Thursday Noon

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TheFrontPageCover
~ Featuring ~
Why the US Is Right to Refuse to 
Sign UN Migration Compact
by Hans von Spakovsky  
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With Democrats in Power, 2019 Will 
Be the Year of Gun Confiscation
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{lidblog.com} ~ A court recently upheld New Jersey’s ban on firearm magazines that hold more than ten rounds... but state officials have steadfastly refused to inform the citizens just how they intend to enforce that law. But the fact that it was upheld and coupled with news in a growing list of other states — not to mention the noise from Washington DC proves that the Democrats intend to make 2019 the year of gun confiscation and ending the Second Amendment in every way without saying it openly. As to New Jersey, Governor Phil Murphy signed the ban on extended magazines in June, but it immediately underwent an appeal by gun supporters. But it looks like supporters of the Constitution lost that battle. So far, the state imagines it has the right to ban these common ammunition magazines. But, just how do officials plan to prosecute people who simply refuse to voluntarily hand over their magazines? No one is saying. “We will enforce the law of the state,” Lieutenant Theodore Schafer of the New Jersey State Police said. “That’s our plan.”That is a statement, not a plan. The only real way to enforce this law is mass confiscation via home inspection. But will they do this. Again, no one is saying. New Jersey is not alone.  Democrats in Florida have already started their effort to confiscate your guns, America, in the first taste of what Democrats are going to try when they take full control of the House of Representatives in Washington...
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House Democrats Change Rules 
to Make It Easier to Raise Taxes
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by Haris Alic   
{freebeacon.com} ~ Democratic Rep. Nancy Pulosi (Calif.) has yet to take the speaker's gavel of the U.S. House of Representatives, but Democrats are already laboring to make it easier to dismantle the achievements of the Trump presidency... The incoming chairman of the House Rules Committee, Rep. Jim McGovern (D., Mass.), confirmed to colleagues on Wednesday that he would not honor the three-fifths supermajority requirement to raise income taxes, as reported by the Washington Post. McGovern's decision  overturns a rule implemented under outgoing Speaker Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) that mandated a three-fifths majority approve any proposed hike to the income tax. The change comes after a standoff between Pulosi and her moderate allies in the Democratic conference, such as incoming Ways and Means Committee chairman Richard Neal (Mass.), and younger, more progressive members like Rep.-elect commie-Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (N.Y.)...
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Nancy Pulosi, Speaker of the House - the 
Sequel (Worse Than the Original)
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{frontpagemag.com} ~ In the movies sequels are usually worse than the original. Since Washington has often been referred to as “Hollywood for ugly people,”... it is perhaps appropriate to consider another sequel in the making, not in film but in politics. Nancy Pulosi, the former Speaker of the House and soon-to-be Speaker of the House of Representatives, once again was the subject of a video posted on December 7, 2018 by Fox News, in which she rejected the notion of constructing a wall along the highly porous U.S./ Mexican border to prevent the entry of illegal aliens, narcotics and other contraband. Her outrageous statements and positions on immigration law enforcement and border security seemed to strike a new low during her first stint as Speaker. She has yet to resume that position and is already providing a disturbing peek into what America and Americans are in for with her in the position that provides her with a “leadership” role in the Congress and puts her in the chain of succession to the U.S. Presidency. As my dad used to say, “Nothing is so good it could not be better or be so bad it could not get worse.” As hard as it might be to imagine, bad as Pulosi was the last time she held the position of Speaker, she may actually prove my dad was right. It is unfathomable how Pulosi could declare that protecting the United States from threats posed by international terrorists, transnational gangs and the flow of narcotics into the United States is “immoral.” It is similarly impossible to understand how Pulosi could determine that it is immoral to prevent the illegal entry of foreign workers who all too frequently displace American and lawful immigrant workers and drive down wages and working conditions of American and lawful immigrant workers who are similarly employed...  https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/272183/nancy-pelosi-speaker-house-sequel-worse-original-michael-cutler
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Pence Breaks Tie After rino-Flake Refuses 
To Confirm Judicial Pick
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by Randy DeSoto   
{westernjournal.com} ~ Vice President Mike Pence stepped in to cast a tie-breaking vote in the Senate on Tuesday, confirming Jonathan Kobes... as a judge on the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Pence’s move came after Arizona Republican Sen. rino-Jeff Flake joined with Democrats to oppose Kobes’ nomination, The Hill reported. The retiring lawmaker announced last month that he would not support any nominees going forward until his bill shielding special counsel dirty cop-Robert Mueller from being removed by President Donald Trump or the attorney general received a full Senate vote. In light of rino-Flake’s refusal to support Trump’s nominees, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley announced the cancellation of a meeting scheduled for the last week of November during which the senators were slated to consider six nominees to the federal circuit courts and 15 federal district courts around the country. However, more than 30 nominees have already passed out of committee with rino-Flake’s support and can be confirmed by the full Senate without him. But confirmation will require Pence to break the tie, assuming all remaining GOP senators vote to confirm and all Democratic senators vote against confirmation. rino-Flake joined with Democrats late last month to filibuster judicial nominee Thomas Farr to serve on the federal bench for the Eastern District of North Carolina. Pence broke the 50-50 tie in the procedural vote, allowing the nominee to be eligible for a full Senate vote...  
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Incoming Lawmakers Briefed by Netanyahu, 
Tour Hamas Tunnels Into Israel
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by Brent Scher
{freebeacon.com} ~ A bipartisan group of incoming members of Congress were given a security briefing by Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a trip to the Jewish state... Republican congressman-elect Denver Riggleman, an Air Force veteran, says the visit served as "Israeli history basic training." Riggleman, a Republican who ran against a vocal anti-Israel activist in Virginia's fifth district, says there's been a good balance to the information presented to the group thus far on the trip, which is sponsored by the American Israel Education Foundation (AIEF), an American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC)-affiliated nonprofit group. In addition to their briefing on security from Netanyahu, they met with Tzipi Livni, a prominent politician who leads the opposition party in the Knesset. The group also traveled to the West Bank city of Ramallah to meet with Saeb Erekat, a top Palestinian official. "They are directing us to learn in a nonjudgmental way," Riggleman said during a phone call from Tel Aviv. "It's been fantastic to hear from people who will forget more about Israel in a day than most Americans will know in a lifetime."...
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Why the US Is Right to Refuse to Sign UN Migration Compact

by Hans von Spakovsky
 

On Dec. 10-11 in Morocco, most of the world’s nations will sign on to the United Nations’ Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration.
               The U.S. will not be signing the migration compact — and that’s the correct decision from public policy, national security, and national sovereignty standpoints.
               The migration compact was initiated when the U.N. General Assembly unanimously adopted the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants in September 2016.
               While the scumbag/liar-nObama administration enthusiastically supported the New York declaration and the migration compact, the Trump administration has had serious concerns about its provisions and requirements that are inconsistent and contrary to our immigration policy.
               On Dec. 2, 2017, the United States announced that it would not participate in the migration compact, as explained by U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley:
               America is proud of our immigrant heritage and our long-standing moral leadership in providing support to migrant and refugee populations across the globe.
               No country has done more than the United States, and our generosity will continue. But our decisions on immigration policies must always be made by Americans and Americans alone. We will decide how best to control our borders and who will be allowed to enter our country.
               The global approach in the New York Declaration is simply not compatible with U.S. sovereignty.
               The decision to end U.S. participation was controversial and unfairly criticized by U.N. officials and human rights groups.
               Since the U.S. decision, however, other nations have likewise signaled that they would not sign the migration compact because of concerns that “it tramples on national sovereignty” and “does not distinguish sufficiently between economic migrants and people in genuine need of international protection.
               At least 10 other nations are expected to join the U.S. in not signing the migration compact, including Australia, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Israel, and Poland.
               In addition, the compact is causing political controversy and turmoil in some places that its supporters might consider unlikely, such as Belgium, Germany, Denmark, and the Netherlands.
               The concerns voiced in these countries mirror those of U.S. officials. For example, while the migration compact says that it is the sovereign right of states to “govern migration within their jurisdiction,” they can only do so to the extent it is “in conformity with international law.
               That’s a direct limitation on the constitutional authority of our government to determine our immigration policy regardless of international law.
               Similarly, the migration compact says that the due process rights and access to justice provided to migrants must be “consistent with international law.” That imposes another limitation on the authority of the U.S. to determine its immigration policy and the extent of the due process procedures that will be provided to illegal aliens.
               There are other, similar caveats contained throughout the migration compact, such as a requirement that a country’s migration policy be consistent with the U.N.‘s nonbinding 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
               It directs that detention of illegal aliens should only be “a measure of last resort,” a policy that would release large numbers of illegal aliens into the interior of the U.S., where they could disappear and defy our immigration laws.
               The migration compact has many other provisions that would extend asylum rights and provide access to a variety of government benefits far beyond what U.S. immigration law provides.
               In general, it is in accord with the push by liberal advocacy groups to extinguish the line between legal and illegal immigration to the greatest extent possible.
               In addition, the migration compact states that it rests on a number of international agreements, which is important, considering the compact’s frequent references to international law.
               Strangely, it makes no distinction between commitments that are legally binding and those that are not — citing, for example, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, alongside the Paris accord and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
               The compact fails to note that not all states have ratified the treaties listed. The United States, for example, has declined to ratify the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women; the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights; the Convention on the Rights of the Child; the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea, and other treaties referenced in the compact.
               The U.S. should avoid even implying that agreements and treaties that it has not ratified constitute binding commitments on this country.
               Defenders of the migration compact argue that U.S. concerns are misguided because country commitments under it are nonbinding. Indeed, supporters of the compact lament the lack of a binding treaty on migration.
               The purpose of the compact, however, is to be a steppingstone to that goal. To that end, it lays out common commitments and practices on “all aspects of international migration” that signatories will be pressured to honor.
               States that fall short of expectations or interpretations of those commitments by the U.N. and nongovernmental organizations will be accused of bad faith and of abandoning their commitments.
               We witnessed such criticism when the U.S. pulled out of the similarly nonbinding Paris accord on climate change. Yet, at the recent Group of 20 meeting in Buenos Aires, Argentina, the other governments insisted that the nonbinding Paris accord is “irreversible.”
               It is important to note that not signing the migration compact would in no way undermine or reverse America’s generous policy on migration.
               The U.S. should work with the International Organization for Migration and other relevant entities to implement the migration compact’s sensible provisions, but it is right to protect jealously its discretion and sovereign authority to set its own migration policies that further U.S. interests.
               Signing on to the compact provides no additional authority or ability to adjust U.S. migration policy to meet urgent or ongoing needs. It does, however, serve as an invitation for politically motivated criticism and international pressure.
               The U.S. is right to weigh the costs and benefits of this approach and find it wanting. The costs far outweigh the benefits.  

~The Patriot Post  

https://patriotpost.us/opinion/59950?mailing_id=3935&utm_medium=email&utm_source=pp.email.3935&utm_campaign=snapshot&utm_content=body
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Comments

  • Bonnie

    Pretty much how I feel but the dems will try with all they have to take away our rights.

  • AS TO OUR GUNS:  TRY AND TAKE MINE.   IF WE ARE NOT WATCHING WE WON'T HAVE ANY RIGHTS LEFT.    

    ACCOUNTABILITY BOY WE NEED IT NOW  AND WHY WE ELECT THE SAME PEOPLE PUZZLES ME.

    AS TO THE UN KISS MY BUTT.    WE NEED TO LEAVE IT NOW

This reply was deleted.