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Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, center, leaves the courthouse after an arraignment for his court-martial, in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, on December 22, 2015. (Photo: Reuters)

Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, center, leaves the courthouse after an arraignment for his court-martial, in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, on December 22, 2015. (Photo: Reuters)

Disgraced Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl pleaded guilty to desertion and misbehavior before the enemy on Monday, charges that carry life in prison. As People’s Pundit Daily (PPD) reported last week, Bergdahl decided to plea rather than stand trial for deserting his post while serving in Afghanistan.

“I left my observation post on my own,” Bergdahl told a judge. “I understand leaving was against the law.”

Bergdahl, 31, who was serving with an Alaska-based infantry regiment, deserted his post in Afghanistan back in 2009. At the time, he was 23 years-old and was held captive by the Taliban for roughly 5 years. Bergdahl said he had been caged in the darkness, beaten and chained to a bed.

However, in December 2009, the Taliban released a second video showing him in good health as he delivered a lengthy statement criticizing the U.S. military. Eventually, the Obama Administration agreed to a controversial trade in exchange for 5 highly-dangerous Guantanamo detainees dubbed the “Taliban Five.”

The disgraced solider initially claimed he was lagging behind a patrol when he was captured. He also said he left his post to alert people about problems he perceived within his unit. Investigators said Mr. Bergdahl suffered from schizotypal personality disorder at the time he left his post, and had become deeply anti-American.

In December, he requested a pardon from then-President Barack Obama before he left office, though it was denied. Mr. Obama attempted to use a photo-op with his father and mother in the Rose Garden to arrest sinking approval ratings. The public quickly turned against the exchange when more details began to emerge.

Then-Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump said Mr. Bergdahl was a “no-good traitor” who should be executed for his crimes and the tragic result of those crimes. His fellow soldiers also wanted him held responsible for casualties incurred as a result of those who went searching for him.

That will factor into the sentencing that begins October 23, as will his own self-reported mental injuries. However, because the offense was committed during a time of war, the penalties are typically more severe.

According to the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ)–specifically, 899. Article 99. Misbehavior Before the Enemy–those found guilty “shall be punished by death or such punishment as a court- martial may direct.”

Under 885. Article 85. Desertion (c),

Any person found guilty of desertion or attempt to desert shall be punished, if the offense is committed in time of war, by death or such other punishment as a court-martial may direct, but if the desertion or attempt to desert occurs at any other time, by such punishment, other than death, as a court-martial may direct.

Meanwhile, of the “Taliban Five” — Mohammad Fazl, the former Taliban army chief of staff; Khairullah Khairkhwa, a Taliban intelligence official; Abdul Haq Wasiq, a former Taliban government official; and Norullah Noori and Mohammad Nabi Omari — at least three have attempted to reconnect with their old Islamic terrorist brothers.

The nonpartisan Government Accountability Office (GA) said in August 2014 that the Obama Administration failed to notify the relevant congressional committees at least 30 days in advance of the exchange, which was a clear violation of the law. The executive branch is prohibited under law from releasing Guantanamo Bay detainees without first giving the aforementioned notice and receiving congressional approval.

Disgraced Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl pleaded guilty

From L-R: Former U.S. President Bill Clinton, Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and Vice Chair of the Clinton Foundation Chelsea Clinton, at the 2014 Meeting of Clinton Global Initiative University at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona March 22, 2014. Film producer Harvey Weinstein attends the 2016 amfAR New York Gala at Cipriani Wall Street in Manhattan, New York February 10, 2016. (Photos: Reuters)

From L-R: Former U.S. President Bill Clinton, Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and Vice Chair of the Clinton Foundation Chelsea Clinton, at the 2014 Meeting of Clinton Global Initiative University at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona March 22, 2014. Film producer Harvey Weinstein attends the 2016 amfAR New York Gala at Cipriani Wall Street in Manhattan, New York February 10, 2016. (Photos: Reuters)

The Clinton Foundation will not return any of the large donations from film producer and alleged rapist Harvey Weinstein, saying the money has been spent. A spokesperson for the Clinton Foundation told DailyMail.com that the group spent the money on initiatives run by Chelsea Clinton and Bill Clinton.

That’s particularly noteworthy given the well-documented history of lavish spending by the two. As People’s Pundit Daily (PPD) previously reported, an internal investigation revealed Chelsea Clinton used “foundation resources for her wedding and life for a decade,” including campaigning.

In an email released by the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks, longtime Clinton (Bill) aide Doug Band lamented over Chelsea’s stewardship to Clinton campaign chair John Podesta. On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 4:43 PM, Mr. Band wrote:

I just received a call from a close friend of wjcs [William Jefferson Clinton] who said that cvc [Chelsea] told one of the bush 43 kids that she is conducting an internal investigation of money within the foundation from cgi to the foundation

The bush kid then told someone else who then told an operative within the republican party

I have heard more and more chatter of cvc and bari talking about lots of what is going on internally to people

Not smart

Mr. Podesta, who was a frequent ear for a frustrated Band over Chelsea, wrote back, “You are perfecting your skills for understatement.”

Band responded:

The investigation into her getting paid for campaigning, using foundation resources for her wedding and life for a decade, taxes on money from her parents….. I hope that you will speak to her and end this Once we go down this road….[sic]

Chelsea literally ran away from reporters on Saturday when approached about the money the foundation received from Mr. Weinstein, who is being accused of sexual misconduct by more than 30 women. In a statement, the group insisted the money–which they claimed to be somewhere between $100,000 and $250,000–was used for philanthropic causes.

They also said the last donation was received in 2014.

However, Mr. Weinstein was a major bundler for Mrs. Clinton, hosting numerous fundraising events with Hollywood donors. He personally contributed over $35,000 to her 2016 presidential campaign.

As numerous outlets have reported–which was backed up by admissions by actors and actresses–Mr. Weinstein’s behavior was well-known for decades. Yet the former secretary of state and Democratic nominee released a statement only after several days of requests acting as if it was the first time she had learned about it.

“I was shocked and appalled by the revelations about Harvey Weinstein,” Mrs. Clinton said in a statement. “The behavior described by women coming forward cannot be tolerated.”

She made no mention of the numerous sexual assaults her own husband had been accused of spanning decades.

The Obamas released a similiar statement, though Malia Obama, 19, landed an internship at the Weinstein Company right after her dad left office earlier this year.

The Clinton Foundation will not return any

A factory worker at a New York manufacturing plant. (Photo: Reuters)

A factory worker at a New York manufacturing plant. (Photo: Reuters)

The Empire State Manufacturing Survey, a regional gauge of factory activity by the New York Federal Reserve, surged to the highest level in more than 3 years in October.

The general business conditions index climbed 5.8 points to 30.2 in October, easily beating the forecast.

That’s the highest the general business conditions index has been since September 2014 and was last exceeded back in October 2009.

Shipments, at 27.5, are at their highest level since October 2009. New orders, at 18.0, were down 7 points but still at unusual strength.

The employment index rose 5 points to 15.6, indicating the strongest rate of hiring since March 2015. The average workweek index registered at zero, suggesting that the average workweek held steady.

The prices paid index fell 9 points to 27.3 and the prices received index moved down 7 points to 7.0.

The future business conditions index gained another 6 points to 44.8 and the index for future new orders also came in at 44.8. The results indicate that firms are still very optimistic about the next 6 months, though employment was expected to increase modestly from this point. The capital expenditures index edged down 3 points to 21.9 and the technology spending index was basically unchanged at 16.4.

The Empire State Manufacturing Survey, a regional

Florida State Senator Jack Latvala, R-District 16, announced he is running for governor. (Photo: Courtesy of the Campaign)

Florida State Senator Jack Latvala, R-District 16, announced he is running for governor. (Photo: Courtesy of the Campaign)

The Florida State Fraternal Order of Police on Saturday endorsed state Senator Jack Latvala for governor, adding to a growing list of first responders who are throwing their weight behind the Clearwater Republican.

The endorsement, which carries influence with more than 22,000 members in 104 lodges, came after the the Florida State Lodge Board meeting in Jacksonville.

“There have been decades of support shown to the Fraternal Order of Police along with other first responders,” Florida State Lodge FOP President Robert Jenkins. “It is this unwavering dedication to the men and women wearing the badge that prompts our decision to endorse Jack Latvala for Florida Governor.”

As People’s Pundit Daily previously reported, Mr. Latvala has landed numerous firefighter endorsements early in the Florida gubernatorial election. Firefighters in St. Petersburg, Coral Gables and Indian River County recently joined Miami, Orlando, West Palm Beach, Boca Raton and Boynton Beach in endorsing the state legislator.

“He always has our back, so we back Jack!” added Mr. Jenkins, who called the lawmaker “a tireless advocate” for men and women in law enforcement.

Mr. Latvala–who represents a district that includes parts of Pasco, Polk and Hillsborough counties –is one of 10 declared Republicans seeking the nomination in the race to replace Governor Rick Scott. He declared his gubernatorial on August 11, 2017.

“There is no doubt that all the things we hold most dear start with living in safe communities because without that it is nearly impossible to do the rest,” said Mr. Latvala. “Police officers are so critical to all of us, it is a true honor to be endorsed by this exceptional group of law enforcement professionals.”

He’s worked to protect the Florida Retirement System (FRS) and pay raises for first responders, as well as introduced legislation to create the Florida Law Enforcement Officer (LEO) Alert system, which honors fallen law enforcement officers with a specialty license plate.

There are also 5 declared Democratic candidates hoping to earn the chance to replace Gov. Scott, who cannot seek a third term due to term limits. He has governed effectively under a Republican trifecta. A recent analysis on People’s Pundit Daily (PPD) revealed Gov. Scott has far surpassed his economic promises made before he was first elected in 2010.

While Florida is characterized as a Battleground on the PPD Election Projection Model, Gov. Scott’s economic success could give the eventual GOP nominee a slight edge. PPD’s Battleground State Likely Voter Profiles shows the Sunshine State marginally favoring the Republican Party.

Mr. Latvala also represented District 16–including parts of Pasco County and Pinellas County–when he previously served in the Florida State Senate from 1994 to 2002. He chaired the Government Oversight, Banking and Insurance and Natural Resources committees.

His roots in District 16 and District 20 could prove key in a general election. They are both Pivot Districts, which means they host at least parts of one or more counties that have voted for Republican and Democratic candidates on the gubernatorial and/or presidential levels.

The Florida State Fraternal Order of Police

Boy Scouts of America salute during a "camporee" in Sea Girt, N.J., on Saturday morning, May 21, 2011. On Wednesday, October 11, 2017 Boy Scouts of America announced it would admit girls throughout its ranks, a move that will transform what has been a mostly cordial relationship between the two iconic youth groups since the Girl Scouts of the USA was founded in 1912, two years after the Boy Scouts. (Photo: AP)

Boy Scouts of America salute during a “camporee” in Sea Girt, N.J., on Saturday morning, May 21, 2011. On Wednesday, October 11, 2017 Boy Scouts of America announced it would admit girls throughout its ranks, a move that will transform what has been a mostly cordial relationship between the two iconic youth groups since the Girl Scouts of the USA was founded in 1912, two years after the Boy Scouts. (Photo: AP)

This may sound cheesy to some, but as a very young teenager I remember the end of Boy Scout summer camp being a very big deal. The event was the “ordeal” for the Order of the Arrow, a rite-of-passage of sorts in the marshlands off Savannah, Georgia.

Towards the end of the camp week, we sat around the campfire deep into the night and discussed what it meant to be a man. The drums beat and the massive flames licked the dark sky, probably twenty boys in all and our adult leaders.

Then, someone unexpectedly came from behind and placed a blindfold around my eyes, stood me up, and led me quietly out into the forest. After walking for some time, being led from behind, I was placed on the ground. I didn’t know where I was but knew they would come and get me in the morning.

Everything was done in complete silence, of course. I was young, alone, and scared.

However, as I took off the blindfold and looked up through a hole in the trees and saw the bright stars looking down on me, I realize  I could do this.

I didn’t sleep much that night as the noises of the forest were all around me. But as dawn broke over the horizon I had changed in no small way. I was closer to being a man.

Boy Scouts meant something to me.

It was camaraderie with other boys and men. It was a time you could do things without girls around.

The decision by the Boy Scouts of America to admit girls is vile. It represents nothing less than the destruction of an organization that has helped millions of boys throughout the last century. Lord Baden-Powell must be turning over in his grave. Leftists will stop at nothing to destroy the culture of America.

The BSA submitting to the feminist, culturally Marxist agenda is sickening. How are you doing to do the same type of ceremony with girls among the boys? The possibility for sexual exploitation is too great to do this type of thing. The leaders of the BSA must care only about money and their jobs, not the basic values and tenets of helping boys become men and future leaders of our country.

If the Girl Scouts don’t provide what girls need, then fix the Girl Scouts, don’t destroy the Boy Scouts to appease leftist lawyers and neo-Bolsheviks.

I am extremely saddened by this development as future boys will not get the same type of experience I had the good fortune to enjoy. This is a dark day for our country, one that will have consequences down the road.

Scouting taught me many things that still are with me today. I hope this decision can be stopped in its tracks.

If you feel as I do, please make your rage known to the Boy Scouts of America. Their phone number is 972-580-2000.

This article first appeared on The Washington Times.

The decision by the Boy Scouts of

Pedestrians walk past the International Monetary Fund (IMF) headquarters’ complex in Washington Sunday, May 2, 2010. (Photo: AP)

Pedestrians walk past the International Monetary Fund (IMF) headquarters’ complex in Washington Sunday, May 2, 2010. (Photo: AP)

I’m not a fan of the International Monetary Fund. Like many other international bureaucracies, it pushes a statist agenda.

The IMF’s support for bad policy gets me so agitated that I’ve sometimes referred to it as the “dumpster fire” or “Dr. Kevorkian” of the global economy.

But, in a perverse way, I admire the IMF’s determination to advance its ideological mission. The bureaucrats will push for tax hikes using any possible rationale.

Even if it means promoting really strange theories like the one I just read in the bureaucracy’s most recent Fiscal Monitor.

Welfare-based measures can help policymakers when they face decisions that entail important trade-offs between equity and efficiency. …One way to quantify social welfare in monetary units is to use the concept of equally distributed equivalent income.

And what exactly is “equally distributed equivalent income”?

It’s a theory that says big reductions in national prosperity are good if the net result is that people are more equal. I’m not joking. Here’s more about the theory.

…a welfare-based measure of inequality…with 1 being complete inequality and 0 being complete equality. A value of, say, 0.3 means that if incomes were equally distributed, then society would need only 70 percent (1 − 0.3) of the present national income to achieve the same level of welfare it currently enjoys (in which incomes are not equally distributed). The level of income per person that if equally distributed would enable the society to reach the same level of welfare as the existing distribution is termed equally distributed equivalent income (EDEI).

Set aside the jargon and focus on the radical implications. The IMF is basically stating that “the same level of welfare” can be achieved with “only 70 percent of the present national income” if government impose enough coercive redistribution.

In other words, Margaret Thatcher wasn’t exaggerating when she mocked the left for being willing to sacrifice national well-being and hurt the poor so long as those with higher incomes were subjected to even greater levels of harm.

Not surprisingly, the IMF uses its bizarre theory to justify more class-warfare taxation.

Figure 1.16 shows how the optimal top marginal income tax rate would change as the social welfare weight on high-income individuals increases. Assuming a welfare weight of zero for the very rich, the optimal marginal income tax rate can be calculated as 44 percent, based on an average income tax elasticity of 0.4… Therefore, there would appear to be scope for increasing the progressivity of income taxation…for countries wishing to enhance income redistribution.

But not just higher statutory tax rates.

The bureaucrats also want more double taxation of income that is saved and invested. And wealth taxation as well.

Taxes on capital income play an equally important role in shaping the progressivity of a tax system. …An alternative, or complement, to capital income taxation for economies seeking more progressive taxation is to tax wealth.

The article even introduces a new measure called “progressive tax capacity,” which politicians doubtlessly will interpret as a floor rather than a ceiling.

Reminds me of the World Bank’s “report card” which gave better grades to nations with “high effort” tax systems.

Though I guess I should look at the bright side. It’s good news that the IMF estimates that the “optimal” tax rate is 44 percent rather than 100 percent (as the Congressional Budget Office implies). And I suppose I also should be happy that “progressive tax capacity” doesn’t justify a 100 percent tax rate.

I’m being sarcastic, of course. That being said, there is a bit of genuinely good analysis in the publication. The bureaucrats actually acknowledge that growth is the way of helping the poor, which is a point I’ve been trying to stress for several years.

…many emerging market and developing economies…experienced increases in inequality during periods of strong economic growth. …Although income growth has not been evenly shared in emerging market economies, all deciles of the income distribution have benefited from economic growth, even when inequality has increased. …Benefiting from high economic growth, East and South Asia and the Pacific region, in particular, showed remarkable success in reducing poverty between 1985 and 2015 (Figure 1.8). Likewise, a period of strong growth has led to a sustained decline in absolute poverty rates in sub-Saharan Africa and in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Here are two charts from this section of the Fiscal Monitor. Figure 1.7 shows that the biggest gains for the poor occurred in the emerging market economies that also saw big increases for the rich. And Figure 1.8 shows how global poverty has fallen.

I’m not saying, by the way, that inequality is necessary for growth.

My argument is merely that free markets and small government are a recipe for prosperity. And as a nation becomes richer thanks to capitalism, it’s quite likely that some people will get richer faster than others get richer.

I personally hope the poor get richer faster than the rich get richer, but the other way around is fine. So long as all groups are enjoying more prosperity and poverty is declining, that’s a good outcome.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has made

Chinese tourists take pictures of themselves standing in front of the Sydney Opera House in Sydney, Australia, September 28, 2015. (Photo: Reuters)

Chinese tourists take pictures of themselves standing in front of the Sydney Opera House in Sydney, Australia, September 28, 2015. (Photo: Reuters)

Back in 2013, when I was still doing a “question of the week” column, I suggested that Australian was the best option for those contemplating a new home in the event of some sort of Greek-style fiscal collapse in the United States.

I pointed out that America wasn’t in any immediate danger, though I can understand why some people are interested in the question since our long-run outlook is rather grim.

Anyhow, I picked Australia for several reasons, including its geographic position (no unstable welfare states on the border, which is why I didn’t select Switzerland), its private social security system (unfunded liabilities are small compared to the $44 trillion shortfall in America’s government-run system), and its relatively high level of economic freedom.

I’m not the only person to notice that Australia is a good place to live. A recent Bloomberg column noted that millionaires are moving Down Under.

They’re all going to the land Down Under. Australia is luring increasing numbers of global millionaires, helping make it one of the fastest growing wealthy nations in the world… Over the past decade, total wealth held in Australia has risen by 85 percent compared to 30 percent in the U.S. and 28 percent in the U.K., aided by the fact that Australia has gone 25 years without a recession. As a result, the average Australian is now significantly wealthier than the average American or Briton. …At the end of 2016 individuals held about $192 trillion of wealth worldwide…, with 13.6 million millionaires holding $69 trillion of this. There were 522,000 multi-millionaires, having net assets of $10 million or more.

The number of millionaires moving to Australia is especially impressive when looking at global data.

Here’s a map showing the nations with the most incoming and outgoing rich people (h/t: Steve Hanke). Maybe it’s because there’s no death tax in Australia, but it’s remarkable that a nation with less than one-tenth the population of the United States manages to attract more millionaires.

But not everybody is cheerful about Australia’s economic position.

I’m currently in Brisbane for a couple of speeches. I spoke earlier today about how market-oriented jurisdictions grow much faster over the long run when compared to nations with statist economic policy.

But I don’t want to focus on my remarks (much of which will be old news to regular readers). Instead, let’s look at the some of the information in a speech by Professor Tony Makin of Griffith University.

Two of his slides caught my attention. Let’s start with a depressing look at how Australia has declined in the global competitiveness rankings put together each year by the World Economic Forum.

This is not a good trend.

That being said, I think Economic Freedom of the World is a more accurate measure and it shows that Australia (whether looking at its absolute score or its relative ranking) has suffered only a small decline.

Here’s another chart that is depressing as well. It shows that the per-capita burden of taxes and spending has continuously increased even after adjusting for inflation.

To be fair, the numbers aren’t quite as bad when looking at taxes and spending as a share of gross domestic product.

Nonetheless, the trend isn’t favorable, which is a point I made back in 2014.

None of this changes my view that Australia is still a good choice for emigrating Americans. But it does leave me worried about whether it will still be the top choice in 10 years or 20 years.

For what it’s worth, the main recommendation in my speech was for Australia to adopt a spending cap, similar to the ones that exist in Hong Kong and Switzerland. I also should have suggested sweeping decentralization since the government actually is open to that idea.

P.S. One of the most disappointing things about Australia is that the country’s foreign aid bureaucrats are trying to bribe/coerce Vanuatu’s government into adopting an income tax.

P.P.S. Professor Makin was the author of the report I recently cited about the failure of Australia’s Keynesian spending binge.

Prior to 2013, Australia was a prime

FILE PHOTO: Supporters of contraception rally before Zubik v. Burwell is heard by the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. (Photo: Reuters)

FILE PHOTO: Supporters of contraception rally before Zubik v. Burwell is heard by the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. (Photo: Reuters)

When writing about the ObamaCare and its birth-control mandate, I’ve made a handful of observations.

President Trump recently announced that his Administration would relax the mandate. I think that is good news for the above reasons.

Critics are very upset. But rather than argue about the desirability of insurance coverage and the wisdom of Washington mandates, they’re actually claiming that the White House has launched some sort of war on birth control. I’m not joking.

Jeff Jacoby of the Boston Globe analyzes the issue. He starts by observing that nobody is proposing to ban birth control

…the Supreme Court ruled, in Griswold v. Connecticut, that government may not ban anyone from using contraceptives. …That freedom is a matter of settled law, and hasn’t been challenged in the slightest by President Trump or his administration.

He then points out that some folks on the left have gone ballistic.

Hillary Clinton accused Trump of showing “blatant disregard for medicine, science, & every woman’s right to make her own health decisions.” Elizabeth Warren, denouncing “this attack on basic health care,” claimed that the GOP’s top priority is to deprive women of birth control.

Their arguments, however, are utter nonsense. If Person A no longer has to subsidize Person B, that doesn’t mean Person B can’t buy things. It simply means there won’t be third-party payer.

Jacoby agrees.

News flash to Warren, et al.: There is no attack on health care, and no in America is being deprived of birth control. You are losing nothing but the power to force nuns to pay for your oral contraceptives. …As a matter of economics and public policy, the Affordable Care Act mandate that birth control be supplied for free is absurd. …Especially since birth control will remain as available and affordable as ever.

Indeed, the Trump Administration was actually far too timid. There should be no birth-control mandate for any insurance plan. It should be something negotiated by employers and employees.

…the new White House rule leaves the birth-control mandate in place. Trump’s “tweak won’t affect 99.9 percent of women,” observes the Wall Street Journal, “and that number could probably have a few more 9s at the end.” Washington will continue to compel virtually every employer and insurer in America to supply birth control to any woman who wants one at no out-of-pocket cost.

Jacoby closes his column with some very sensible observations and recommendations.

…there is no legitimate rationale for such a mandate. Americans don’t expect to get aspirin, bandages, or cold medicine — or condoms — for free; by what logic should birth control pills or diaphragms be handed over at no cost? …By and large, birth control is inexpensive; as little as $20 a month without insurance. …access to birth control, as the Centers for Disease Control reported in 2010, was virtually universal before Obamacare. The White House is right to end the burden on religious objectors. But it is the birth-control mandate itself that should be scrapped. Contraception is legal, cheap, and available everywhere. Why are the feds meddling where they aren’t needed?

The last sentence is key. The federal government (heck, no level of government) should be involved with birth control. They shouldn’t ban it. And they shouldn’t mandate it, either.

P.S. About five years ago, Sandra Fluke got her 15 minutes of fame by asserting that she had a right to third-party-financed birth control. That led to some clever jokes, including this cartoon and this video.

For what it’s worth, I think this cartoon is the best summary of the issue.

P.P.S. Predictably, the United Nations supports a “right” to taxpayer-financed birth control.

if politicians really want birth control to

President Donald Trump hosted a Hispanic Heritage Month event at the White House on Friday October 6, 2017. (Photo: PPD)

President Donald Trump hosted a Hispanic Heritage Month event at the White House on Friday October 6, 2017. (Photo: PPD)

President Donald Trump announced on Friday that his administration will not re-certify Tehran’s compliance with the Iran nuclear deal. He announced a series of steps he has ordered, which “begins with the long overdue step of imposing tough sanctions on the Islamic Revolutionary Guard.”

In his opening remarks, the President said it is his “highest obligation is to ensure the safety and security” of Americans, which is why he ordered a “complete strategic review” of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), better known as the Iran nuclear deal.

Following that review, he concluded the deal negotiated by the Obama Administration was not in the best interest of the United States (US) and will lead to the “predictable conclusion” of Iran getting a nuclear weapon.

“Based on the factual record I have put forward, I am announcing today that we cannot and will not make this certification,” President Trump said. “We will not continue down a path whose predictable conclusion is more violence and terror, and very real threat of Iran’s nuclear breakout.”

The Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act (INARA), which was passed nearly unanimously by the U.S. Congress, requires the President to re-certify the Iran nuclear deal every 90 days. The decision now starts a 60-day congressional review period, which taken alone does not break the agreement between the U.S., Iran and other world powers.

However, it does start a clock to resume sanctions that the U.S. had lifted prior to and as part of the Iran nuclear deal. In his announcement, the President said lawmakers are working on new legislation to deal with the regime, though Secretary of State Rex Tillerson elaborated during a conference call Thursday night.

The secretary of state said the White House will propose an amendment “to the INARA to put in place some very firm trigger points. If Iran crosses any of these trigger points, the sanctions automatically go back into place.”

“These are trigger points that are specific to the nuclear program itself, but also deal with things like their ballistic missile program,” he said.

Mr. Tillerson, along with National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster referred to the entire plan as “President Donald J. Trump‘s New Strategy on Iran.”

However, after making the case that “Iranian dictatorship’s aggression continues to this day,” President Trump warned that he will not hesitate to unilaterally pull out of the deal if Congress does not act.

“The nuclear agreement will be terminated without an agreement,” Mr. Trump said. “As we have seen in North Korea, the longer we ignore a threat, the worse that threat becomes,” Trump said. “The world’s leading sponsor of terror will never obtain a nuclear weapon.”

The internal debate over the last certification deadline split the Trump Administration in two camps. Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon and advisor Dr. Sebastian Gorka lost out to Secretary Tillerson, General McMaster and others.

The latter also wanted the commander-in-chief to re-certify the deal at this time.

But as People’s Pundit Daily (PPD) first reported last week, the President decided on a more comprehensive strategy for containing Iran, a government the review found to still be “the world’s leading state-sponsor of terror.”

In addition to authorizing the U.S. Treasury Department to further sanction the IRG, the Trump Administration will work with allies to address the regime’s proliferation of weapons.

The“fix it or nix it” approach is supported notably by Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Theresa May have also made statements in the past few weeks indicating support for a plan that forces Iran back to the table. The goal is to reimplement the economic pain that brought the regime to the table in the first place.

He slammed the previous administration for lifting sanctions right before what very well could have been the total collapse of the regime.

“We hope that these new measures directed at the Iranian dictatorship will compel the government to reevaluate its pursuit of terror,” President Trump said. “We pray for a future where young children, American and Iranian, Muslim, Christian and Jewish, can grow up in a world free from violence, hatred and terror.”

President Donald Trump announced he will not

An offshore oil platform is seen in Huntington Beach, California September 28, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

An offshore oil platform is seen in Huntington Beach, California September 28, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

The Baker Hughes North American Rig Count is down 5 to 1,140 for the week ending October 13, as the U.S. declined and Canada gained slightly. Overall, the North American Rig Count is up 436 on the year, still far more than the 704 rigs in commission at this time last year.

The U.S. rig count was down 8 rigs to 928 and up 389 rigs from last year. The Canadian count was up 3 rigs to 212 and up 47 rigs from last year.

For the U.S., rigs classified as drilling for oil was down 5 to 743, while rigs classified as gas are down 2 at 185. For Canada, oil rigs were flat at 112 and gas rigs are up 3 to 100.

Worth noting, the rig count in states impacted by Hurricane Harvey decreased, contrary to forecasts. Texas rigs were down 4 to 444 and Louisiana rigs were up 1 to 67. The Gulf of Mexico, which is not included in the North American Rig Count, was down 2 to 20.

The Baker Hughes North American Rig Count

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