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JANUARY 17, 2021

WE THE PEOPLE RADIO

Hour 1 WE THE PEOPLE RADIO Hour 2 WE THE PEOPLE RADIO

"Capitol Hill Update"

U.S. Congressman Doug La Malfa

"A Critical Response to the 1619 Project"

Peter Wood - President of the National Association of Scholars

Doug LaMalfa is a fourth generation rice farmer and business owner who has lived in Northern California all his life. Doug attended local schools and grew up learning the value of hard work and community service. Doug earned his degree in Ag/Business from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. He now manages the family farming business originally founded by his great-grandfather in 1931.

Doug is a strong voice for the North State’s agriculture and resources based economy and for the first district’s farms and businesses.

A conservative leader, Doug LaMalfa has opposed increasing taxes and is a stalwart defender of California’s Proposition 13. With a proven record of fighting on behalf of working families, Doug believes that taxpayers know better than bureaucrats and politicians how to spend and invest their own hard-earned money.

Doug is a strong supporter of private property rights and the author of a Constitutional Amendment to protect Californians against eminent domain abuse.

Water is the North State’s most precious natural resource and Doug LaMalfa believes in protecting our water rights and developing more water storage. He has continually advocated for increasing California’s water supply, supporting planned projects such as Sites Reservoir and the Auburn Dam. Doug has been a leader in opposing burdensome environmental regulations that place fairy shrimp and fish ahead of human needs.

Agriculture and Forestry have been the backbone of northern California’s economy for generations and Doug LaMalfa has made it a priority to educate his fellow Representatives on the importance of resource industries and the beneficial stewardship they provide. Doug successfully authored and passed California’s Forest Fire Protection Act of 2004 to allow landowners to make their rural lands fire-safe.

Doug LaMalfa’s firm beliefs are that government should do no harm and that limited government means government should do only what people cannot do for themselves, in the most efficient manner possible.

Here is the 2019 calendar for the House of Representatives.  The blacked out dates are when they are scheduled to be in session.  

 

Note the volume of time in session as compared to the calendar below for the current session in 2021.

 

The comparison with 2021 is good news for those who love liberty!

 

Here is the 2021 calendar for the House of Representatives.  The blacked out dates are when they are scheduled to be in session.  

 

Note the volume of time in session as compared to the calendar above from 2019.

This calendar says that Pelosi doesn't think she can get much through the House this session!!  Very good news indeed ;-)

 

Unscambling the confusion of the year end vote that was a lot more than just a COVID relief bill

From the desk of Congressman Doug LaMalfa December 24, 2020

Greetings. I hope this finds you well during this Christmas holiday season.  

There is a lot of confusion and legitimate consternation about the bills passed by Congress last Monday.  I wanted to take this opportunity to clarify much of the information and false hype surrounding the bills I supported just before Christmas. I hope you will read all the information below and contemplate each bit as my staff and I worked through a large and complex set of information to make a more bite sized format for our constituents in this Republic, and that I haven’t gone off the rails in my own thinking that I have represented in standing for election.

It was in fact many bills, our annual federal operations bill, a completely separate coronavirus aid bill, and dozens of leftover bi-partisan bills that were already approved earlier in the year by either the House or Senate, but not finished. The Senate forced these bills to be considered together to make passage quicker but they, as I said, were several different bills rolled into one. This has helped add to the confusion and frustration the public has right now. The coronavirus portion has been part of start-and-stop negotiations that began in May. Yes, May. Speaker Pelosi has held up aid for partisan purposes repeatedly as the November election was looming, seeking a gargantuan $3.5 trillion bill via the so-called Heroes Act. That bill was a Democrat wish-list that had little to do with coronavirus effects, and was more costly than the 3 previous virus aid bills combined. Speaker Pelosi has recently openly admitted that she held up passage of a much larger virus spending package before the election. Now a bill at half that price post-election she deems as acceptable, and she has delivered Democrat votes for it. But this was only after Presidential election results that she presumably favors, showing a Biden win.  It could’ve been passed anytime since May instead of the end of December, like cramming for college finals.

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Government actions at all levels, combined with the virus itself, bear much of the blame for causing the financial disaster to families and small businesses across the country. Draconian shutdowns that seem to have no benefit in reducing the spread of the virus, as compared to states who are fully open, are the cause of much of the financial harm families are facing. Amazingly, Operation Warp Speed has produced vaccines, and we see the efforts underway for those who want to receive it to have that timely opportunity.

Now, the annual spending bill, often called the Omnibus, has been in negotiations since the late summer. Congress has been forced to do Continuing Resolutions (CR) to keep things operational since Sep 30, which is the end of the normal fiscal year.  (CRs or temporary budget extensions, freeze as is current budget items and their funding levels whether they are currently relevant or not; in my view an irresponsible way of long-term spending). I’ve been very clear that I view any coronavirus bill as disaster aid, not a vehicle for a long wish-list of other unrelated legislative dreams. So both big bills somewhat coincidentally being done now and lumped together have caused misunderstanding. The Omnibus bill was going to be the Omnibus bill and the Virus disaster bill its own disaster bill. Each was its own but for both being delayed, now lumped together, because of deadlines each faced due to lack of previous ability to find agreement and political dithering. 

Every spending bill Congress takes up is at best a mixed bag. There are two parties in charge of different aspects of government, each with quite differing ideas on how to budget and prioritize. This is all made worse by election year politics, divided government, where big spenders seek to continuously drive appropriations up, and a general divide in this country likely to a level we haven’t seen since the 1860s. However, in this case, President Trump, his negotiators, and Republican Leader McCarthy were able to force the big spenders to follow statutory budget limits that have successfully prevented major spending growth within normal budgeting. Inside those limits there are many items that I support and many items that I oppose in this bill. 

The problem with Washington is that if we do nothing, the spending continues on auto-pilot due to using the Continuing Resolution process. CRs have been in place since Oct 1, (passed October 1st, Dec 11th, Dec 18th, Dec 21st, and Dec 22nd).  Unless we fully shut down the government, which is also destructive and ends up more costly to stop and restart, the government continues to spend automatically on all the of items we might like or others that may be outdated or useless. Our discretion to adjust, reprioritize or eliminate spending, ideally in a public committee hearing process, goes right out the window with more tacked on CRs. Yes, a CR can be ok if Congress is actually budgeting and hearing and listening, but just runs out of time. Perhaps then a temporary CR to buy a couple weeks is ok to finish a good process. Doing no Omnibus bill but instead more long term CRs means we can’t achieve reforms on spending. Plus, we end up costing the American people more than if Congress had planned ahead and passed a real spending plan. When Congress passes continuing resolutions, it means for example, that the military’s needs, such as starting to replace our almost timed-out big boomer submarines or keeping our other weapon systems current as deterrents, as well as major infrastructure construction projects and our highways — these all stall. This just increases costs while delaying completion. Stopping construction on a highway project or housing construction because contractors aren’t getting paid for an unforeseen time, demobilizing equipment and crews to other projects, then calling them back to reopen and restart is a loser for everyone. Or trying to plan the phase-in of the building and procurement of ten new nuclear submarines when the Navy doesn’t know if they will have the proper funding from one month to the next. 

So you ask why support this annual but late appropriations bill? I made that hard ask myself. It includes a lot of things that I dislike, and have legitimate questions on whether we should be spending your tax dollars on such. Much of the overseas spending is under closer scrutiny than ever and deservedly so. Americans are hurting fiscally and in morale. One reality is that overseas spending has been ongoing and is in every budget as part of what the State Department, the President, asks for. His negotiating team, headed by Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin knew full well everything that was in the bill, better than much of Congress until the last minute. Pakistan spending has drawn much ire as a remnant of the ongoing war, capturing Osama Bin Laden, and trying to leave Pakistan with some stability. Whether all of this worked is a subject of its own long debate. Spending there has gone down dramatically, especially during Trump years and will continue to decrease. Let’s remember too, that under a CR, the levels of spending don’t change. Here we were able to decrease it and move it elsewhere. (See the Pakistan aid table).

The Omnibus appropriations bill also does cast some of President Trump’s much needed reforms in stone for an additional year, which may not happen after January. It provides new funds for continued border wall construction, $1.375B, and protects Trump’s authority to use military and homeland security funds to build the wall. It prioritizes national defense and rebuilding our military after nearly 20 years of combat by building missile defense, new F35 fighters, additional warships and giving our men and women in uniform the needed raise we’ve been trying to finish for months. This appropriation bill also legislatively takes back $934 million for California’s High Speed Rail fiasco (something I’ve been working to eliminate for years).  This bill reduces foreign aid below 2017/18 spending and is with minor adjustments what President Trump asked Congress for in his annual budget request. Again, none of this would happen under a CR or likely wouldn’t under a Biden administration. One should thoughtfully ask before eliminating foreign aid, as many are calling for, what was its purpose and benefit to the US position to begin with? Trade? foreign military bases? Helping small flare ups in distant lands to not become big ones that affect our commerce, security, or increase terror activity? Or even cause our men and women in the military to have to be placed in harm’s way? Or now is some of this aid outdated, frivolous and not beneficial (See Foreign Aid Spending table).

This bill locks in the important pro-life protections both at home and abroad that President Trump and many of us have championed. In fact, this bill has a strict funding prohibition on any taxpayer funds to Planned Parenthood — a major win. It also bars the government from funding anti-second amendment activism and policies, something that will be important should Trump’s legal and political efforts on the election fail.  With this bill in place, Trump’s policies continue even under a Biden administration and Speaker Pelosi.

I had to make a judgement if this bill is somehow better than continuing the status quo of last year’s bill that includes much of the pork that I think is inappropriate and insulting. Had Congress passed another Continuing Resolution instead, money would still be heading overseas in foreign aid in the exact same amount as last year.  Given that it’s the same overall spending level, and this bill moves funds to more urgent priorities that help the country and the North State, like Sites Reservoir, forest thinning and firefighting, additional flood control, rural broadband, help for family farmers and ranchers, and funds better veterans care, it’s better than last year’s plan in those ways. Importantly, this bill protects law enforcement by ensuring full funding to federal, state and local police and ends the Democrats’ defunding of police efforts that they pushed in appropriations bills over the summer. It also provides needed enforcement against illegal immigration. I encourage you to go to my website and see the long list of policy wins in this bill, including eliminating surprise medical billing that has harmed so many families.

There is also much to dislike in these combined bills. I could have voted No, and I strongly considered it. To me the $600 checks ARE inadequate… compared to a strong and free economy and full employment. The program funds $166 billion to kick out these $600 checks. I don’t think government borrowing double that to produce poorly targeted $1200 checks like last time, or perhaps more than tripling it to do $2000 checks, is an efficient or effective method of getting us back to where we need to be economically and as a free country. We will still have upcoming debate on that. I also want to make clear, there is no money in the Coronavirus aid bill for illegal immigrants, despite some saying there is.  I reviewed all of the language in advance, only citizens with valid social security numbers will receive checks, It’s still flawed but is tighter than when $1200 checks were flying out of DC. Also, despite what you may have read on social media, this bill specifically bars members of Congress from receiving raises. Most of the many pages of the large Omnibus bill had already been available in pieces to anyone- the separate, more routine, legislative bills had already passed bipartisanly in one house or another. The spending portion was debated in the summer, with some changes during the last minute but it all was agreed upon by the White House, Senate and House leaders and negotiating teams. Or there wouldn’t have been a vote at all until such an agreement by all sides. It’s still not an attractive process the way it all came together.

 

Omnibus Budget 1822 pages or 33%

Coronavirus Aid, 646 pages or 11%

Other Legislative Bills, 3125 pages or 56%


I hope those that typically agree with my views can see my logic within this strained environment. Those that are my detractors are never happy with my decisions and will criticize anything I do anyway. Perhaps future elections can cause more elected officials to be in charge who agree with what we are all dissatisfied with here. A strong majority that has the will to bring common sense to the negotiations and then vote to get this stuff out instead of splitting hairs, or, just paralyzing everything. A bill under a Republican House majority would’ve looked much different by eliminating many of those wasteful items. All of this legislation should have and could have been done separately and much earlier, but politics and gridlock got in the way. Negotiations with a Biden administration would be that much more difficult and costly. I ask you to look at my comparison graphics included here and decide if we did what we could in a Speaker Pelosi run House, during an extremely costly pandemic and a clouded election. I always will be straight with you and try to do what you would if you were standing in my boots with what I know at that time. Thank you for reading and your consideration, please pass it on to a friend!

Fiscal Year spending package for 2021
Most people thought that the budget gave everything to the Democrats. I think you'll find that isn't actually true if you look through this overview from the Appropriations Committee
2020 Final FY21 Package Overview.pdf
Adobe Acrobat document [439.2 KB]

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"A Critical Response to the 1619 Project"

Peter Wood  President of the National Association of Scholars

WE THE PEOPLE RADIO

About Peter Wood


Peter Wood is the president of the National Association of Scholars and author of the new book, 1620: A Critical Response to the 1619 Project.  A former professor of anthropology and college provost, he is the author of several books about American culture, including Diversity: The Invention of a Concept (2003) and A Bee in the Mouth: Anger in America Now (2007).

Wood is a frequent media guest who has appeared on major radio and television programs nationwide.  He is the editor in chief of the journal Academic Questions and a widely published essayist.  In 2019, he received the Jeane Kirkpatrick Prize for contributions to academic freedom.  He is based in New York City.

 

1620  A Critical Response to the 1619 Project

By Peter W. Wood

Washington, DC—When and where was America founded?  Was it in Virginia in 1619, when a pirate ship landed a group of captive Africans at Jamestown?  So asserted the New York Times in August 2019 when it announced its 1619 Project.  The New York Times set out to transform history by tracing American institutions, culture, and prosperity to that pirate ship and the exploitation of African Americans that followed.  A controversy erupted, with historians pushing back against what they say is a false narrative conjured out of racial grievance.

In 1620: A Critical Response to the 1619 Project (Encounter Books, November 17, 2020), Peter Wood—president of the National Association of Scholars—analyzes what the critics have said and argues that the proper starting point for the American story is 1620, with the signing of the Mayflower Compact aboard ship before the Pilgrims set foot in the Massachusetts wilderness.  A nation as complex as ours, of course, has many starting points, most notably the Declaration of Independence in 1776.  But if we want to understand where the quintessential ideas of self-government and ordered liberty came from, the deliberate actions of the Mayflower immigrants in 1620 count much more than the near accidental arrival in Virginia fifteen months earlier of a slave ship commandeered by English pirates.

Peter Wood contends that the 1619 Project’s attempt to “reframe” American history is “part of a larger effort to destroy America by people who find our nation unbearably bad.  The project treats the founding principles of our nation as an illusion—a contemptible illusion.  In their place is a single idea: that America was founded on racist exploitation.  The form of this racist exploitation has shifted from time to time, from chattel slavery to freemarket mechanisms, but its character has not changed at all.  There is no American history as such, but only an eternal present consisting of white supremacy and black suffering.  The 1619 Project thus consists of an effort to destroy America by teaching children that America never really existed, except as a lie told by white people in an effort to control black people.  It eradicates American history and American values in one sweep.”

Despite the 1619 Project’s sloppiness with the facts, indefensible historical interpretations, and agenda of stoking racial grievance, it has been a popular success.  As 1620 notes, “Nikole Hannah-Jones, the architect of the 1619 Project and author of its lead essay, went on a nationwide speaking tour and was met by friendly audiences.  The Times not only heavily advertised the project, it seeded themes from the project in hundreds of news stories and columns.  It added a podcast devoted to the project, and it used its weekly online newsletter, “Race/Related,” to stoke the fire.  Given the Times’ status as the nation’s “newspaper of record” and the lodestar for other news organizations, 1619 Project themes and conceits began to appear everywhere in the nation’s press, with or without explicit mention of the project itself.”  Hannah-Jones even “won a Pulitzer Prize for the 1619 Project; and she proudly accepted the term ‘the 1619 Riots’ as the name for the orgy of destruction that followed the death of George Floyd in police custody.”

To what extent are the heightened racial tensions, destruction of historical monuments, and riots that tore through American cities in 2020 related to the racial grievances fomented by the 1619 Project?  As 1620 argues, “making slavery the distinguishing aspect of American history creates an unbridgeable divide between blacks and whites.  If the 1619 Project succeeds, it would revitalize racial antagonism—in both directions.  It would also infantilize black Americans by teaching them that nothing they have ever done has changed their oppressed status one bit.  The 1619 Project teaches that they have no friends or allies, and must rely only on themselves.  The practical effects will in the short run be more affirmative action; in the longer run, reparations; and in the longest run, a version of racial separation promoted by black activists such as we now see at our universities.”

Schools across the country have already adopted the Times’ radical revision of history as part of their curricula.  The stakes are high.  Should children be taught that our nation is a four-hundred-year-old system of racist oppression?  Or should we teach children that what has always made America exceptional is its pursuit of liberty and justice for all?

 

To arrange an interview with 1620 author Peter Wood, please contact Stephen Manfredi at 202.222.8028 or smanfredi@ManfrediStrategyGroup.com.

 

10 Interview Questions
for 1620 Author Peter Wood
To Learn More About 1620, visit www.EncounterBooks.com

  1. Why did you write 1620: A Critical Response to the 1619 Project?

  2. What is the 1619 Project?  Why did the New York Times launch and heavily promote its effort to “reframe” American history?  Is this an unusual endeavor for a newspaper?

  3. In 1620, you contend that the 1619 Project is “part of a larger effort to destroy America by people who find our nation unbearably bad.  The project treats the founding principles of our nation as an illusion—a contemptible illusion.  In their place is a single idea: that America was founded on racist exploitation.  The form of this racist exploitation has shifted from time to time, from chattel slavery to freemarket mechanisms, but its character has not changed at all.  There is no American history as such, but only an eternal present consisting of white supremacy and black suffering.  The 1619 Project thus consists of an effort to destroy America by teaching children that America never really existed, except as a lie told by white people in an effort to control black people.  It eradicates American history and American values in one sweep.”  Please explain.

  4. 1620 methodically chronicles the 1619 Project’s sloppiness with the facts, indefensible historical interpretations, and agenda of stoking racial grievance.  How have historians reacted to the 1619 Project and its inaccuracies?  Why is “fake history” even more dangerous than “fake news”?

  5. What impact has the 1619 Project had on the broader media landscape and America?  Why has it been such a popular success?  Is the 1619 Project inherently political?

  6. Why do you contend that the proper starting point for the American story is 1620 with the signing of the Mayflower Compact aboard ship before the Pilgrims set foot in the Massachusetts wilderness—not the landing of a pirate ship with captive Africans at Jamestown in 1619?  What about 1492?  What about 1776?

  7. In 1620, you argue that making slavery the distinguishing aspect of American history creates an unbridgeable divide between blacks and whites while fomenting racial antagonism.  To what extent are the heightened racial tensions, destruction of historical monuments, and riots that tore through American cities in 2020 related to the racial grievances fomented by the 1619 Project?  Why do you think 1619 Project architect Nikole Hannah-Jones proudly accepted the term “the 1619 Riots” as the name for the orgy of destruction that followed the death of George Floyd?

  8. In practical terms, how is America endangered by the 1619 Project’s success?  How are black Americans, in particular, harmed by the 1619 Project’s focus on racial oppression?

  9. How is the 1619 Project currently being used in American schools?  What impact will using the 1619 Project as school curriculum have on our nation?  What are some more effective ways of including the history of slavery and racism without replacing traditional conceptions of American history with a history refracted through the lens of black identity politics?

  10. What can the average citizen do to fight back against the 1619 Project’s radical revision of history, and make sure we teach children that what has always made America exceptional is the pursuit of liberty and justice for all?