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President Obama Speaks On Iran Nuclear Deal At American University

President Barack Obama addresses American University’s School of International Service in Washington, District of Columbia, U.S., on Wednesday, Aug. 5, 2015. The speech focused on the Iran nuclear deal being debated in Congress. American University was chosen as the venue by the White House because it is where President Kennedy made his famous 1963 speech on nuclear disarmament. President Obama’s Iran Deal speech at AU falls on the 52nd anniversary of the signing of the Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. (Photo: Pete Marovich/Bloomberg/Pool)

Yeah, I get President Obama’s point. He wants to disarm law-abiding Americans but entrust the Iranian Islamist theocracy to police itself on nuclear arms and subsidize its funding of global terrorism. But we’re the “crazies.”

Recently, Obama dissed opponents of his Iran nuclear deal for “making common cause” with Iranian hard-liners who chant “death to America,” and now he’s calling us crazy. But he’s the one playing footsie with those America haters. Projection is a beautiful thing.

It gets old pointing out that Obama uses Saul Alinsky tactics to demonize conservatives and avoid defending his positions, but it’s true.

Instead of explaining why we’re wrong, he calls us nuts. So most U.S. representatives, Sen. Chuck Schumer — a stalwart Obama supporter — and roughly half of Americans are all whack jobs? Are the 69 percent of Israelis against the deal lunatics, the 21 percent undecided flirting with lunacy and only the 10 percent in favor rational?

Instead of accusing us of being crazy and making common cause with the hard-liners, perhaps Obama should explain why he is doing their bidding.

The administration originally assured us that the United States would be able to have “anywhere, anytime inspections” of Iran’s nuclear facilities, but then we learned that “anywhere” meant limited locations, that “anytime” meant giving Iran 24 days’ lead time to hide its weapons and that the “United States” meant entities other than the United States. He is essentially leaving compliance up to the Iranians and their international sympathizers, because we won’t be allowed to participate in the site inspections.

This means we are relying on their good faith. Folks, this is a regime that has a long history of nuclear violations, that remains openly committed to the destruction of Israel and America, and that sponsors proxy wars throughout the Middle East. Our “sane” president offered these murderers a $150 billion signing bonus for a deal that is great for them and terrible for us. The hyper-rational Obama didn’t require the mullahs to come clean on their past illegal nuclear activities prior to the deal’s going into effect. And he didn’t try to get our four hostages released, saying it would muddy the deal, even though he released a top Iranian scientist in the process.

Every day, we discover more reasons to oppose the deal. The White House guaranteed that if Iran violates the agreement, the sanctions will snap back into place, but it concealed a major loophole in that provision: The deal grants Iran a basis to exclude from snapback sanctions long-term sales of Iranian oil and gas and almost all nonnuclear items. According to The Weekly Standard, once the deal is in place and the sanctions are lifted, Iran “could launch long-term (say 20 year) contracts to sell to ‘any party’ — including Chinese, Russian, Lebanese or other parties friendly to Iran — all the oil or gas, for example, that Iran chooses in the future to sell.”

Do you realize that this deal that only crazies oppose allows the hard-liners to produce intercontinental ballistic missiles to their darkened hearts’ content? That it permits them to keep their vast nuclear infrastructure? That it will most likely lead to a nuclear arms race in the Middle East that could include Turkey, Egypt and Saudi Arabia?

Though Obama acts as if he can alter reality by making declarations at odds with it, our failure to approve this deal would not mean war. Rather, the deal itself increases the risk of conflict and war.

Robert Joseph, former undersecretary of state for arms control and international security, poses five questions to gauge whether this is a wise deal for the U.S.: 1) Does it deny Iran a nuclear weapons capability — the long-standing declared goal of the U.S. and the international community? 2) Does it, after the constraints expire, prevent Iran from building a nuclear weapon in a short period of time? 3) Does it meaningfully extend the breakout time? 4) Is it effectively verifiable? 5) Is there a meaningful phased relief of sanctions, and are there guaranteed snapback provisions? The answer to each of those questions, says Joseph, is no.

Have you ever heard the phrase “shifting the goal posts” to describe the dishonorable negotiating tactic of changing one’s demands midstream? Well, at least you can understand the logic in the other side’s doing so to get a better deal. But the opposite is occurring here. Inexplicably, Obama keeps changing the terms to get a worse deal for the United States.

Indeed, former senior officials who helped frame the administration’s policy on Iran’s nuclear capacity issued a public statement warning that the deal “may fall short of meeting the administration’s own standard of a ‘good’ agreement.”

Isn’t that great? Obama moved the goal posts, all right, but he moved them toward the Iranian regime. Now if that isn’t crazy and lurching toward common cause with the bad guys, I’m not a bitter clinger.

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Obama wants to disarm law-abiding Americans, whom

[brid video=”14132″ player=”1929″ title=”Levin on Jorge Ramos “He’s a Fanatic Obnoxious Activist and Pretend Journalist””]

Conservative talk radio host Mark Levin slammed Jorge Ramos on Hannity Wednesday night, calling him “a fanatic, obnoxious activist” and “pretend journalist.”

Conservative talk radio host Mark Levin slammed

[brid video=”14129″ player=”1929″ title=”NAR Chief Lawrence Yun Discusses July Pending Home Sales Index”]

Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors (NAR), discusses the July Pending Home Sales Index that showed a less-than-expected increase to a seasonally-adjusted 110.9. The results, which are based on signings for purchases of previously owned homes, are up from an upwardly revised reading of 110.4 in June.

Lawrence Yun, chief economist for National Association

Is the Housing Market Run Over?

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Existing and pending home sales reported by the National Association of Realtors. Photo: Reuters)

The National Association of Realtors said Thursday its pending home sales index rose only 0.5% in July, indicating the housing market again is losing steam. The index, which is based on signings for purchases of previously owned homes, rose to a seasonally-adjusted 110.9, from an upwardly revised reading of 110.4 in June.

Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had expected a 1% rise in July.

“Led by a solid gain in the Northeast, contract activity in most of the country held steady last month, which bodes well for existing-sales to maintain their recent elevated pace to close out the summer,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for NAR. “While demand and sales continue to be stronger than earlier this year, Realtors have reported since the spring that available listings in affordable price ranges remain elusive for some buyers trying to reach the market and are likely holding back sales from being more robust.”

Yet, there is reason for optimism. Home sales typically close within a couple of months after signing and the index rose 7.4% in July from a year earlier, which is the 11th consecutive annual increase. But Yun did warn recent stock market volatility could cause some buyers to delay buying a home out of an abundance of caution.

“In light of the recent volatility in the stock market, it’s possible some prospective buyers may err on the side of caution and delay decisions, while others may view real estate as a more stable asset in the current environment,” said Yun. “Overall, the prospects for ongoing strength in the housing market remain intact for now. The U.S. economy is growing — albeit at a modest pace — and the labor market continues to add jobs.”

However, Yun also warned that “available listings in affordable price ranges remain elusive for some buyers trying to reach the market and are likely holding back sales from being more robust.”

The average interest rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage was 4.05% in July, according to Freddie Mac, but was back down to 3.84% last week.

REGIONS

The readings were mixed across regions. The PHSI in the Northeast increased 4.0 percent to 98.8 in July, and is now 12.1 percent above a year ago. In the Midwest the index remained unchanged at 107.8 in July, and is now 5.7 percent above July 2014.

Pending home sales in the South increased slightly (0.6 percent) to an index of 124.2 in July and are now 6.5 percent above last July. The index in the West declined 1.4 percent in July to 103.0, but is still 7.5 percent above a year ago.

The National Association of Realtors said Thursday

obama-cameron-press-conference-1-16-15

President Barack Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron hold a joint news conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Friday, Jan. 16, 2015. Growing fears about the specter of terrorism in Europe and the West are lending themselves to a sense of trans-Atlantic solidarity as President Barack Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron met at the White House. (Photo: AP/Carolyn Kaster)

It would require several people, working around the clock, to provide daily updates about the bizarre and senseless actions of the crowd in Washington. And you’d need many additional people to monitor the foolish decisions in state capitals. I certainly try to do my small part, sharing example of jaw-dropping vapidity by our overseers in government (especially in New York City and California).

But I don’t like to discriminate, which is why I periodically highlight inane behavior by foreign bureaucrats and politicians. And we have two perfect examples today. We’ll start north of the border.

Here are some passages from a CBC report about nanny-state overkill from Canada (h/t: Lenore Skenazy).

Clayton, 8, and Kristopher Cadieux, 10, started their business last summer, digging up worms and selling them as bait for $2.50 per dozen. But after a complaint from a neighbour, the brothers received a note from the city saying they were breaking a bylaw and had to shut down their business. The mayor of Cornwall, Leslie O’Shaughnessy, explained that the bylaw requires all personal business sales be conducted within the home, without outdoor signage. …The city told the brothers to move their business inside their home, and to take down their signs on their front lawn. …Kristopher said the worm enterprise only brought in about $34 a month last summer, and he doesn’t understand why he and his brother are being told they can’t sell worms from their front lawn.

How dare these kids display entrepreneurship.They’re almost as bad as the Canadian kid who got in trouble for stopping a knife attack.

But I still think America wins the prize for teaching kids bad lessons. After all, local government officials have heroically thwarted rogue operators of unregulated and unlicensed lemonade stands, in California, Georgia, and Oregon!

Without adequate government supervision, you never know what might happen. If you allow kids to engage in voluntary exchange, maybe that will be the gateway step to other forms of anti-social behavior. Such as snow removal without government approval. Or giving topless haircuts without a cosmetology license!

Our second example of foreign government stupidity comes from the United Kingdom, which is infamous for astounding – and embarrassing – episodes of political correctness.

But this latest example, reported by the U.K.-based Metro, represent the ultimate triumph of the P.C. culture (h/t: Amy Alkon).

…according to one school, Wonder Woman and her Golden Lasso of Truth are…not suitable lunchbox fodder. According to Redditor twines18, who posted a copy of the letter and offending lunchbox on Imgur, the lunchbox contravened the schools dress code which states children aren’t allowed to bring ‘violent images’ into the building. The letter states: ‘We have defined “violent characters” as those who solve problems using violence. Super heroes certainly fall into that category.’

Part of me is convinced this is a joke, but it seems legit. And let’s remember this is coming from a nation where anti-gun fanaticism results in jaw-dropping displays of government stupidity. Anyhow, here’s the letter that was sent to the parents.

So solving problems using violence is bad?

I guess that means this school doesn’t teach the kids about World War II. After all, Churchill and other U.K. leaders obviously took the wrong approach. I’m sure a big group hug would have sufficed to stop Hitler and the rest of the National Socialists.

P.S. Speaking of England, the U.K.-based Spectator reports that local universities have an unfortunate habit of filling the heads of foreign students with very bad economic theories. And when those students gain power in their home countries, you get very bad results.

Varoufakis was a product of British universities. He read economics at Essex and mathematical statistics at Birmingham, returning to Essex to do a PhD in economics. With the benefit of his British university education he returned to Greece and, during his short time in office, obliterated the nascent recovery.But Varoufakis is not alone. Plenty of other visitors to our universities have been influenced by the teaching here and returned to their countries to wreak havoc. Jawaharlal Nehru, the first prime minister of an independent India…was influenced by British intellectuals such as George Bernard Shaw, a socialist, Bertrand Russell, who once remarked ‘communism is necessary to the world’, and John Maynard Keynes. He returned to India and started to put the ideology into practice with state planning, controls and regulations. This was a calamity. …Julius Nyerere, president of Tanzania,…read economics and history at Edinburgh (as did Gordon Brown). Naturally he was surrounded by leftist academics and apparently ‘encountered Fabian thinking’ in particular. The experience made it all but inevitable that Tanzania would endure a bloated bureaucracy, shortages and miserably low growth. …the London School of Economics can rightly claim more than its share, of course. Jomo Kenyatta, first prime minister of Kenya after independence, went there. …overblown, corrupt state industries and attempted import substitution took their toll, so that GDP growth per capita was low and, in some years, negative. …Pierre Trudeau…came to the LSE for his doctorate. He did not finish it but the LSE nonetheless gave him a finishing course in leftist economics. Under his rule, Canada introduced wage and price controls while inflation, unemployment and the national debt all rose. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, variously president and prime minister of Pakistan, went to…Oxford. …once he had gained power, declaring ‘socialism is our economy’, he nationalised the steel, chemical, cement and banking industries along with the flour, rice and cotton mills. Economic growth slowed to a crawl.

Wow, what a rogue’s gallery of statist politicians. Though, to be fair, I don’t think you automatically get bad ideas by studying economics in the United Kingdom. It’s a function of being “taught” be misguided professors.

After all, just think what must happen to foreign students in America who take classes from Paul Krugman. If these examples (here, here, here,herehereherehereherehere, herehere, and here) are any indication, they probably experience un-learning.

CATO economist Dan Mitchell highlights inane behavior

Gov’t Revisions to GDP Method = GDP Revised up to 3.7 from 2.3 Percent

GDP-Shipping-Cranes-Trade-Portland-Oregon

File photo: Shipping-cranes-in move containers at a port in Portland, Oregon. (Photo: REUTERS)

The Commerce Department Thursday said they have upwardly revised second quarter GDP growth to show the U.S. economy grew at a 3.7 percent annual pace. Though the gross domestic product was initially estimated at 2.3 percent, following an adjustment by the government on the methodology for calculating growth, the Federal Reserve is still unlikely to hike interest rates in mid-September. The hike is likely to come this year sometime in December following recent market volatility.

“An increase [in rates] seems less compelling to me than it was a few weeks ago,” said New York Fed President William Dudley. Economists polled by Reuters had expected that second-quarter GDP growth would be revised to a 3.2 percent rate.

The GDP report, which was released in the wake of a global stock market sell-off, is the first since the government “adjusted” their longstanding methodology. The change, which again came after first quarter contraction, marks the second time the government has changed the previously long-standing methodology. In July 2013, the U.S. government made a significant change in the gross investment number (I), which now includes research and development (R&D) spending, art, music, film royalties, books and theatre. In the entertainment industry, for instance, much of those numbers are expected projections, such as how much they believe a movie will make at the Box Office.

This change in the method to gauge GDP —or, rewriting the GDP number— was first implemented by the United States, and India was quick to express an interest. Yet, unlike the U.S., India has made a reasonable case for revising their long-plagued methodologies. In the U.S., changing the method to boost investment measures has no real benefit to the truth and no other purpose but to make “GDP growth happy,” as Bloomberg correctly critiqued. Let’s take a look at the government’s claims.

Not surprising, these revisions to second-quarter growth also reflected the accumulation of $121.1 billion worth of inventories, up from the previous estimate of $110 billion. Because of the new method, inventories contributed 0.22 percentage point to GDP instead of subtracting 0.08 percentage point. Further, the build up in inventory will likely weigh down third quarter growth.

The energy sector, which is feeling the pinch of “severe” government regulations and preparing for historic rules in the future, naturally continued to weigh on growth. To be sure, spending cuts by oil-field companies like Schlumberger and Halliburton in the aftermath of a more than 60 percent plunge in crude oil prices since last year have taken a toll, as well.

In turn, spending on mining exploration, wells and shafts tanked at a 68.3 percent rate in the second quarter, which is the largest decline since the second quarter of 1986. This category was previously reported to have contracted at a 68.2 percent pace.

 

Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity, grew at a 3.1 percent rate, rather than the 2.9 percent pace reported last month. The trade deficit was smaller than previously reported, adding 0.23 percentage point to GDP growth.

The GDP report also showed after-tax corporate profits gained 1.3 percent in the second quarter after pluging 7.9 percent in the first quarter. A relatively strong dollar has weighed on the profits of multinational corporations.

The Commerce Department Thursday said they have

Firing Rate Decreases for Week Ended Aug. 22

Job-seekers-interview

Job seekers wait on a line to interview with jobs fair and Labor Department officials in NYC. (Photo: REUTERS)

The Labor Department said on Thursday initial claims for state unemployment benefits, or weekly jobless benefits, fell 6,000 to a seasonally adjusted 271,000 for the week ended Aug. 22.

While economists had forecast claims falling to 274,000 last week, it was the first decline since July 18, and weekly jobless claims for the prior week were unrevised. A Labor Department analyst said there were no special factors influencing the data and no states had been estimated.

The four-week moving average of claims–which is widely considered to be a better measure of labor market trends as it irons out week-to-week volatility–increased 1,000 to 272,500 last week. It was the 22nd straight week that the four-week average remained below the 300,000 threshold.

Thursday’s claims report showed the number of people still receiving benefits after an initial week of aid rose 13,000 to 2.27 million in the week ended Aug. 15. The so-called continuing claims data covered the week during which the government surveyed households for the August unemployment rate.

Continuing claims were little changed between the July and August survey periods, suggesting the jobless rate likely held at a seven-year low of 5.3 percent.

The Labor Department said on Thursday initial

Can We Find Common Ground on Fighting Wildfires?

Firefighters-US-Forest-Service

PHOTO: U.S. Forest Service firefighters stand near flames in the Angeles National Forest, Sept. 2013. (PHOTO: DAVID MCNEW/GETTY)

As wildfires plague much of the American West, one must ask, Who is paying to put them out? The answer is largely the American taxpayer. By that, we mean the taxpayers of Maryland, Tennessee and New Jersey — as well as those in California, Oregon, Washington and Montana, the states where the worst fires now rage.

Given this reality, we can also wonder at Western conservatives’ passion for transferring federal lands to the states or into private hands. Do they really want the cost of protecting this considerable acreage placed on the shoulders of their locals?

Some Western politicians, such as Montana Gov. Steve Bullock, have thought this through. His state owns 5.2 million acres — the size of Massachusetts — and a good part of it is in flames.

“I could spend $40 million on fires alone,” Bullock, a Democrat, recently told me.

Western conservatives should know that other conservatives are asking why U.S. taxpayers are spending so darn much money putting out their fires. And they are joined by environmentalists, who argue that the federal government’s enthusiasm for suppressing wildfires encourages bad land planning and unnecessary tree removal.

About two-thirds of the cost of fighting wildfires comes out of the federal coffers, and the U.S. Forest Service accounts for the lion’s share. Its fire suppression actives include both firefighting and fire prevention. For the first time this year, the Forest Service will devote over half its budget to wildfire suppression. By 2025, large wildfires could consume two-thirds of that budget, according to a new report by the Department of Agriculture, which oversees the agency.

A warming climate is adding size and intensity to the blazes — making them more expensive to put out. And there’s a stiff human price: Three Forest Service firefighters died recently trying to contain a wildfire in north-central Washington.

But much of the Forest Service’s fattening bill for suppressing wildfires comes from the rising costs of protecting isolated residences in the so-called wildland-urban interface. About 10 million houses were been built in fire-prone rural areas last decade — on top of 6 million in the 1990s.

The building continues apace because of a growing desire for homes with nice views and proximity to national forests. And because the feds deal with the worst fires, the state and local governments approving this development have little incentive to curb it.

The federal government also has a variety of post-fire rehab programs. One helps rebuild the homes, 75 percent of which are uninsured or underinsured.

“Many say the insurance companies should be creating a moral hazard when they insure homes on the interface,” Sue Stewart, a scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who was formerly with the Forest Service, told me. Homeowners in fire-prone zones should bear the costs of the added risk, not unlike those on flood plains.

Local governments can also assume more responsibility, writes Randal O’Toole at the conservative Cato Institute. One suggestion is “turning firefighting over to the states and paying the states the same fixed annual amounts per acre that private forest land owners pay.”

O’Toole speaks approvingly of the federal Bureau of Land Management’s policy of letting enormous wildfires in Alaska burn largely unattended.

In Berkeley, California, meanwhile, angry environmentalists are protesting a plan to lessen fire hazards by leveling over 400,000 eucalyptuses and other trees in the East Bay hills. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has offered to write the check.

In assessing federal fire suppression programs, one must distinguish between mindless budget cutting and thoughtless spending. As we can see, not always an easy call.

As wildfires plague much of the American

Hillary-Clinton-Watermark-Silicon-AP

Hillary Rodham Clinton jokes during her keynote address at the Watermark Silicon Valley Conference for Women in Santa Clara, Calif., on Feb. 24, 2015. (Photo: AP)

What if former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been pulling the wool over our eyes for years?

What if, while she was secretary of state, she ran two secret wars, one in Libya and one in Syria? What if there already were wars in each of those countries, so she used those wars as covers for her own?

What if President Obama gave permission for her to do this? What if the president lacks the legal authority to authorize anyone to fight secret wars? What if she obtained the consent of a dozen members of Congress from both houses and from both political parties? What if those few members of Congress who approved of her wars lacked the legal authority to authorize them?

What if her goal was to overthrow two dictators, one friendly to the U.S. and one not? What if the instruments of her war did not consist of American military troops, but rather State Department intelligence assets and American-made military-grade heavy weapons?

What if under federal law the secretary of state and the secretary of the Treasury are permitted on their own to issue licenses to American arms dealers to sell arms to the governments of foreign countries? What if Clinton secretly authorized the sale of American-made military-grade weapons to the government of Qatar? What if Qatar is a small Middle Eastern country, the government of which is beholden to and largely controlled by the Muslim Brotherhood?

What if the Muslim Brotherhood is a recognized terrorist organization? What if the U.S. has no lawful or military purpose for putting military hardware into the hands of a government that supports or is controlled by a terrorist organization?

What if the real purpose of sending military hardware to Qatar was for it to end up in the hands of rebels in Syria and Libya? What if it got there? What if some of those rebels are known al-Qaida operatives? What if some of those operatives who received the American military hardware used it to assault Americans and American interests?

What if among those assaulted was the U.S. ambassador to Libya? What if Ambassador Christopher Stevens was assassinated in Benghazi, Libya, by al-Qaida operatives who were using American-made military-grade hardware that Clinton knowingly sent to them?

What if the U.S. had no strategic interest in deposing the government of Libya? What if Congress never declared war on Libya? What if Col. Gadhafi, the then-dictator of Libya who was reprehensible, was nevertheless an American ally whose fights against known terrorist organizations had garnered him praise from President George W. Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair?

What if the U.S. had no strategic interest in deposing the dictator of Syria, President Assad? What if Congress never declared war on Syria? What if the government of Syria, though reprehensible, has been fighting a war against groups and militias, some of whom have been designated as terrorist organizations by the secretary of state? What if that secretary of state was Hillary Clinton?

What if Clinton had a political interest in deposing the governments of Libya and Syria? What if her goal in fighting these secret wars was to claim triumph for herself over Middle Eastern despots? What if it is a federal crime to fight a private war against a foreign government? What if it is a federal crime to provide material assistance to terrorist organizations? What if these are crimes no matter who consents or approves?

What if, when asked about this while testifying to the Senate Armed Services Committee, Clinton professed ignorance? What if it is a federal crime for a witness to lie to or mislead Congress?

What if the outcome of Clinton’s war in Libya has been the destruction of the Gadhafi government and ensuing chaos? What if that chaos has brought terror and death to many thousands of innocents in Libya? What if Clinton has failed to achieve any noticeable result with her secret war in Syria?

What if she managed these wars on an email system that was not secured in a government venue? What if she did that to keep her thoughts and actions secret from the president and from the State Department in case she failed to win the wars? What if she used a BlackBerry she bought at Walmart instead of a secure and encrypted government-issued phone?

What if her management of these wars on the private email system exposed national security secrets to anyone who could hack into her server or her router? What if the server or the router had been kept in the bathroom of an apartment of an employee of a computer company in Denver, Colo., and not under lock and key and armed guard in her home in New York as she has represented?

What if Clinton just doesn’t care whether she has broken any federal laws, illegally caused the deaths of thousands of innocents, and profoundly jeopardized and misled the American people?

What if the American people do care about all this? What will they do about it?

Judge Andrew Napolitano: What if former former

Donald-Trump-Dubuque-Iowa

DUBUQUE, IA – AUGUST 25: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks to guests gathered from around Iowa and neighboring Wisconsin. (PHOTO: GETTY)

The conservative pro-economic freedom Club for Growth PAC slammed GOP frontrunner Donald Trump over remarks he made in Dubuque, Iowa on Tuesday night.

“I would say very simply, ‘Fellas, sorry, you gotta move back,'” Trump said Tuesday regarding Ford Motor Company, who recently announced they will build a plant in Mexico. “I’ll call them up and say, ‘Gotta go. I don’t want you in Mexico.’ I would say to the head of Ford, ‘Sorry, I’m not gonna approve. You’re gonna pay a tax, for every car and every truck and every part that comes across that southern border, you’re gonna pay a 35% tax, OK?’ That’s what’s gonna happen.”

Those comments, which follow the protectionist rhetoric that has appealed to millions of Americans who feel the nation has got the raw end of trade deals over the last several decades, didn’t sit well with the pro-free trade Club.

“Donald Trump’s threat to impose new taxes on U.S. car companies will hurt the American economy and cost more American jobs,” said Club for Growth President David McIntosh. “It should thrill liberals and Democrats everywhere that Trump wants to create new taxes and start a trade war to force American companies to work where he demands.”

This isn’t the first time The Club for Growth has gone after The Donald. Following his announcement, the Club circulated past statements made by the billionaire real estate mogul over the years. The email to PPD cited Trump’s past statements expressing support for universal health care, and prior donations to Hillary Clinton and other Democrats. To be fair, Trump has stated he doesn’t support universal health care in the U.S. because it isn’t comparable to other countries, and now has put forward free market solutions. Regarding the donations, he has claimed he was just playing the game, which is corrupt and needs reform.

But Mr. McIntosh isn’t buying it. Immediately after the first GOP debate, he ripped Trump for being “proud that he made money from filing bankruptcies that cost thousands of jobs for Americans.”

“Instead of lowering corporate taxes, cutting unnecessary regulations, and fostering a more profitable environment in the U.S., as some Republican candidates have proposed,” he said. “Trump wants to unilaterally threaten a major U.S. manufacturer with higher taxes.”

But the Club’s various attacks mirror those unsuccessfully employed by various other 2016 Republican candidates vying for media attention in a crowded field dominated by Trump. Thus far, those attacks have proven fruitless, with pollster Frank Luntz characterizing Trump as “virtually impervious” to attacks on the issues. It would seem, at least this time around in 2016, the voters are just too pissed at the establishment.

In the latest national Republican nomination poll conducted by Gravis Marking for One America News Network, Trump hit the 40% mark. The survey marks the first time since any candidate–let alone the real estate mogul–has broken above the so-called 30% ceiling pundits have pegged him and others at.

“The strength of the U.S. economy has historically been our free markets. But, for the past seven years the Obama Administration has driven up costs for consumers by attacking free markets with costly regulations and executive orders,” McIntosh added. “Now Donald Trump wants to one-up the Obama pen-and-phone method by threatening global companies like Ford with higher taxes to make cars for Americans. If Donald Trump gets his way, the heavy hand of government will get substantially heavier, and car buyers will be left holding the bag.”

Whether the Club’s attacks or similar assaults from GOP hopefuls prove effective in the future remains to be seen.

The conservative pro-economic freedom Club for Growth

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