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Justice Department (DOJ) Inspector General Michael Horowitz and FBI Director Christopher Wray testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee. The hearing conducted by Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, is entitled: “Examining the Inspector General’s First Report on Justice Department and FBI Actions in Advance of the 2016 Presidential Election”

While Mr. Horowitz stopped short in his criticisms, the review of the handling of the Clinton email case released last week was very damning to the FBI and DOJ.

For instance, it revealed an FBI official conducting the email investigation and Russia probe vowed to prevent Donald Trump from becoming President of the United States.

Worse still, the messages, which were between Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, two anti-Trump FBI officials who were also having an affair, had previously been excluded from disclosures to members of Congress.

Read Report: A Review of Various Actions by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Department of Justice in Advance of the 2016 Election

DOJ Inspector General Michael Horowitz and FBI

The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS). (Photo: AdobeStock/bbourdages)

The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS). (Photo: AdobeStock/bbourdages)

The U.S. Supreme Court (SCOTUS) ruled against Democrats in a redistricting case from Wisconsin, though they sidestepped the larger issue of gerrymandering. The justices ruled in the majority opinion that the 12 Democrats in Wisconsin who challenged legislative districts drawn by the Republican state legislature didn’t have standing to bring the case.

Democrats have had some success in getting courts to offset the rightward shifts in Middle America. Republicans hold a 64 to 35 majority in the Wisconsin Assembly and an 18 to 15 majority in the Senate. While the backlash to Democrats in The Badger State began the very first year under Barack Obama, it culminated with the shocking result in 2016.

President Donald Trump broke the Blue Wall first in Wisconsin, a state that hasn’t went for a Republican since 1984.

The Court also did not side with Republicans in Maryland, who challenged a single congressional district. That opinion can be read, here.

The sidestepping of the issue looms as the Court decides whether to take up a new case from North Carolina. The majority opinion in the Wisconsin case, which was written by Chief Justice John Roberts, cast serious doubt on the chances of Court interference.

Chief Justice Roberts wrote that the Court’s role “is to vindicate the individual rights of the people appearing before it,” not more broad partisan preferences.

The U.S. Supreme Court (SCOTUS) ruled against

Roofers work on new homes at a residential construction site in the west side of the Las Vegas Valley in Las Vegas, Nevada April 5, 2013. (Photo: Reuters)

Roofers work on new homes at a residential construction site in the west side of the Las Vegas Valley in Las Vegas, Nevada April 5, 2013. (Photo: Reuters)

The NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI) showed builder confidence in the market for newly built single-family homes fell two points to 68 in June. The decline was due in large part to sharply elevated lumber prices, although sentiment remains on solid footing.

“Builders are optimistic about housing market conditions as consumer demand continues to grow,” said NAHB Chairman Randy Noel. “However, builders are increasingly concerned that tariffs placed on Canadian lumber and other imported products are hurting housing affordability. Record-high lumber prices have added nearly $9,000 to the price of a new single-family home since January 2017.”

All three HMI indexes ticked down 1 point in June. The index measuring current sales conditions declined to 75, while the component gauging expectations in the next 6 months fell to 76. The metric gauging buyer traffic ticked down to 50.

“Improved economic growth, continued job creation and solid housing demand should spur additional single-family construction in the months ahead,” said NAHB Chief Economist Robert Dietz. “However, builders do need access to lumber and other construction materials at reasonable costs in order to provide homes at competitive price points, particularly for the entry-level market where inventory is most needed.”

Looking at the 3-month moving averages for regional HMI scores, the Northeast gained 2 points to 57, while the West and Midwest were unchanged at 76 and 65, respectively. The South ticked down 1 point to 71.

About the NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI)

Derived from a monthly survey that NAHB has been conducting for 30 years, the HMI gauges builder perceptions of current single-family home sales and sales expectations for the next six months as “good,” “fair” or “poor.” The survey also asks builders to rate traffic of prospective buyers as “high to very high,” “average” or “low to very low.” Scores for each component are then used to calculate a seasonally adjusted index where any number over 50 indicates that more builders view conditions as good than poor.

The NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI)

In this Feb. 17, 2017, photo, a protester holds a sign that reads "ICE Hands Off DACA Families Free Daniel," during a demonstration in front of the federal courthouse in Seattle. (Photo: AP)

In this Feb. 17, 2017, photo, a protester holds a sign that reads “ICE Hands Off DACA Families Free Daniel,” during a demonstration in front of the federal courthouse in Seattle. (Photo: AP)

Fox News obtained records showing 59,786 recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program have been arrested while in the U.S. That’s roughly 7.8% of all who have been approved to remain in the U.S. under the program since it was created in 2012.

Department of Homeland Security (DHS) also revealed an astonishing 53,792 DACA recipients were arrested before their most recent requests for a “grant of deferred action” were approved, and another 7,814 DACA recipients were arrested after their request was approved.

Ten of them, or 0.02%, are accused of murder.

Of the 53,792, more than 4,500 had been arrested on allegations of assault or battery; 830 arrests were related to sex crimes — including rape, sexual abuse or indecent exposure; and 95 arrests were made on warrants for kidnapping, human trafficking or false imprisonment.

Roughly 38.9% of the 53,792 had “driving-related” offenses — excluding driving under the influence — while 22.1% were accused of “immigration-related” crimes. Another 12.3% were accused of theft or larceny and more than 4,600 have been accused of “drug-related” crimes, again excluding driving under the influence.

Worth noting, the statistics from DHS do not indicate how many DACA recipients arrested were convicted of crimes, whether charges were reduced or dropped, or how many arrested were deported as the result of a conviction.

An astonishing 53,792 DACA recipients were arrested before

Ben Cohen, right, and Jerry Greenfield, left, at a rally for socialist Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders in Exeter, N.H., February 2016. (Photo: Reuters)

Ben Cohen, right, and Jerry Greenfield, left, at a rally for socialist Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders in Exeter, N.H., February 2016. (Photo: Reuters)

I’m a big believer that some images do a great job of capturing an issue.

Speaking of socialism, let’s look at some more images that reveal the essence of that bankrupt ideology.

Here’s a cartoon from Libertarian Reddit that does a great job of showing the real difference between capitalism and socialism.

 

Perfectly stated. Reminds me of the insights offered by Thatcher and Churchill.

Sadly, if you provide the statists with real-world evidence, many of them still prefer the world in top-right frame rather than the bottom-right frame.

Heck, the IMF actually publishes studies supporting equal levels of poverty.

As you might suspect, there are plenty of socialists who enjoy the benefits of capitalism while urging statism for everyone else. Think, for instance, about all the leftists who use tax havens.

Or this hipster millennial.

 

Maybe he could have a ménage à trois with Pajama Boy and Julia? Though only if everyone is guaranteed equal levels of disappointment.

Next is a helpful reminder from Bernie Sanders about the very thin line between socialism and communism.

 

Though I’m not sure there’s a meaningful difference.

Last but not least, this gem from Libertarian Reddit appealed to my juvenile sense of humor.

 

Basically the same message you find in the last item in this collection of socialism humor.

Some images do a great job of

Sale, consumerism and people concept - happy family with child and shopping cart buying food at grocery store or supermarket. (Photo: PPD/AdobeStock/Syda Productions)

Sale, consumerism and people concept – happy family with child and shopping cart buying food at grocery store or supermarket. (Photo: PPD/AdobeStock/Syda Productions)

Fewer Americans are celebrating Father’s Day this year and more children will live with the very real consequences of fatherlessness, which is on the rise. Yet, rarely does Corporate Big Media cover the growing problems with American men.

Media and political leaders focus almost exclusively on the grievances and disadvantages of women and girls. The insinuation of course is that American men are doing just fine. Statistically speaking, we are not fine, and few will publicly acknowledge the decline of American men is hurting the whole of society.

According to a recent study by the U.S. Census Bureau, the percentage of children living in single-parent households rose from just 12% in 1960 to 31% in 2016. During that same period, the percentage of children living with only their mother nearly tripled.

Currently, the Census estimates 24.7 million children, or 33%, live in a household without their biological father. There are 2 million single-father households in America juxtaposed to 10 million single-mother households.

That shameful trend is mirrored by public opinion.

A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey finds that 63% of adults think being a father is the most important role for a man to fill in today’s world. That’s down from 70% in 2017 and below the previous low of 68% in 2014.

Even worse, 18% now say fatherhood is not a man’s most important role, and another 19% are undecided.

The Rasmussen Reports survey compares to the Fathering in America Poll in 1999, which found 72.2% of the U.S. population saw fatherlessness as the most significant family or social problem facing America.

The very real and devastating impact of fatherlessness is associated with nearly every societal challenge facing our children and can be seen and felt in just about every area of civil society. It impacts our neighborhoods, our schools, our criminal justice system, our healthcare industry and so much more.

The National Fatherhood Initiative, which aggregates study data on fatherlessness, warns children without a father in the household are 279% more likely to carry guns and deal drugs. The National Center for Fathering estimates they are 20 times more likely to be incarcerated, 9 times more likely to drop out of school and 11 times more likely to exhibit violent behavior.

According to Children and Family Research, children who grow up in households with active fathers are 39% more likely to earn mostly A’s in school. They are 45% less likely to repeat a grade, 60% less likely to be suspended or expelled from school, are 2 times more likely to go to college, 75% less likely to have a teen birth and 80% less likely to spend time in jail.

If fatherlessness was classified as a mental disorder, it would be an epidemic. President Donald Trump could and probably would declare it a national emergency.

What’s the cure? I don’t have all the answers, but I tend to take a very simple approach to this national sickness.

Man the f— up, America!

The birth of my son was literally the catalyst for my brain snapping out of a deep prescription drug addiction. For me, the choice was very hard but the answer was simple. I could continue to be sick, selfish and defeated by fear, or recover and aspire to become everything my son deserved in a father.

While I have a lot of sympathy and apathy for those struggling with addiction — a growing cause of fatherlessness — I have little sympathy for dead-beat dads, whatever their reason, for a good reason.

But then again, I was raised by my father. I was lucky enough to have him in my life, to learn from and to emulate. Maybe, just maybe there’s something to all those statistics, after all.

If fatherlessness was classified as a mental

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) headquarters in Washington, D.C. (Photo: Reuters)

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) headquarters in Washington, D.C. (Photo: Reuters)

It’s a judgement call, of course, but I think the IRS’s suppression of the Tea Party was the worst of all the Obama-era scandals.

Some people say the green-energy scams like Solyndra should be at the top of the list, but steering taxpayer money to campaign donors was just routine corruption. And the fast-and-furious scandal at the BATF was reprehensible, but did not have systemic impact on society.

Lois Lerner and the other hacks at the IRS, however, did something profoundly worse. They actively used the coercive power of government to suppress political speech.

The bad news is that Lois Lerner didn’t get punished. She’s now enjoying a fat taxpayer-financed pension. And other IRS officials successfully stonewalled with no adverse consequences.

Heck, Republicans actually rewarded the IRS with a bigger budget. And the Trump Administration so far has been AWOL on curtailing IRS abuses.

But that may be about to change. One of the President’s appointees has expressed support for protecting donors to nonprofit organizations.

The Wall Street Journal recently opined on this topic.

….a Congressional hearing this week offered potentially good news to nonprofits whose donors are under political threat. …Montana Republican Steve Daines asked Acting IRS Commissioner David Kautter whether the agency is considering the necessity of IRS 990 Schedule B. These are the forms that nonprofits must supply to the IRS listing donors who contribute more than $5,000. Schedule Bs are supposed to remain confidential, but AGs in New York and California have sought to require nonprofits to file them at the state level. Many Democrats see the form as a gift-wrapped list of donors to target, and a way to chill donations to conservative nonprofits. …Mr. Kautter acknowledged that he was “actively involved” along with Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin at offering more donor protection. …Nonprofits would still be required to keep their donor details, and if the IRS or other authorities had valid reason to suspect fraud they could demand to see the records. But requiring nonprofits to provide names each year to partisan AGs or tax bureaucrats is an invitation to repeat the scandal of the Obama years when Lois Lerner and the IRS targeted conservative nonprofits.

Brian Garst of the Center for Freedom and Prosperity also weighed in on the issue, pointing out that government has a sorry track record of persecuting political dissent.

…robust protections for speech were listed first among the Bill of Rights and have long been a cornerstone of our republic. …Like the secret ballot, respecting donor privacy and thus anonymous speech and association is essential to prevent majoritarian abuse and intimidation that subverts democracy. This was a lesson learned in the civil rights era after the shameful attacks on the NAACP and its supporters. …Lois Lerner was found to have illegally shared confidential Form 990 taxpayer information with the Federal Election Commission.

The solution is to not let the government get the information in the first place, especially since it isn’t needed to enforce any tax laws.

Unfortunately, invasive donor reporting requirements instituted by the Internal Revenue Service threaten to chill this critical democratic tool. …Schedule B requires 501(c) organizations to include certain contributors’ names and addresses with their annual Form 990 reports. Yet the IRS has acknowledged that this information has no enforcement value. Instead, its collection creates opportunities for abuse and chills speech and civic participation. …there’s good reason to question the ability of the government to protect sensitive taxpayer information given the history of inadvertent disclosures and information leaks at the IRS. …For minority viewpoints, public exposure can lead to intimidation… Several years ago, the IRS was said to be considering dropping the unnecessary Schedule B reporting requirement, which it was never required by statute to collect in the first place. Unfortunately, the agency did not follow through under President Barack Obama… The Trump administration should do what the Obama administration would not and ensure the right of Americans to participate in the political process without fear that they will be made vulnerable to targeting based on their political views.

Well said.

Though I think both Brian and the WSJ should have gone even farther and called for the abolition of the charitable deduction in the tax code as part of a shift to a simple and fair flat tax.

Then there would be zero rationale for the government to know about our donations. And since there’s plenty of evidence that nonprofits would prosper without a special preference in the tax code, this would be a win-win reform.

P.S. Privacy is an under-appreciated benefit of fundamental tax reform. Not only would donors and nonprofits no longer have to share information with the IRS under a flat tax, we also wouldn’t need to tell the government anything about our homes since the mortgage interest deduction would vanish. And since the death tax and capital gains tax are abolished, the government would have no need to know about our assets. And since all capital income is taxed at the business level, we wouldn’t have to tell the government about any stocks, bonds, or bank accounts we own.

Privacy is an under-appreciated benefit of fundamental tax

Key with business words and rig equipment graphic icons relative to the oil and gas industry. (Photo: PPD/AdobeStock/JEGAS RA)

Key with business words and rig equipment graphic icons relative to the oil and gas industry. (Photo: PPD/AdobeStock/JEGAS RA)

The Baker Hughes North America Rig Count rose by 24 rigs for the week ending June 15, fueled by a reversal from what was a sagging trend in Canada. The U.S. rig count fell overall by 3, but was easily offset by the Canadian rig count, which rose by 27.

Rigs classified as drilling for oil in Canada increased by 18 to 87 and those classified as gas added 9 to 52. In the U.S., rigs classified as drilling for oil gained 1 to 863, while those classified as gas declined by 4 from 198 to 194.

The Gulf of Mexico, which is separate from the North America Rig Count, held steady at 19.

The Baker Hughes North America Rig Count

Paul Manafort, senior advisor to Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump, exits following a meeting of Donald Trump's national finance team at the Four Seasons Hotel in New York City, U.S., June 9, 2016.

Paul Manafort, senior advisor to Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump, exits following a meeting of Donald Trump’s national finance team at the Four Seasons Hotel in New York City, U.S., June 9, 2016.

BREAKING: A federal judge has revoked Paul Manafort’s bail ahead of his pending trial, citing obstruction charges leveled by the special counsel. U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson made the decision to revoke bail and jail the former Trump campaign manager after prosecutors accused him and a longtime associate of witnesses tampering.

Mr. Manafort’s attorney’s argue that he didn’t do anything wrong and accused federal prosecutors of conjuring a “sinister plot” out of “innocuous” contacts with witnesses.

However, President Trump has repeatedly called the special counsel investigation a “witch hunt,” and District Judge T.S. Ellis appeared to agree with that assessment. The no-nonsense judge scolded the prosecution in the case, stating Special Counsel Robert Mueller just wants to oust President Trump from office.

“You don’t really care about Mr. Manafort’s bank fraud,” Judge Ellis told Michael Dreeben, adding the special counsel wants to squeeze Mr. Manafort to provide material that would lead to President Trump’s “prosecution or impeachment.”

“That’s what you’re really interested in.”

Mr. Manafort and his longtime aide Rick Gates were indicted by the special counsel last October. Mr. Gates is cooperating with investigators but the indictment surrounded lobbying efforts long before his brief time on the Trump campaign.

He was hired for being one of only two people alive with experience in a convention floor fight for delegates, which at the time appeared likely.

Mr. Manafort lobbied the Clinton Department and Capitol Hill Democrats through The Podesta Group on behalf of the then-pro Russian government in Ukraine. Neither he nor The Podesta Group, which was founded by former Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta and his brother, were registered under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA).

Mr. Mueller’s team did interview several witnesses about the role The Podesta Group played in advancing Russian interests at the State Department under Hillary Clinton. However, despite uncovering potential wrongdoings, Mr. Mueller and his team did not charge anyone from the formerly most powerful liberal D.C. lobbying group.

BREAKING: A federal judge has revoked Paul

U.S. President Donald Trump (2nd L) shakes hands, after signing the guest book, with Israeli President Reuven Rivlin (2nd R) with his wife Nechama Reuven (R) and first lady Melania Trump (L), in Jerusalem May 22, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

U.S. President Donald Trump (2nd L) shakes hands, after signing the guest book, with Israeli President Reuven Rivlin (2nd R) with his wife Nechama Reuven (R) and first lady Melania Trump (L), in Jerusalem May 22, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

Anyone who has visited the Temple Mount in the center of the old city of Jerusalem in the last decade must acknowledge the obvious: Jerusalem is the indisputable capital of Israel.

I guess there are many intellectually dishonest people out there, but the resistance to the obvious is based on ideology, not historical truths.

I say the conclusion is obvious because Israel, after capturing the Temple Mount during the 1967 war, began excavating along the Western Wall of the Second Temple, which was built on the site of the first, destroyed by the Babylonians. The Jewish people have called Israel, or the land of Canaan, their home for three thousand years.

The archaeological facts overwhelmingly support Jewish claims on the area, long before anyone else arrived.

All you have to do is go down into the tunnels along the western retaining wall of the Second Temple, and see the massive stones that form the bedrock of the wall, stones that were placed there by King Herod two millennia ago, to understand the Jewish heritage of Jerusalem. We’re talking about a history that predates by almost a thousand years the rise of Islam. And these walls were from the Second Temple, built on the top of the original, for which there is archaeological evidence as well.

Today you can see the remains of the Second Temple’s exterior plaza and walls, piled along the side of the original structure, thrown there by the Roman soldiers who destroyed the temple and buried it to erase any trace of the Jewish claim on the area.

Yet, in the face of all of this history and the kind of proof you can touch, Israel has remained an impartial steward of the holy sites. The Dome of the Rock, the al-Aqsa Mosque and the surrounding Christian sites, are free to the faithful of the world’s other major religions to visit and worship as they wish.

In fact, those in the West who decry Israel for its fierce defense of its borders do not understand the grace with which Israel has handled the status of the Temple Mount, the most holy site in Judaism.

The “deniers” most likely also do not know that the Roman Empire, after crushing the Jewish rebellion after the death of Christ, erased all traces of Jewish history in the area, and created a revised “history” of the newly-minted Palestine — hence the creation of the term “Palestinians.” These Palestinian people were simply a collection of Arabs who immigrated to the area once the Jews started returning to Zion centuries later, providing jobs for the Arab laborers.

It is worth noting that the Jordanians, who previously controlled the Temple Mount, did not allow free access to their Jewish neighbors. They did not show the same kind of maturity and tolerance that the Israelis have shown since 1967, to all religions.

The Palestinians and other Islamic leaders still cling to their narrative that the Jewish people have no historic claim to the Temple Mount. This is worse than Baghdad Bob, who denied the advances of American troops who were in the process of capturing the Iraqi capital during the Iraq War. The Palestinians have rejected peace, over and over again, in order to keep alight their hatred of anything to do with Israel and to deny its right to exist.

As Golda Meir famously said, “We will have peace when the Arabs love their children more than they hate us.”

One thing is for sure, in the near future, Palestinians will still try to kill Jews, and Israel will still keep the Temple Mountopen for all who want to worship in Jerusalem.

Yes, Jerusalem is the capital of Israel, the everlasting home of the Jewish people, who now once again Israelis have control of their birthright. I’m glad we finally have a president who has the guts to say so, and do something about it.

This article first appeared on The Washington Times via Threat Assessment with L. Todd Wood.

Copyright © 2018 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

President Donald Trump's decision to move the

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