Donald J. Trump will you please go now?

This election is a result of an act of sabotage against the Republican Party.  The saboteur is the media Hive, specifically NBC News.  The weapon used was the Access Hollywood tape that destroyed the Republican nominee’s chances.  This tape had been in NBC’s possession for many years, and was held in reserve for use at the point when it could do maximum damage.  Had this tape been released before the end of the Republican primaries, someone other than Trump would be the nominee, and the victor in today’s election.

This has got to be the message of the 2016 election.  It was stolen, by the Hive, and given to Clinton.  She has no political legitimacy.  Legally, she’ll be President, but it will be in name only.  When she speaks, the nation won’t listen.  2/3 of the country has tuned her out before she’s even elected.

Trump has no political future, and will be allowed to recede  — soon!  soon!  —  into the bad and fading memory of a dark night.  He’ll do his best to hang on to the spotlight,  but it’s all down hill from here.  He’s got his fans, but no one with any sense will pay attention to a thing he says.  Any man with half a brain could have won this election.  It takes somebody pretty special to lose to Hillary Clinton.  You’ve got to be stupid in a very special way.

Pence, or someone, will realize that this election was about a reassertion of American nationalism.  Nationalism scares some people.  But all nations of the world act in their own best interest, and that’s all that nationalism is.  In this country the way we express our nationalism is by saying we believe in America first and foremost, last and always.  It’s not complicated.  All policies are founded on a bedrock of self interest.  What’s in the best interests of the American people?

If that is not the basis of your policy, what is?

 

 

The election that might have been

The powers that be decided that Ted Cruz and Bernie Sanders were not acceptable nominees.  So instead of having a political discussion in 2016 we’re talking about which is worse, a self-obsessed sex fiend or a lying criminal.  It’s a tough choice.

In most elections people ask themselves, What’s best for me?  If you’re one of those suburban Republican women that Trump desperately needs, you may have a 401(k) or some other stock market investments.  When Comey cleared Clinton of wrongdoing on Sunday, the market took that as a sign that she was out of the woods, and Trump wasn’t going to win.  As a result, the market today broke an extended losing streak, and jumped 2%.  At least in the short term, people will think  a Clinton win is good for stocks, and this will help her.

But what I think puts her over the top is the danger of radical change that Trump represents.  Women in particular dread uncertainty.  I remember reading somewhere that prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient Causes; and accordingly all Experience hath shewn, that Mankind is more disposed to suffer, when Evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the Forms to which they are accustomed.  Trump is just too unpredictable for a lot of people, especially women like Babbie.  He’s a nut.

It seems like a while since we had any urban riots or terror attacks.  Probably just a coincidence.  But the relative calm we’re experiencing is helping Clinton, so it may be somehow intentional.  Julian Assange has said that Trump will not be allowed to win the election.  Dark forces may be at work, it seems to me, but that’s just a hunch.

As always, the Philadelphia Democratic machine will steal the election in Pennsylvania.  Voting in black precincts will exceed a 100% turnout.  And all across the rust belt, excepting Ohio, fearful suburban Republican women will counteract angry white working class men.

But the wizards at 538.com now say, for the first time, that Republicans are favored to keep the Senate, barely.  Article V’ers are hoping to flip the Kentucky House, and have a shot in the legislatures of Maine, Minnesota and Washington.  Or we could lose the Colorado Senate, and be faced with another possible rescission.  The fact that the R’s may keep the Senate is a good sign for all down ballot Republicans.

Today is our 45th, and Babbie and I are off to see “Hacksaw Ridge”.  Before I met and married her, I’d seen a fair amount of trouble in my life.  It’s been smooth sailing ever since.  It’s like it was meant to be.

We’re getting what we deserve

Generally speaking, people get the government they deserve.  And the American people are about to get it good and hard.  I’m looking forward to a Clinton Presidency, the same way I look forward to dental surgery.  It will be long and painful, but it’s just something you have to endure.  There will be an end to it, and then the beginning of something new.

I want 2017 to be the start of the Insurrection of the States.  To my mind, the timing is perfect.  Things have gone terribly wrong in this country, and they’re going to keep getting worse.  If the last line of American freedom’s defense, its 7,382 State Legislators, don’t step up and perform their duty now, they probably never will.  If not now, when?  If not us, who?

I know Trump could still win.  Nate Silver gives him a one in three shot, and he knows his business.  But the last shoe just dropped, and James Comey did the Democrats a favor.  Now, at least, we won’t be electing a President under investigation by the FBI.  It’s something.

I’m fairly confident Speaker Ryan will be ineffective in opposition.  He wants to govern, he wants regular order, he wants to work with the President, to compromise.  He’ll do his best, but it won’t be much.  The institution he leads, Congress, is corrupt.  The next Congress will be the same as the last  — feckless, unwilling to fight.

Everybody’s going to be unhappy for the next four years.  Nothing will get done.  We may manage to kick the can down the road, and avoid economic disaster.  I hope so, but that’s the best we can hope for, and it will be a close run thing.

And while all this is going on in Washington, Republican Governors and State Legislators will be governing the States effectively.  They have a lot of problems, but they’ll work through them.  These men and women are, by and large, not corrupt, and are patriotic Americans.  What a contrast to D.C.

Walter Russell Mead thinks “the blue model” is on its last legs, and can’t last much longer.  Tax, tax, tax, spend, spend, spend, elect, elect elect.  It only works for so long, and I think Mead is right, it can’t last much longer.  Detroit was for openers.  Illinois may be next.  Things may get ugly, as all the bills come due.

Never in my long life, and, never, in my opinion, in American history have been conditions so ripe for a revolt against the Center.  People hate Washington and everybody in it.  This is not just from the right.  The young Sanders supporters, like my acquaintance Ryan Clayton of the Young Turks, hate Washington as much as I do.  These liberal idealists want to use Article V against Washington the same way we do.  They want an Article V Convention to propose a campaign finance reform Amendment to the Constitution.  They’ve got Resolutions from five States, Vermont, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Illinois and California.  All these very liberal Democratic State Legislators have embraced the use, by the States, of Article V to reform the federal government.  Somehow, in the next couple years, we’ll all find something we can work on together.  Wolf-pac wants to overturn Citizens United, and that’s a non-starter.  But campaign finance reform, in general terms, has huge public support.   We just have to find a way to do it without violating the First Amendment.  Maybe there’s a way.

What I’m getting at is that the news from Washington in 2017 is going to be very depressing.  People will ask, Is this the best we can do?  Isn’t there a better way?  And all the while, the battle goes on, State by State, for the first exercise of the Article V power in American history.   At some point, you’d think people would notice.

That should start happening at the end of the month.  Stay tuned.

 

Who guards the guardians?

The guardians of the Constitution are the States, acting through their State Legislatures.  They are given the ultimate authority.  If they wanted, they could abolish the Constitution, and start over.  The only thing they can’t do is reduce the equal suffrage of the States in the upper chamber of the federal legislature.

Since the power of the States is essentially unlimited under Article V, there is fear that an Article V Convention would “run away”, that is, exceed the scope of its call.  Our fundamental freedoms under the Bill of Rights could theoretically be eliminated.  An Amendment Convention called for the sole and exclusive purpose of proposing a Balanced Budget Amendment might decide that it wanted to do something else besides.

In which case Congress would be within its rights to refuse to specify how such proposed Amendments would be ratified.  Until Congress does this, the process of Amendment under Article V is brought to a halt.  Further, of course, is the difficulty of getting 38 States to ratify such Amendments.  All it takes to stop an Amendment is one chamber of a State Legislature in 13 States.  With Amendments to the Constitution, many are called, and few are chosen.

Another reason this runaway scenario is so fanciful is the composition of the people with the power, the 7,382 members of our State Legislatures.  I was one for eight years in Alaska, and over the last three years, working with the BBA Task Force, I’ve met hundreds of them, all across the country.  With some exceptions, like California, they’re not professional politicians, and have no desire to become one.  They’re citizen legislators, most of whom make a financial sacrifice in order to serve.  Unlike Congress, few of them are lawyers.  There’s no money in it, unless you’re corrupt, and few are.

A State Legislator is an elected community leader, and it’s considered a great honor.  Your friends and neighbors want you to go to the State Capitol and represent them.  Many of them are personally acquainted with you.  In places like Maine and New Hampshire the number of voters in a State House District is tiny, maybe 10,000.  As a State Senator in Alaska, I had about 50,000 people in my district.  It was where I lived, earned a living, and sent my kids to school.  I was never a very sociable person, but Babbie made a lot of friends, and  we were just members of the community.  If you wanted to ask me a question at the grocery store, I’d be happy to answer, though in my case nobody ever did.  Most State Legislative sessions only last a few months, so you’re living at home in the district almost the whole year.  You’ll answer your own phone, and arrange to meet with anyone in your district on legislative business.  A State Legislator is accountable, unlike a Congressman.

With few exceptions, these people are nothing to be afraid of, especially when about 60% of them are Republicans, and most of those are conservatives.  These are the people who care about where this country is heading, and prove it by running for office.  More than the average citizen, they understand the importance of the Constitution, which every one of them has taken an oath to uphold.  A lot of them take that oath seriously.

So the answer to the question, who guards the Guardians?, is simple.  The people who live in their community.  The answer is, you.  If my State Representative starts messing with the Bill of Rights, he’ll hear from me, face to face.  And I’m not alone.

The crazy thing is, the Guardians are afraid of each other.  Bill Fruth and I have run into this time and time again.  “We’re OK here in Utah, but how about all those other guys?”  I’d tell them that those other guys were a lot like them, but they didn’t believe me.

Fruth and I have finally figured out how to deal with this problem, and it’s why I go into 2017 with such complete confidence.  I’ve always known the Great American Eclipse in August of next year would be somehow symbolic.   Now I’ve figured out how.  The impact of the first use of Article V in our history, to save the Constitution, marks a turning point in our political history, a new beginning.  We’re going to restore our Constitutional form of government, one Amendment Convention at a time.

It starts in 2017.

It’s never over

Starting next Wednesday the final push to 34 States begins in earnest.   Regardless of the election, this year we’re going to pull it off.  After years of preparation, in 2017 we harvest the fruits of our labors.

Article V is easy to explain, but hard to fully appreciate.  For a hundred years the size and scope of the federal government has grown, so that it now has a virtual monopoly of political power, the States reduced to the status of administrative units of the Center.  Together, the Congress, the Supreme Court, and Presidents of both parties have grown the central government, gutted the Constitution, and imposed their will on the American people.  Winning elections, even with a man like Reagan, didn’t make much difference.  Since Newt Gingrich resigned as Speaker, Congress,  regardless of which party was in control, has only made things worse.  Things just get worse quicker under the Democrats.  Big money runs Congress, and that’s not going to change.  Our political system is broken, as shown by the two Presidential nominees it has produced.

The answer to all these problems is Article V, which is nothing more than the States exercising their prerogative of asserting their authority over the federal government.  It’s never been done before.  Very few people are aware that the States have this power, which is virtually unlimited.  The people who are charged with exercising this authority are the 7, 382 members of our State Legislatures.  Most of them, the large majority, have no idea that they have this vital responsibility.  They are the last line of defense of the Constitution, and they don’t even know it.

It takes time to educate them, but they are capable of learning.  In the spring of 2014 the Reagan Project, supported by Lew Uhler’s National Tax Limitation Committee, sent pledge letters to all Republican legislative candidates in Wyoming, right after the filing deadline to run.  I got seven back, two of whom won their primary, and then the general.  Bill Fruth and I each made several trips to Wyoming to lobby the legislators.  We lost on the Senate floor in 2015.  We lost on the House floor in 2016.  But now, with Loren Enns doing the groundwork, and with Eli Bebout as Senate President, all the ducks are in line.  We switched sponsors in 2015, and that was a mistake.  We’re back with Rep. Tyler Lindholm as our prime sponsor, aided by his sidekick, Rep. Dan Laursen.  Wyoming convenes on Jan. 10th.  It should be our 29th State by the first week of February.

Idaho should follow shortly thereafter, then Arizona and Wisconsin, getting us to 32 by the beginning of March.  At that point the fight is on for Montana, South Carolina, and then Kentucky (if the Republicans pick up the House, which all signs point to).  We’d be at 35, meaning a rescission in Maryland wouldn’t stop us.  And we may have gained so much momentum, and publicity, that the Democrats in Maryland might be reluctant to stick their political necks out by stopping a drive to a federal Balanced Budget Amendment.

While all this is happening at the State level, the new administration will be assuming power in Washington.  Cabinet members must be chosen, and confirmed.  There will be a lot of sturm und drang, but nothing will be getting done.  Congress is dysfunctional.  It’s paralyzed by the special interests, or factions, which finance political campaigns.  At the same time as Congress is once again is demonstrating its futility, the States will be organizing to take power away from it, to bring it back to the States, and the people.

The Balanced Budget Amendment is just for openers.  The Second Amendment Convention, should, in my view, should be called for the sole purpose of passing one Amendment.  Call it the Federalist Amendment.  It gives 30 State Legislatures the power to repeal or overturn any federal law or regulation.   It would give the States veto power.  It would change everything.

The Third Amendment Convention?  I say Congressional term limits, but who knows?   Those 7,382 State Legislators will decide what happens.  Acting together, they are the sovereigns of this country.  If they only knew, and now they will.