Christian about that. And I’m not saying judge not. Use your discernment. Make a righteous judgment. But this constant vomiting of bitterness and loathing of this sinful man is not right. I’ve had my problems with Trump and still do, but I refuse to live in such a perverted state of reality that I would call out another man’s sins all day everyday and forget my desperate need of forgiveness; reveal other’s sins and forget that Jesus has covered mine. Shall I emulate Jesus and advocate the forgiveness of this man’s sin, or play the part of the Devil and accuse him before the Father? There is nothing Christian about this constant railing on this sinner.

Nor is there anything Christian about this constant railing on those that have decided to choose between these two candidates. It was the greatest thing in the world when Cruz said, “Vote your conscience!” Different things weigh differently on different people’s conscience. Letting Hillary in office weighs far heavier on some people’s conscience than allowing Trump in office may weigh on yours. Can we not respect that? Must someone who’s conscience bears different burdens than yours be a idol-worshipping religious whoremonger? Must we question their devotion to Christ because they want to vote; because they want to do what all Americans have done for 250 years. I’ve never heard such ridiculousness! Christian vote shaming? Please.

#5 Wrong All the Time

Why was it okay to participate in this process 18 months ago? But now, it’s not? People were not being shamed for voting Republican 18 months ago. If it wasn’t wrong back then, why is it wrong now? What changed? Trump was one of the first, if not the first, person to put his hat in the ring. It was okay to participate in the process then. I’ve given much thought to all this. I’ve been in. I’ve been out. There’s two words that I just can’t get around however I slice and dice this: SORE LOSER. Look, we lost. Cruz lost. He almost got it. It could have gone his way, but it just didn’t happen. You can explain it anyway you want. You can justify yourself anyway you’d like. You can quote scripture. You can invoke your Christianity. But you can’t change the fact that if you don’t vote for the Republican nominee after you actively participated in the process to determine one, you’re just a sore loser. You want to take your little football and go home. Is this how you would have wanted the Trumpers to treat you if Cruz had won, Mr. Christian? If you have so much integrity, and credibility, and honor, and Christianity, why don’t you stick to what you of your own volition chose to be a part of? If all are wrong to vote R on the presidential ballot on November 8th, then you are wrong to ever have participated, even 18 months ago. Where you not a Christian 18 months ago? It is disingenuous to start something and not finish. This bitter practice is bad precedent.

#6 Bible Thumping

I’ve brought up 2 Samuel 24 to demonstrate that yes, God may reguire of us a difficult choice. This is the passage where David is taken to task for numbering Israel. He is asked of God between 3 judgments by the the prophet Gad.

For when David was up in the morning, the word of the LORD came unto the prophet Gad, David’s seer, saying, Go and say unto David, Thus saith the LORD, I offer thee three things; choose thee one of them, that I may do it unto thee. So Gad came to David, and told him, and said unto him, Shall seven years of famine come unto thee in thy land? or wilt thou flee three months before thine enemies, while they pursue thee? or that there be three days’ pestilence in thy land? now advise, and see what answer I shall return to him that sent me. (11-13)

Why would God have David choose the judgement? I’m sure some parents have tried this on their kids. No doubt the intention would be to cause the perpetrator to own his sin. I guess you can say it is a teachable moment. I only offer this to demonstrate that it is within the character of God to place before his people a difficult choice. Some have insisted that God would never want us to vote for such a man as Trump, and would have us choose someone of integrity, one that fears God. For far too many years, we’ve chosen wrong. God may be past that and now he places before us not a choice of who will lead our country, but rather how our country will be judged. Ironically, it seems like David was of the #NeverJudgement crowd:

And David said unto Gad, I am in a great strait: let us fall now into the hand of the LORD; for his mercies are great: and let me not fall into the hand of man. (14)

It seems like David refused to choose, but left it up to God. For a long time I thought David chose pestilence; but my son pointed out to me David didn’t choose. So I’m suprised I haven’t heard #NeverTrumpers declare “See, David didn’t choose!” They’d have a pretty good argument.  But to that I must say a few things:

  1. I offer this passage to only demonstrate the character and ways of God in time of judgement.
  2. Judgement still came regardless of the fact that David refused to choose.
  3. Maybe if David would have said what he said in verse 17 instead of shirking the choice or coming to the reality of it, God may have stayed his hand. “Lo, I have sinned, and I have done wickedly: but these sheep, what have they done? let thine hand, I pray thee, be against me, and against my father’s house.”
  4. David was willing to let the judgement of his sin be shared with all of Israel. Famine, defeat in battle, and pestilence all affect others, not just him. In his refusal to choose, he did not come to terms with truly owning his sin.
  5. The irony of  his statement: Let us fall into the hand of the LORD, and let me not fall into the hand of man. Us? It wasn’t us that sinned. Me? He was more concerned of himself than those that would be judged for his sin.

If this passage teaches us anything. It speaks of our need to own our responsibility in this matter. We are not to lift ourselves above everybody as if we have no blame in the matter or no blood on our hands. Ezekiel the watchman, the one that would warn the wicked from his wicked way, to save his life said, “I came to them of the captivity of Tel-abib, that dwelt by the river Chebar, and I sat where they sat…”

I only bring this up to put to rest this arrogant notion that the Bible strictly forbids Christians to vote for Trump.  I leave you with this last thought:

And he spake this parable unto certain which trusted in themselves that they were righteous, and despised others. Two men went up into the court house to vote; the one a Pharisee, and the other a repubican. The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself, God, I thank thee, that I am not as other men are, compromisers, sell-outs, unprincipled, or even as this republican. I fast twice a week, I give tithes of all that I possess. And the republican, standing afar off, would not lift up so much his eyes unto heaven, but pulled the lever, saying, God be merciful to me a sinner. I tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather than the other: for every one that exalteth himself shall be abased; and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted.

 

Some Things To Consider Regarding Cruz

cruztrumpMany have been very troubled and perplexed about this election. This day was imminent. Ted Cruz has finally come out publicly in support of Donald Trump. There is much disappointment circulating out there over this decision. Consider these few thoughts before throwing Ted Cruz under the proverbial bus.

Consider His Prayer

Throughout all this election cycle, Cruz has demonstrated himself to be the real deal, a Christian Constitutional Conservative, whatever that means to some people. Consider that the man talks to God on a regular basis and consults his counsel on all things. There is no one on earth that has prayed more about this decision than Ted. There is no one on earth that has struggled more with this decision than Ted. There is no one on earth that has wrestled with God, himself, his wife, and his mind and heart more than Ted, and has no doubt poured out his heart and wept. This was not an easy decision for Ted, his wife, his dad, or his entire family. In light of this, how should we, as Christians treat him? How would you treat a friend that has been struggling with God on such an important matter? It is disgusting to see the very same people that were so reviled by the incendiary comments of those who were against Cruz to now hurl insults, slander, and stones toward Ted in the same manner. Never criticize another Indian until you’ve walked a mile in his moccasins.

Consider His Christ

After studying the first part of the Sermon on the Mount a curious pattern has emerged; humility, affliction, exaltation. Christ being our perfect example. “…he humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him…” (Phil 2:8,9) We may very well be seeing Cruz’s Christianity shining forth. I can’t think of a more humbling thing that Ted could do but to kiss the ring of the very one that has reviled him and has said all manner of evil against him falsely. He made this decision knowing that many of those that have claimed to have loved him, would forsake him and call him a sell out, just another compromising politician, and the worst of names. He made this decision knowing all the repulsive Trumptards would revel and celebrate in such a victory; would mock and laugh at all those that supported Ted, thinking that Ted would never do this. He made this decision knowing that he’s having to support the very one that hijacked and stole what was rightfully his. He made this decision knowing full well that this may be the end of his political career. It took much humility to concede his support as he’s done. And now, affliction and suffering, but soon he may have his time, and God will exalt him. “Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that he may exalt you in due time.”

Consider His Constitution

There are few in this country alive today that have known, studied, loved, and fought for the United States Constitution as Ted Cruz has. Just a quick glimpse at Cruz’s resume will reveal that Cruz’s life has been dedicated to the honor of contending for the survival of one of our most sacred documents.  One of the most valuable freedoms that our constitution upholds and guarantees is the right and privilege to vote. In the hearts of many people, the same reason we stand and pledge allegiance to the flag, is the same reason we trek the rain, wind, and snow and vote. Our brave founding father and our brave soldiers have shed their blood in order that we might exercise that right. It would be a disgrace and dishonour to the memory of these fine people to not vote. Therefore, under his obligation to and love of country, the patriot will vote. This is the spirit in which Cruz carries out his duty. No matter the choices, the consequences, or the critics, he will perform his duty to his country and constitution and vote. Consequently, he owes it to his supporters to be honest about his choice.

Consider His Choice

Donald Trump. We will not be so foolish as to think him as a Darius or Nebuchadnezzar. And we will not be so gullible and ridiculous as to think that God would want us to actively pursue a leader of this nature. No. Never. However, what we must do is trust in the Lord, and lean not unto our own understanding. (Proverbs 3:5) How is this all going to turn out? How will God ultimately use Donald Trump to shape the events of history? What will be the fate of this blessed country? As Ezekiel said, “Oh Lord God, thou knowest.” (37:3) He knows the beginning from the end. No matter what denomination, flavor, or creed, Christians are always talking about how God will lead us down a path that quite frankly doesn’t make sense. Well here you go Christian! That path is now before you. In our understanding, it makes no sense whatsoever to vote for someone like Trump, or Hillary for that matter; that it will take our country down a road of damage that is irrecoverable, and we exclaim, “We will die!” Perhaps Darth Vader may help us with that when he said, “Nothing can stop that now.” Just kidding.

Seriously though, many people, including great conservative minds like Deace, Erickson, Beck, and others have sought the scriptures and concluded that God would never expect us to choose a leader of this character and nature. It’s possible we’ve personalized this just a bit much. We’ve sought desperately to defend our individual right to not choose this Donald Trump as our president. Perhaps, it’s not who God would have us choose, but rather that God would have us choose; as an individual indeed, but more importantly as a nation. Is this biblical? After David had sinned before the Lord in numbering all of Israel, Gad the prophet came to David and said, “Thus saith the LORD, I offer thee three things; choose thee one of them, that I may do it unto thee.” (2 Sam 24:11) The bible says that David was in a great strait for he was to choose the manner in which judgement would be given. How is this different from the strait we now find ourselves. Will God not deal with the sins of our nation? God may very well require of us with our heads hung down in shame, with a heavy heart, and tears go down to our local precinct on the eighth day of November and execute our civic duty.

Consider This Conclusion

There are many more things to consider, but time does not allow. Ted Cruz has earned his position in our hearts. He has stood with the people of the United States through the thick and thin. Many times he has been the lone voice in Washington speaking our minds. He deserves our support and understanding, and even our consideration to his request. May God bless Ted Cruz.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Populism and the Birth of the IRS

popirsSo the other night, some of us men were discussing the power of the IRS and how the government uses money as a tool to control the people, or the fear of losing money as a means of controlling the people.  We complained about it, wondered why it wasn’t the other way around, complained about it some more, but ultimately we did not hammer out a plan to save the country that night.  We came close.  But the answer always seems to evade us.  Consequently though, there was a really good question asked:  When was the IRS created?  And none of us were really sure.  So old Franko (my eldest son) did some investigation tonight.  Here’s what he found on wiki:

  1. There was little to no income tax pre-1900.  During the Civil War, in 1862, the government imposed emergency temporary income taxes to raise money for the war effort.  These expired in 1872.  The Income Tax of 1894 was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court
  2. “In 1906, with the election of President Theodore Roosevelt, and later his successor William Howard Taft, the United States saw a populist movement for tax reform. This movement culminated during then candidate Woodrow Wilson’s election of 1912 and in February 1913, the ratification of the Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution:”  This, of course, granted to Congress the power to impose an income tax on the people.  This populist movement did not just advocate for tax reform, but they were notorious for protectionism and trade tariffs, the likes of which Trump, Sanders, and Clinton are all three now promoting.  The protectionism and tariffs of this populist movement eventually led to the Fordney-McCumber and Smoot-Hawley tariffs, which many believe were responsible for plunging us much deeper and longer into the Great Depression.
  3. So in 1913 the IRS gave us our first 1040 form.  And incidentally, here’s the kicker (emphasis added): “The IRS’s workload jumped by TEN-FOLD, triggering a MASSIVE restructuring. The IRS DOUBLED its staff, but was still processing 1917 returns in 1919.”

Interestingly, listening to LevinTV tonight, Mark was comparing Reagan’s legacy of free-market, free-trade capitalism to Trump’s and Sander’s tariffs and protectionism.  He had this to say about where we’re heading if we don’t follow Reagan’s model:

“There’s another issue.  That’s the government.  When we have more free-market capitalism, we need less government.  Don’t we?  In fact, power moves from the central government to the individual.  Power moves from the public sector to the private sector.  It’s a good thing.  So it has consequences in terms of the civil society.  So apart from economics, which is not to be dismissed in any respect, this goes to the issue of the civil society in government.  How much government do we want?  I want you to think about this for a second.  Regardless of who’s elected, they keep talking about protectionism and tariffs.  What kind of bureaucracy would we have to create in order to control so many prices, in order to issue so many taxes?  The auditors that would have to be hired…  The investigators that would have to be hired…  THE STRENGH OF THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE WOULD HAVE TO EXPAND.  The central government become more increasingly powerful…  You think I’m joking?

No Mark.  I don’t think you’re joking. I think you’re absolutely right.  While I was listening to his program, old Franko was reading all this stuff about the history of populism and the IRS.  Later on that night we shared with each other what we had learned and the information beautifully intersected on a point of enlightenment.  So what Levin is warning about has most certainly already happened in the past.  I think it’s a shame that history and common sense are not on the side of Trumpmania.

A Little Bit of Common Sense

thomaspaineI’ll admit, I’ve learned some things during this election cycle.  One thing that has come to my attention that I never really realized is this transfer of power from the legislative branch of our government to the executive branch of our government.  We know something is wrong in our country.  We see its effects.  We see our nation crumbling.  But why can’t we stop these things from happening?  I mean what is the plan to get this country back on track.  What track?  The constitution track.  People just don’t understand HOW we’ve strayed from our constitution.  Therefore, we don’t understand HOW to get us back on a constitutional track.  What is lacking must somehow be provided.  This is just one aspect of all this mess.  There must be a transfer of power BACK to the legislative branch of government.

Everybody is mad and everybody sees that something is wrong.  Something is missing.  Something is not working.  Something is broke.  People want to know how to fix it.  But they don’t know where the problem is.  That is why they vote for Trump.  They just don’t know.  They think that this one person is going to fix the problem.  But let me ask you this:  How is he going to transfer the power of the executive branch BACK to the legislative branch?  You see, it’s very common for people to see President Obama as a usurper of power when he hands down his bathroom edicts.  But I contend that the problem is not that he’s usurped power, but rather that power has been unconstitutionally conferred to him.  This is very similar to the all-powerful Supreme Court.  We complain that they legislate from the bench. But truly, the problem is not necessarily the justices, but rather the power they wield has been unconstitutionally conferred to them.  And thus the fallacy that the right person in that position will fix the problem.  A conservative justice will not fix the broken judicial system we have.  And neither will a single president be able to transfer his branch’s power BACK to the legislative branch of our government where it belongs (or to the states), especially if he hasn’t once mentioned on the campaign trail that this needs to be done.

There was a great interview with Senator Mike Lee by Mark Levin explaining this phenomena.  Mike Lee explained how the agencies and departments of the executive branch have given legislators relief of the responsibility of passing law.  They literally don’t have to legislate anymore because that power has been systematically relinquished to the executive branch.  They have given up their accountability.  They let the executive branch legislate away and wash their hands of any responsibility.  The beautiful balance of powers between the three branches that our founding fathers instituted is way out of balance.  Just the other day I was reading how the executive branch hands down 3500 to 4000 new regulations a year, whereas our legislative branch that is supposed to be making the law only pass 100-200 laws a year.  Our government is out of balance and there’s no way to check the power of the executive branch.  The only recourse we have are the courts.  The courts are packed by the executive branch with leftist judges that love big government.  So our system of checks and balances has run amok!

And that is one of our biggest problems.  The executive branch is getting bigger and bigger and bigger.  The EPA, the Department of Education, OSHA, and on and on.  They are the ones writing the law.  We the people have no representation.  We the people have no recourse.   The executive branch is effectually swallowing up the legislative branch.  I wanted to share something with you from Thomas Paine’s “Common Sense”.  He’s writing to the inhabitants of America on February 14th, in the year 1776..

“The nearer any government approaches to a republic the less business there is for a king.  It is somewhat difficult to find a proper name for the government of England.”

So the converse of this is what is happening in our government.  The king, or the President and his executive branch, is taking up more and more business:  health, housing, education, and now bathrooms!  All that is none of their business.  And the more business the executive branch gets into, the further we regress from a republic.  So it is becoming more and more difficult to find a proper name for the government of the United States of America.  Were we not given a republic?  What do we call our government now?

“…in its present state it is unworthy of the name, because the corrupt influence of the crown, by having all the places in its disposal, hath so effectually swallowed up the power, and eaten out the virtue of the house of commons (the republican part in the constitution) that the government of England is nearly as monarchical as that of France and Spain.”

Clearly, the power of our house of commons, our legislative branch, is getting swallowed up and any virtue that it once had is now eaten out.  I find it interesting that we’ve come full circle.  The very corruption that we declared our independence from is now at hand.

“For it is the republican and not the monarchical part of the constitution of England which Englishmen glory in, viz. the liberty of choosing an house of commons from out of their own body – and it is easy to see that when republican virtue fails, slavery ensues.  Why is the constitution of England sickly, but because monarchy hath poisoned the republic, the crown hath engrossed the commons?”

This is the very reason, the power of England had to be shook off.  This is how we don’t have representation.  It’s not that we don’t have representatives. No, we’ve got plenty of those.  It’s that they have no real power. It’s that there truly is no accountability.  They’re not the ones making the law.  They have given away their power to make law.  They have refused to take back that which is rightfully theirs.  Simply put, our representative refuse to do their job.  There is only one solution to this.  That which is lacking must be provided.  The power must be wrested from those who unconstitutionally have it, and it must be given back not only to those who constitutionally should have it, but to those who can be trusted to keep it.    God help us.

 

Mark Levin vs Julia Hahn

TrumpifiedReagan300So the trade wars have begun.  Mark Levin says that Reagan was for free-trade.  Julia Hahn says that Reagan was actually a protectionist.  Who’s right?  I have to say that the latest article by Julia is very well written, very sophisticated, very well sourced out with quotes and references to back her up.  And when I first read it, I got to admit I was shaken up a bit and thought, “Maybe Levin isn’t quite right about what he’s been saying about trade?”  But I went outside and did some work and chewed on all this and read the article again.  It took me a while, but I see now that this article, though it’s convincing, is still nothing more than manipulative Trump propaganda.  With a little bit of brain power, a common man like me can see this for what it really is.  So I quoted the entire article and I added my notes in an italicized red font to explain what really is going on.  I know trade talk is boring and doesn’t really make ratings on the cable networks; but it is important.  So if you can endure it, please read on.  Here’s the entire article:

 

Hillary Pledges Open Borders, Levin Responds with Attack on Trump’s Tariffs

by Julia Hahn, 14 May 2016

First of all, the title of this states that Levin is responding to Hillary’s pledge to open borders with an attack on Trump’s Tariffs.  So right off the bat, Julia starts by lying.  Levin is not responding to Hillary pledge, but he’s responding to Trump’s pledge.  Julia is implying that open borders is an issue that Levin doesn’t care about, or perhaps Levin doesn’t see the horror of Hillary’s view on immigration.  Julia seems to think that because Levin is for free-trade, that somehow that makes him an open-border advocate, which most people who listen to Levin know that is absolutely absurd.  All that is simple deflection.  Julie is doing exactly what she’s accusing Levin of doing.  Julia is bringing attention to another subject to distract from the subject at hand due to a personal motive to smear Levin.

Last week, Donald Trump met with the family members of Sarah Root, a beautiful, beaming 21-year-old girl slaughtered by an illegal alien in Nebraska the day after graduating from college with 4.0 GPA. Later that day, Trump warned, “Crooked Hillary Clinton wants completely open borders.”

So Levin doesn’t care about Sarah Root or her family because he’s trying to shed some light on Trump’s trade plan or at least bring it to the forefront of people’s minds.  Of course illegal immigration is how Trump bursted on the scene; it’s his supposed strongest subject.  So, anytime anyone questions Mr. Trump they pound the immigration drum.  Anytime Mr. Trump was slipping in the polls, they pounded the immigration drum.  I remember on Breitbart, before every primary, they’d splash several illegal immigration stories across their website.  So this is par for the course.  Also, please note that Julia is politicizing the Sarah Root tragedy in order to smear Levin.  Deflection and politicization are tools of liberals.

Indeed, a review of Clinton’s campaign website reveals that her immigration plan is even more radical than that of Barack Obama, who completely suspended enforcement of America’s immigration law and printed hundreds of thousands of work permits for illegal aliens.

However, a much more pressing topic seems to have triggered the passions of radio host Mark Levin who, along with Jamie Weinstein, is one of the most vocal members of the #NeverTrump movement. In the course of two days, Levin penned two lengthy denunciations of Trump’s trade platform and Breitbart News’s coverage of it.

In a story featured on this website, Levin emotionally warns conservative Americans that Trump’s effort to boost American manufacturing represents a kind of existential threat to conservatism. It IS an existential threat to conservatism.  Tariffs is a government-handed solution to unfair trade.  Conservatives believe that government is not the solution, but rather government is the problem.  Levin is seemingly unconcerned with the prospect that his energetic Trump-bashing could help place Hillary Clinton in a position to add millions more Third World migrants to America, who almost certainly will not support Levin’s vision of smaller government conservatism nor tune in to his radio show where he espouses the same.  Just because someone disagrees with Trump does not mean that they are responsible for Hillary taking the White House.  Trumpsters are going to repeat this over and over and over.  I whole-heartedly disagree.  Those who vaulted him to the nomination bear the responsibility if he wins or loses.  Trumpsters were warned.  The RNC was warned.  All that should have been considered before the votes were cast.  Elections have consequences.  As Ted Cruz said, “You broke it, you bought it.”

“…Levin’s vision of smaller government conservatism…”  Huh?  This possibly exposes more about Julia than anything else.  I didn’t know there was another type of conservatism that wasn’t smaller government conservatism; as if you can have big government conservatism.  Do you see how they are attempting to redefine conservatism.  Do you remember that Trumpster women, Kayleigh McEnany, that Dana Loesch was bashing?  What did Kayleigh say that got Dana got so mad about?  She said that anybody that doesn’t support Trump is not truly a conservative.  They are actively trying to redefine conservatism.  Ironically, this is the very reason Savage advocated for a nationalist candidate.  Savage said that conservatism doesn’t mean anything anymore.  Well, now we got a nationalist candidate and his crowd is actively redefining conservatism, and demonizing true conservatives. Is that what you wanted, Savage?

One of the enduring mysteries of the #NeverTrump movement now that their preferred vessels— John Kasich and Ted Cruz— have exited the race is why they seem to believe that Trump’s “America First” platform represents a greater threat to conservatism than Clinton’s agenda of massive government, massive taxation, and massive Third World migration.  This is straw-man crud.  Nobody believes that Trump’s platform is a greater threat to conservatism than Clinton’s platform.  There may be a few (very few) people out there that believe that.  In fact, the only people that have even suggested this that I can recall are establishment elite’s like Boehner.  Conservatives don’t believe that and have never suggested that.  A threat to conservatism is a threat to conservatism; no matter what party it comes from.  This is just another ploy to somehow paint conservatives that don’t like Trump into some straw-man that supports Hillary and is really in league with the establishment.  There’s no such thing.

Trump is a “radical protectionist” whose trade policy would result in “economic misery” for nearly “everyone,” Levin warns conservatives:

The billionaire is a radical protectionist who has repeatedly declared his intention to impose massive tariffs aimed at the economies of other countries, such as Japan and Mexico, and a forty-five percent tariff on products from China. Such broad tariffs would most certainly result in retaliation by the targeted countries. This is a sure job-killer that would also drive up costs of everyday products to low- and middle-class Americans. The net result: economic misery, not just for those hard-working, tax-paying Americans who work in industries that rely on international commerce and trade, but mostly everyone.”

Levin lays out his economic theory, which leads him to his conclusion: namely, Trump’s expressed willingness to protect American industries against specific countries would result in higher prices for U.S. consumers and thus ensure economic hardship. Levin writes:

Remember, a tariff is really just a tax, the cost of which is imposed on the American people.  The higher the tariff, the higher the tax.  Imagine what a 45 percent increase in the price of goods made, say, in Japan would do to a middle class family shopping for a Toyota or Honda.   While Trump and his surrogates may have the money to pay the higher prices his policies would cause, many Americans – who are already having difficulty making ends meet – do not.

Levin makes no mention of the fact that if you raised the price of a Toyota by 45 percent, presumably Americans would not pay 45 percent more for a Toyota, but would instead buy a Ford, and that as Ford’s sales went up, the marginal cost of production would go down.

This sentence really is the only argument that Julia offers in defense of Trump’s trade theory, or as an answer to Mark Levin’s trade theory.  That’s it.  This is the only example or argument or attempt to disclaim Levin’s views on trade.  The rest of the article Julia concentrates on Ronald Reagan and attempts to cast Reagan as a protectionist.  But as far as inflation goes, higher prices, and such, this is it.  This simplistic example is really all she has.  I mean is this it?  This is all you got?

So first off, Toyota is already producing vehicles in the United States.  This is not even a good example.  But even if it was, what about all the local Toyota dealerships that would go out of business?  And it’s not just Toyota.  It’s Honda.  It’s Kia.  It’s Izuzu.  It’s Nissan.  All those dealerships and service companies would go belly up.  These are dealerships, family owned and operated by Americans that are the ones that will get hurt.  This will truly be another case of government elites picking winners and losers.

Secondly, what about the fact that a grand amount of the parts in the American made Ford are actually made in Japan or China.  Julia thinks everything under that hood is made in America.  Think again.  She thinks Ford won’t be affected by this?  Chevy?

Thirdly, Julia assumes that a marginal cost of production going down would actually be passed on to the consumer, or the employee.  Yeah right!  You just keep believing that.  I remember reading years ago that what happened more times than not is that…  Well, let me use a simple example.  Trump imposes tariff on Toyota.  Toyota’s price goes up.  Ford, instead of keeping their price the same, they raise their price to match the Toyota price.  Why?  Because they can.  So price goes up on Toyota 45%, but price goes up on Ford 44% and nothing changes but the price.  There’s examples of this in history; the steel industry for one.   

Fourth, she doesn’t address the topic of retaliation that Levin brings up:  Trade Wars.  They are very real, and Mark Levin does use history to back up what he’s saying.  He refers to the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of the Depression.  Smoot and Hawley promised to relieve or protect the farming industry by applying these across the board tariffs on imported agriculture.  Most historian seem to believe that these tariffs made the Depression worst.  There’s a few out there that believe that it wasn’t necessarily the Smoot-Hawley tariffs.  One thing can be agreed though:  The Smoot-Hawley tariffs DID NOT DELIVER WHAT WAS PROMISED.  Anyway, many countries imposed tariffs on us because of this maneuver and the whole world paid the price. 

Fifth, Levin has made it real clear that tariffs are hitting this problem from the wrong side.  This is a heavy-handed government solution to unfair trade.  Mexico is not killing American jobs.  Canada is not killing American jobs.  No.  America is killing American jobs.  With all the regulations, taxes, and liabilities associated with doing business, it’s near impossible to compete with other countries.  You don’t fix that by taxing the competition.  You free up the American businesses.  You deregulate them.  You quit taxing them.  You get out of the way and let Americans produce.  We’re over taxed.  And now you’re going to tax the competition and we’re supposed to pay for that too.  Henry Ford begged Hoover not to sign the law, and called the Smoot-Hawley tariffs “an economic stupidity!”.  Yeah, so Julia doesn’t address that.

Sixth, this is it.  This is really the only argument Julia poses for Trump tariffs.  She actually thinks it’s that simple.  The rest of the article, she systematically tries to discredit Mark Levin on the basis that Reagan was not a “free-trade purist”, therefore Levin doesn’t know what he’s talking about even though Levin never asserted such a thing.  Read for yourself.

Moreover, Levin’s example (denouncing a 45% tariff on Japanese vehicles, which he imagines could be implemented by a President Trump) is completely analogous to an action Ronald Reagan took during his Presidency. As President, Reagan implemented a 45% tariff on Japanese motorcycles in order to save the Harley-Davidson Motor Company. To use Levin’s words: “Imagine what a 45 percent increase in the price of goods made, say, in Japan would do to a middle class family shopping for a…” motorcycle. 

A motorcycle is not… nevermind.  I’ll let her finish her argument.

A 1984 report notes that the “average dealer net price of a Harley-Davidson motorcycle” was approximately $4,780—or “$890 more than the average dealer net price ($3,890) of Japanese-brand motorcycles in the 1000cc and over class, and $2,134 more than the average price ($2,546) of all Japanese- brand motorcycles in the 700 to 899cc class.”

Regardless, Levin attempts to defend Reagan’s actions and distinguish Reagan’s trade views from Trump’s, writing:

Reagan did not make wholesale protectionism and tariffs a central plank of his platform, as Trump does; nor did he support imposing high tariffs on every single product produced in a particular country.  Actually, Reagan emphasized the opposite.  Reagan’s tariffs were targeted, including on Japanese motorcycles and semiconductors, and usually in response to specific violations of trade deals.  Besides, Trump is a populist/nationalist/protectionist.  Reagan was a conservative.  There’s a difference.”

This has got to be the most disingenuous stupid arguments I’ve ever seen.   Julia will attempt to take down Levin assertion that Reagan was not a protectionist.  She’s trying to compare Reagan’s tariff on a particular industry to Trump’s across the board China or Japan tariffs.  No they are NOT COMPLETELY ANALOGOUS.  Comparing motorcycles to a whole nation of goods is stupid.  Please. I can’t believe I actually gave some credence to this article when I first read it.  I mean there’s really no point in going further because the rest is based on this fictitious COMPLETE ANALOGY.  But let’s go into it anyway.

However, Levin’s argument is self-contradictory in two ways.

First, Reagan’s actions are completely irreconcilable with the economic principles that Levin has established: specifically, Levin’s belief that an action which raises the price of imports is “a sure job-killer that would also drive up costs of everyday products to low and middle-class Americans. The net result: economic misery.”

 The economic theory Levin has laid out would prohibit action to raise the price of a foreign good to protect a domestic industry— exactly what Reagan did.

Yet trade rules, by definition, are protectionist. NO DUH GENIUS!  Any prohibition on an unfair subsidy is, at bottom, a prohibition on importing a good so cheaply that an American company has no chance of competing against it. However, by Levin’s zero-sum argument that cheaper is necessarily better, none of these trade rules should exist or be enforced at all because to levy a tariff is to raise prices, and— by Levin’s argument— damage the economy.

Moreover, Reagan grounded his decisions in what Levin might define as “protectionist” rhetoric.

“The health and vitality of the U.S. semiconductor industry are essential to America’s future competitiveness,” Reagan said in 1987 as he was implementing a 100% tariff on Japanese semiconductors. “We cannot allow it to be jeopardized by unfair trading practices.”

“I have determined that import relief in this case is consistent with our national economic interest. The domestic industry is threatened by serious injury because of increased imports,” Reagan said in 1983 as he was implementing his tariff on Japanese motorcycles. “I have maintained that I would enforce our trade laws where necessary and where such actions are consistent with our international obligations.”

Reagan explained that protecting American industry is in the economic interests of the United States, even if it precludes the option of buying cheaper foreign goods. Reagan believed it was worth imposing a tariff for the purpose of ensuring that the American industry is able to survive. In other words, instead of letting the global market decide, Reagan applied a mercantilist approach saying the American producers should survive for the simple reason that they’re American— not because it’s cheaper, and not because it’s necessarily better, though it may be, but because America is better off for having it made within our own borders.

 This sentiment is simply incompatible with Levin’s Cato-esque argument that the cheapest product should win the day.
All this junk that is written above is based on her COMPLETE ANALOGY.  Levin was comparing a SPECIFIC commodity or industry and the protection of a SPECIFIC American enterprise like Harley Davidson to ACROSS THE BOARD tariffs on countries like China and Japan, like Trump is proposing..  The reasoning or ideology behind both are the same: protectionism and nationalism.  Levin NEVER said that it wasn’t.  He was simply saying that Reagan targeted specific industries or products and always explained to the American people why he was doing it.  Levin explains well that tariffs was an exception with Reagan, not a rule like it is with Trump.  And Juila really doesn’t address that. She just assumes that you agree with her complete analogy and hopes that you don’t figure out that it’s not complete.  In fact, I think it’s one heck of a stretch.  Secondly, notice another straw-man she starts pounding:  cheapest product should win the day straw-man.  Mark Levin never said that the price was the end-all bottom line.  Conservatives don’t believe that.  I would venture to say that most conservatives of my flavor and Levin’s flavor would gladly pay a little more for an American made product when given the chance.  I don’t know where she’s getting this stuff from.

The second reason Levin’s logic is self-contradictory is that Levin’s attempted exit-hatch— that Reagan was simply enforcing rules in response to specific violations of trade deals— would more than justify Trump’s proposed actions.

Trump has clearly said that if China devalues its currency, he will impose a tariff on China equivalent to the amount by which they are devaluing their currency— essentially negating the value of the illicit practice so that they stop doing it.

As Trump told the New York Times:

I would do a tax. And let me tell you what the tax should be? The tax should be 45 percent. That would be a tax that would be an equivalent to some of the kind of devaluations that they’ve done. They cannot believe that we haven’t done this yet. [Emphasis added]

Interestingly, Levin criticizes Breitbart for not including this quote in a Breitbart News report last week. However, when Levin provides the quote to his reader, for some reason, he leaves out the one sentence (underlined above) necessary for the reader to understand that Trump’s tariff is in direct response to illicit currency manipulation.

RedState—a blog that is certainly no friend to Trump—points out that members of corporate media are promoting a false characterization of Trump’s statement. RedState writes:

It seems pretty clear… that Trump is not calling for a 45% tariff specifically, he’s saying that this is basically what he figures that it would take to even out the playing field in terms of China’s devaluation of their currency… In other words, while Trump did utter the 45% figure, he seemed to be clearly using it as an example of how he would respond to a given value of Chinese currency devaluation. He did not claim it as an ironclad rule that should be used against China per se.

Okay so…  Same thing.  I don’t care what the tariff is in response to, the point is that he’s proposing ACROSS THE BOARD tariffs as opposed to Reagan’s SPECIFIC tariffs.  So in that respect, Levin is yet to contradict himself.  Julia thinks that China’s devaluation of currency is analogous to a motorcycle.  I’m just not seeing it.  Another point that Levin makes is that ALL countries manipulate their currency, including ours.  Now, I’ll admit: I don’t know too much about currency manipulation.  But I know enough to know that MOST people don’t know much about currency manipulation.  So to me, for Trump to use that as his argument and justification for across the board tariffs on China, is probably an exploitation of the masses’ ignorance, especially because he, and Julia, don’t address the points that Levin is bringing up.  Speaking about currency manipulation, what about the currency manipulation that our government has been doing; all this quantitative easing?  I don’t know much about it, put typically conservatives frown upon it yet Trump is silent on it.  

Look, there are major major major problems with the heavy-handed, iron-fisted, regulatory, bureaucracy that is killing American industry.  To think that tariffs on imports is going to somehow save us, is to completely ignore the real problems in this country:  YUGE GOVERNMENT!  So the conservative looks at it from this end, looking for a way to get the government out this.  While the liberal looks at it from the other end, looking for a way to get the government into this, which is tariffs.  Also, has anybody asked Trump what he’s going to do with all this revenue that essentially comes out of the consumer’s pocket?

Reagan took a similar position in 1985 when his administration pushed the Plaza Accord, which made products from Japan more expensive by raising the value of Japan’s currency.

However, Reagan was dealing with a world in which America had a much different economic threat matrix than it does today. While economic nationalists may find fault with Reagan for not acting strongly enough to protect enough threatened industries, the scope and reach of the threats that he faced were small in comparison to today. Reagan operated before NAFTA and before China’s entrance into the WTO. Plus, for all the tensions that existed between Japan and the U.S. during Reagan’s day, Japan was never a geostrategic threat to the United States’ position in the world in the same way that China is today.

In the specific case of China, Levin complains that Trump suggested imposing a tariff across the board rather than on selected goods: “Forty-five percent [tariff] on what?  Not a single product or some products. But on all products coming from China and other unspecified tariffs aimed at Japan and Mexico,” Levin writes.

Although one hardly gets the impression that Levin would drop his criticism of Trump’s proposal if Trump provided a list of the specific foreign goods he wished to subject to import duties, what Levin apparently fails to appreciate is that China’s currency manipulation would affect the price of all of their exports—not just some exports.

In other words, the only way to halt currency manipulation would be to impose a countervailing duty on all Chinese goods, which necessarily benefit from the devaluation. Trump was specific in saying that the size of his tariff would be proportional to China’s devaluation.

Though the media, as RedState points out, and Trump’s critics—including Weinstein—are perhaps willfully ignorant of this fact, Trump was explicit in saying that the 45% tariff would be a counterbalance to a 45% currency devaluation, in effect removing any incentive for China to cheat in the first place.

Trump’s tariff on currency cheating is, therefore, no more guilty of raising the price of a particular product than is NYPD raising the price of a Fossil watch when they prohibit the sale of an illegal knockoff in Times Square.

Levin’s logic is thus twisted into a pretzel. He offers a muted defense of Reagan by saying that Reagan was simply applying the rules, while at the same time, advancing an economic argument that would prohibit anyone from enforcing any trade rule at any time since such action would deny Americans access to a cheaper subsidized foreign good.

Rather than address the internal inconsistencies of his own logic, Levin’s piece primarily responds by inundating the reader with various Ronald Reagan pro-free trade quotes.

However, the thesis of a 1988 Cato analysis highlighted in Breitbart’s original report—which Levin offhandedly dismisses without explanation—seems to rebut nearly all of Levin’s op-ed. The analysis entitled “The Reagan Record on Trade: Rhetoric Vs. Reality” argues that “words are not deeds,” and an examination of Reagan’s “record leads to the question: With free traders like this, who needs protectionists?”

Yeah so there it is.  Yes, imposing tariffs is protectionist in nature, but that doesn’t make Reagan a protectionist.   Reagan was at the core a free-market capitalist, and yes he did impose SOME tariffs. But it’s disingenuous to call him a protectionist because he imposed a few tariffs, none of which were across the board.  This may be simplistic, but I do some welding from time to time.  Does that make me a welder?  I hate birthday parties and Christmas shopping.  Does that make me a Jehovah’s Witness?  That’s the kind of stupid reasoning that these people are making.  And the only reason they’re doing this is to Trumpify Reagan for their own gain.

“Although he has made some free-trade statements, he has nearly always contradicted them with other statements and then acted like a protectionist,” Some? Reagan spent years running around this country giving speeches defending conservatism, free-trade, free-market enterprise, and capitalism when he worked for GE.  Imposing two or three specific tariffs is nowhere near being an across the board tariff Trumpeteer.  Trump is RUNNING on tariffs.  That’s the comparison that Levin is making.   wrote Cato’s Sheldon Richman, as he proceeded to level the same criticism against President Reagan for raisings the cost of goods for U.S. consumers that Levin now levels against Trump: “The Reagan policy has harmed the United States in several ways… Consumers pay more for products when quotas make imports artificially scarce and when tariffs make them artificially expensive,” Richman said.

The “free traders’” frustrations over the disparity between Reagan’s rhetoric as a trade purist and his actual trade record was echoed by others at Cato during that time.

There’s that word purist again.  That is straw-man poop.  Reagan never called himself a trade purist.  It’s his opponents that called him a purist.  People always do that to disparage someone.  It’s got a double effect.  They derogatorily call you a purist because you have some principles, then call you a hypocrite when you don’t live up to their standards as a purist.  They hit you coming and they hit you going.  That’s exactly what they do today.  “Oh!  Ted Cruz is a purist!  We can’t put him in office!”  And the next day they say, “Ted Cruz is a hypocrite because of blah blah blah!”  Listen to Michael Savage and Hannity, and they use this purist bologna all the time.  They claim that #NeverTrumpers are purists.  No they have principles.  There’s no such thing as purist.  The closest to purist are probably Libertarians.  And Cato Institute, who Julia seems to love so much, is thought to be a libertarian institute. 

Julia says that “Levin’s logic is thus twisted into a pretzel.”  My goodness!  Julia is the one with the twisted pretzel logic.  She on one hand gives undo credence to the Cato libertarians in saying Reagan was a protectionist, but then completely ignores them in their viewpoint of protectionism in supporting the Trump tariffs.  She only believes half of what they’re saying; and of course it’s the half that helps her discredit Levin. 

“Despite President Ronald Reagan’s free-trade speeches, the portion of U.S. trade subject to U.S. nontariff barriers is estimated to have increased more than 50 percent since 1980,” wrote Cato’s Jim Powell in 1990.

Note:  “nontariff barriers”  You see how Julia does this?  Most people read this real fast and get the impression that Reagan upped import tariffs 50%.  But that’s not what it says.  It says nontariff.  Nontariff.

“Reagan’s instinctive or at least rhetorical commitment to economic freedom was once again overridden, apparently for political reasons,” wrote Cato’s Daniel Klein in 1984, referring to the motorcycle tariff. “President Reagan chose to sacrifice free trade and economic prosperity to short-term political goals. Consumers may well view the higher price of motorcycles as just another form of public financing of presidential campaigns.”

Once again, it’s clear we’re talking MOTORCYCLES, not Smoot-Hawley type tariffs.  As to the criticism at the time of Reagan, I think his free-market, limited government record speaks for itself.  Prices may have gone up, but so did wages, so did wealth, so did freedom, so did individualism, so did nationalism.  I think some of our prominent radio host got it backwards.  They think that this rise of nationalism will bring conservatism.  Reagan’s conservatism brought nationalism.  My question is what brings today’s nationalism?  What is fueling today’s rise of nationalism?  it’s not conservatism.  It’s Trumpism.  Trumpism is simply populism.  If Trumpsters are bashing Levin, and Cruz, and Sasse, and good conservatives that have fought the good fight, there’s something wrong. 

Reagan’s “administration has imposed more new restraints on trade than any administration since [President] Hoover,” said William Niskanen, a former Reagan aide who later went on to work at Cato.

Richman echoed this sentiment: “Ronald Reagan by his actions has become the most protectionist president since Herbert Hoover.”

Interestingly, this again is the same criticism Levin says about Trump. While Reagan’s “free trade” contemporaries accused him of subscribing to Hooverism, Levin writes that Trump’s trade position “is not Reaganism but Herbert Hooverism.”

Levin dismisses the 1988 report by writing simply: “Hahn cites a CATO Institute piece condemning the Reagan trade record. Well, here’s a link to a CATO Institute piece praising it. So what?”

I think Levin has got right perspective on Cato Institute.  So what?  Levin is the one saying that Cato’s claims are irrelevant.  Julia is the one that seems to be placing all the weight on what they have to say.  Niskanen seems to be the purist.  It you wiki him and read a little bit about him.  He seems to be a contentious, libertarian, free-trade purist like the kind that Julia imagines exist.  I suppose they do exist after all.  Well of course they’re going to criticize Reagan.  If you read his short bio on Niskanen, you’ll see he criticizes everybody. 

There’s a distinction that is not made in all these Cato comments.  And I’m not a professional on this, but Niskanen supposedly had a real problem with Reagan’s “restraints on trade”.  (That apostrophe is on the inside of the period on purpose)  Well, Reagan also used quotas and other things as a restraint on trade.  Quotas and tariffs are not the same.  So a simple explanation would be that instead of slapping a 45% tax on Toyota imports, there would be a limit as to how many would come in.  I would think that this would be somewhat a safer approach being that it gently affects economics natural equilibrium of supply and demand.   Price may come up somewhat, but it will be dictated by demand, not the heavy hand of government.  It may not come up at all.  Something to learn more about I guess.

But my point is that just because one dude is complaining about Reagan’s “restraints on trade”, that doesn’t make Reagan a tariff happy protectionist.  Tariffs are just one thing that Reagan used to affect trade, and he used it little compared to the other things he used.  Julia even provides a list of eight different things he did, but strangely only one of the list is a tariff.  Like I said, Niskanen was libertarian and so is Cato Institute.  No president will satisfy these type of libertarian ideologues on free-trade. 

Yet the Cato piece Levin highlights—which was written in 2004 after Reagan had passed away—reads like an effort to rehabilitate Reagan’s trade record in the eyes of Libertarians in service of appropriating his name and popularity to promote their agenda—much the same way liberals use Reagan’s amnesty to suggest that Reagan would have supported Barack Obama’s amnesty. Indeed, the article, entitled “Reagan Embraced Free Trade and Immigration,” tries to argue that Reagan would have held an entirely different view on immigration than Levin does. The article even seems to take swipes at professional Reagan conservatives like Levin, writing:

Reagan’s vision of an America open to commerce and peaceful, hardworking immigrants contradicts the anti-trade and anti-immigration views espoused by [those]… who claim to speak for the conservative causes Reagan largely defined… Like President George W. Bush today, Reagan had the good sense and compassion to see illegal immigrants not as criminals but as human beings striving to build better lives through honest work… Compare Reagan’s hopeful, expansive, and inclusive view of America with the dour, crabbed, and exclusive view that characterizes certain conservatives who would claim his mantle. Their view of the world could not be more alien to the spirit of Ronald Reagan.

I don’t know what this lady is saying.  Levin is not anti-trade.  He’s free-trade.  Trump and tariffs are anti-trade.  Levin is not anti-immigration.  He’s, like most Americans, anti-illegal immigration and anti-mass immigration.  So I really don’t know what Julia is getting at.

Groups like Cato, who at once praise Reagan’s free market philosophy whilst cheering mass migration, operate under the assumption that Reagan’s success had nothing to do with the success of the people he governed. In other words, that Reagan’s administration would have been equally successful had he been chosen president of Bangladesh.

The Cato article delineates another inconsistency in Levin’s position on trade. Specifically, Levin’s espoused economic theory dictating his trade policy seems at odds with his stated position on labor policy. Levin has previously claimed to oppose open borders, in part, because a large excess of low-skilled labor that is willing to work at a reduced salary unfairly undercuts the jobs and wages of American workers. Similarly, a large, uninhibited flow of low-priced imports manufactured by countries whose governments unfairly subsidize those goods, will undercut American manufacturing—and, subsequently, the jobs and wages of Americans who fill those jobs.

The only difference is that imports, unlike people, do not bring with them other elements such as healthcare needs, crime, different values and voting habits, welfare, education costs, and so forth. But the same economic principle applies.

Okay, on the onset Julia sounds smart and I’m sure she is.  But take a second and think about this.  Remember, the intention of this article is not to learn more about free-trade.  The intention is to smear Mark Levin.  Notice she is using the same tactics as left wing liberals to this.  She is equating illegal immigration with legal immigration in order to smear their opponents.  She’s also mixing in that purist/hypocrite poop.  This is Julia’s logic:  Since Levin is a ridiculous free-trade PURIST, then in order for him to be consistent, he must support open-borders, illegal immigration, and murderers.  Levin has never been for open-borders.  So somehow in Julia’s head, or what she’s trying to put in your head is that Levin’s position on tariffs signifies that he’s actually FOR Hillary and therefore un-American.  I’m sorry, but that is just plain… I don’t know how to explain that.

This is Rule #5 in Alinsky’s Rules for Radicals, “Ridicule is man’s most potent weapon.” This an attempt to ridicule Levin, to make his positions seem ridiculous.

This is Rule #13 “Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it. Cut off the support network and isolate the target from sympathy. Go after people and not institutions; people hurt faster than institutions.”  Julia spends one sentence defending and explaining tariffs and spends the rest of the article trying to disparage Levin’s credibility and trying to link him to an illegal-alien murderer or worst, Hillary!

Levin’s previously professed desire to curb visa dispensations seems directly at odds with his espoused economic theory that cheaper is better.

I can’t find where Levin’s political positions are “cheaper is better”.  I never heard him say that on radio nor have I read it or seen it on his TV show.

Lastly, in his op-ed, Levin takes a random swipe at famed Reagan advisor Pat Buchanan. The timing of Levin’s jab seems peculiar given that history—and this election in particular—has proven Buchanan prescient on three of the most fundamental issues concerning American voters: migration, trade, and foreign policy.  In the case of the former, this is an issue conservatives could lose forever if Hillary Clinton is put in a position of power from which she can permanently dissolve America’s borders.

All this talk about trade by Julia is truly an effort to Trumpify Reagan.  They are desperately trying to redefine Reagan in order for Trump to carry his mantle.  I think it’s funny that the only way they can Reaganify Trump is to bring Reagan down and criticize him and redefine him.  Reagan, conservative’s champion of free-market capitalism is now a tariff happy protectionist cowboy, just like Trump.  Please.