The Left believes that the West has to be punished for its historic sins. That's the animating principle behind their policy agenda.
Don't believe us? We'll show you. 🧵 (1/15)
In 1927, the economist Ludwig Von Mises coined the term the "Fourier complex": A "pathological mental attitude" in which "one so hates somebody for his more favorable circumstances that one is prepared to bear heavy losses if only the hated one might also come to harm." (2/15)
This is the impulse lurking beneath the surface of the entire left-wing program today. All the nice-sounding buzzwords—"justice," "human rights," "equality," etc—are just rhetorical window dressing.
The Left's fundamental conviction is that the West deserves to suffer. (3/15)
One of the most obvious recent examples of this is the rise of "land acknowledgments."
On college campuses and in other left-wing spaces across the country, it's now fashionable to begin events by acknowledging that "we're standing on stolen land." (4/15)
The ritual is a symbolic form of delegitimization, aimed at undermining the idea that the United States has a right to exist.
That premise—that we are committing a moral crime simply by existing—underpins the way the Left thinks.
The clearest example is immigration. (5/15)
The conviction that America has no moral right to enforce its borders is evident in the Left's bumper-sticker slogans:
"No one is illegal on stolen land"
"We didn’t cross the border, the border crossed us"
"European settlers were the first illegal immigrants"
And so on. (6/15)
But it's not just activist sloganeering—it's a ubiquitous feature of left-wing discourse. They see immigration as an act of cosmic justice—against America, on behalf of the Third World.
They're open about it. This is from a 2017 essay on immigration in Foreign Affairs: (7/15)
Or here: When the left-wing activist-intellectual Harsha Walia—who founded the "migrant justice" group No One Is Illegal—told the Guardian that "migration is a form of reparations."
It's not that it's good for America; it's that it's a payment we owe to the Global South. (8/15)
Reparations itself is one of the most brazen expressions of this phenomenon. Sure, they want the money. But really, it's about punishing America. That's what "justice" means, to them.
Ta Nehisi-Coates said as much in his famous 2014 essay, "The Case for Reparations." (9/15)
The same is true of the war on American heritage: The 1619 Project seeks to replace 1776. "Indigenous People’s Day" seeks to replace Columbus Day. Juneteenth seeks to replace July 4.
It's the "vengeance of the oppressed"—replacing our symbols and traditions with theirs. (10/15)
Again, you don't have to look very far to hear them say this.
"The statue represents patriarchy, oppression and divisiveness," the mayor of Columbus, Ohio said when his city took down their Columbus statue in 2020. "We will no longer live in the shadow of our ugly past." (11/15)
Even the war on the police is rooted in the desire for retribution.
In 2020, Rep. James Clyburn claimed that "policing itself started out as slave patrols."
Of course, that wasn't true. But it didn't matter. Police are a relic of our past—a past that must be eradicated. (12/15)
In fact, the entire discussion of crime is connected to this attitude.
In 2020, San Francisco passed the CAREN Act, which made it a hate crime to make a "racially motivated" 911 call against a black person "without reasonable suspicion of a crime."
"Karen." Get it? (13/15)
The way the Left talks about crime, policing, and prisons is underpinned by the idea that concerns about crime are a function of "whiteness"—and thus illegitimate.
Of course, that's absurd. But defunding the police and emptying the prisons are another form of revenge. (14/15)
So much of the Left's agenda is essentially a settling of the civilizational score—a way of exacting revenge against the West, on behalf of the groups it has ostensibly "oppressed."
That's what it boils down to. Everything ends up being a form of reparations. (15/15)
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The Inflation Reduction Act spent $2.2 billion on reparation-style payments for minority farmers.
The payments went out last week.
Biden promised to "embed equity" at every level of government. Now, he's following through.
Do you know where your tax money is going? (1/9)
The Biden-Harris administration originally wanted to simply funnel $4 billion directly to black and minority farmers — explicitly discriminating against whites.
But that effort stalled out in the face of lawsuits from white farmers.
So they had to get creative. (2/9)
Instead of explicitly awarding tax dollars on the basis of race, Democrats tucked a "Discrimination Financial Assistance Program" into the Inflation Reduction Act.
Under the new rule, farmers could receive cash if they "experienced discrimination" prior to 2021. (3/9)
In his first public appearance in weeks, Joe Biden called for radical reforms to the Supreme Court—including term limits for judges.
This is why the Left wins. They're relentless. They never stop pressing their advantage.
Their war against the Court is a perfect example. (1/9)
The Left's arguments on this issue are always just a means to an end. There is no actual argument for packing the Supreme Court, for example. The Left barely even tries to pretend otherwise.
They want to "reform" the Court because they don't control it. That's it. (2/9)
The fact that they’re renewing calls to "expand the Court" now gives the game away. Why are they calling for it now? Not because of some well-reasoned, altruistic philosophical argument, but because the Court delivered a ruling that conflicts with their partisan interests. (3/9)
This is a lesson on how the media shapes our politics.
The press wanted Biden out. So they gave him the Trump treatment—burying him in an onslaught of negative news.
In a few weeks, he caved.
Now, the focus is changing once again. They've shifted back to the real enemy. (1/9)
For the brief period of time that the press was arrayed against Biden, everything seemed to suddenly come into place for Republicans. They were elated. The wind was in their sails. Victory seemed to be inevitable.
Biden was isolated—under siege. Trump had all the momentum. (2/9)
But many Republicans didn't fully realize why. Yes, Biden was a terrible candidate. Yes, Trump had just survived an attempt on his life.
But the through-line in all this was that the press was suddenly treating Trump better than they ever had before—or ever would again. (3/9)
The GOP has tried to do this for years. It never works.
Conservatives are supposed to be tough on crime. We should be hitting Kamala from the right—not the left.
We'll show you why. 🧵 (1/12)
A lot of conservative influencers are parroting the line that Kamala "locked up" too many criminals—originally a far-left attack on her in the 2020 Democratic primaries.
This is bad politics and bad policy. And it betrays our own base on one of our strongest issues. (2/12)
First of all, you can't mock left-wing "identity politics" and then complain about Kamala locking up "black men." As D.A., she prosecuted criminals of every race. Exclusively making it about black people plays into all kinds of bogus left-wing narratives about racism. (3/12)
If you think this view is fringe or unusual on the Left, you're wrong.
This is their view of the family. They don't believe that children belong to their parents.
Every once in a while, the mask slips—and they actually say it out loud. 🧵 (1/9)
The clip that @MikeBenzCyber posted is from a 2013 MSNBC commercial, in which one of their hosts blasted the idea that "your kid is yours, and totally your responsibility," and called for an end to "our kind of private idea that kids belong to their parents." (2/9)
But that's not the only time the Left has voiced this idea. This is a 2021 Washington Post piece, written by two education-policy elites.
"To turn over all decisions to parents," they write, "would risk inhibiting the ability of young people to think independently." (3/9)
The era of the pro-Wall Street Republican is over.
We need a conservatism that speaks for our nation and our people—not for the paychecks of rich CEOs.
The old conservatism failed. It failed our workers. It failed our families. And it failed our country.
Here's why. 🧵 (1/17)
For decades, the conservative movement's economic philosophy has been that "the business of America is business"—i.e., what's good for big business is good for America. (And vice versa).
This was never quite true. But it was much more true 50 years ago than it is today. (2/17)
The old conservative bumper-sticker slogans claimed that "Wall Street creates wealth."
But...wealth for who? Over the past 40 years, the growth rate of household income in the top quintile of earners has been 3-4X faster than in the middle class. (3/17)