Governing by feelings has proven deadly                                                             
6

May 19, 2020

Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.

Political correctness is the real Chinese virus
Political correctness usually just seems silly or at worst a little crazy, but in the case of the Chinese-originated virus, the worldwide virtue signaling has become worse than dangerous; it has become deadly. Dario Nardella, the mayor of Florence, Italy, made a bold and disastrous stand for “inclusion” on February 1, immediately following President Trump’s decision to stop all inbound flights from China. According to the Global Times, Nardella “initiated ‘hug a Chinese’ on Twitter on Feb 1, opposing anger toward China amid the #nCoV2019 outbreak, and calling for ‘Unity in this common battle!.” The results were beyond tragic as Italy became synonymous with the spread of the virus, with health facilities in northern cities rapidly becoming overwhelmed. The politically correct embrace of Chinese travelers doomed the region. As a result, many of the cases that showed up in the United States were from people infected in Italy due to virus virtue-signaling. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo ran with the politically correct, pro-China line with his absurd attempt to identify the Chinese virus as a “European virus.” This is akin to claiming that gunpowder or noodles originated in Italy rather than recognizing that Marco Polo brought them from China in the late 13th century. In Cuomo’s politically correct world, however, blaming Italy is far better than agreeing with President Trump who isolated China early, while Europe opened its borders to viral visitors.

Cartoon: Wish List
They’re calling it a cure.

Video: North Carolina businessman wants his state reopened, thinks Trump is right guy for economic recovery
Scott May works in technology sales in Apex, NC. He says he thinks Trump is the right guy to turn the economy around. For now, he just wants to see North Carolina hurry up with its reopening.

Jim DeMint: I’ve changed my mind about China. America should too.
“When President Bush asked my support to establish freer trade with China—a poor nation of a billion people, long oppressed by a violent communist regime—I won't say the vote was easy, but it seemed like the right thing to do. I believed that trade would stabilize China's economy and improve their abysmal politics. Freedom is contagious! I had great hopes not only for the jobs and wealth that would come to America by opening China's huge new market, but the benefits that normalized trade would have for human rights, political freedoms and international security for the Chinese people. I believed free and fair trade with China would be a win-win for everyone. I was right about free trade, but wrong about it being fair. And I was wrong about China.”


Political correctness is the real Chinese virus

6

 

By Rick Manning

Political correctness usually just seems silly or at worst a little crazy, but in the case of the Chinese-originated virus, the worldwide virtue signaling has become worse than dangerous; it has become deadly.

Dario Nardella, the mayor of Florence, Italy, made a bold and disastrous stand for “inclusion” on February 1, immediately following President Trump’s decision to stop all inbound flights from China. According to the Global Times, Nardella “initiated ‘hug a Chinese’ on Twitter on Feb 1, opposing anger toward China amid the #nCoV2019 outbreak, and calling for ‘Unity in this common battle!.”

The results were beyond tragic as Italy became synonymous with the spread of the virus, with health facilities in northern cities rapidly becoming overwhelmed. The politically correct embrace of Chinese travelers doomed the region. As a result, many of the cases that showed up in the United States were from people infected in Italy due to virus virtue-signaling.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo ran with the politically correct, pro-China line with his absurd attempt to identify the Chinese virus as a “European virus.” This is akin to claiming that gunpowder or noodles originated in Italy rather than recognizing that Marco Polo brought them from China in the late 13th century. In Cuomo’s politically correct world, however, blaming Italy is far better than agreeing with President Trump who isolated China early, while Europe opened its borders to viral visitors.

Cuomo’s blame-shifting followed the tainted governor’s obscene decision on March 20 to issue a mandate that New York state nursing homes had to accept virus-infected patients. Everyone in America knew that keeping the virus out of our nation’s senior care system was critical as this population was most likely to die if infected with the virus. We watched in horror in February as deaths mounted in just one Washington state nursing home, and in early March, Cuomo insisted he was taking action in order to protect seniors by heeding the president’s call.

Instead, in what can only be called political correctness run wild, Cuomo signed death warrants for thousands of elderly New Yorkers by injecting the virus directly into where they lived.

In case you think this is hyperbole, the Kaiser Family Foundation notes that of the 14 states it has studied, fully half of all the COVID-19 deaths have occurred in nursing homes. One-half, and the media darling Cuomo forced officials in his state to let the virus loose in virtually every nursing home there.

Any questions why New York accounts for one-third of all the deaths from the virus in the United States?

Even more incredible, this insane policy is contained in Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s latest stimulus bill, where the House Democrats now want to incentivize senior care facilities to accept virus-infected patients.

Given the spread of the politically correct idea to infuse COVID-19 patients into senior health facilities so as to not treat them as lepers, as well as the push to negate China’s culpability for the virus itself, it is clear that political correctness is the most dangerous part of the entire government response to the plague unleashed upon the world from Wuhan, China.

Rick Manning is the President of Americans for Limited Government.

To view online: https://amgreatness.com/2020/05/18/political-correctness-is-the-real-chinese-virus/


Cartoon: Wish List

By A.F. Branco

6

 

Click here for a higher level resolution version.


North Carolina businessman wants his state reopened, thinks Trump is right guy for economic recovery

6

 

To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQt2birpfrY


toohotnottonote5.PNG

ALG Editor’s Note: In the following featured oped from Newsweek.com, former Sen. Jim Demint (R-S.C.) admits he was wrong about China for years:

newsweek logo.png

I’ve changed my mind about China. America should too.

By Jim DeMint

It was the year 2001 and I was a second-term U.S. congressman from South Carolina. Opening trade with China was the top priority of Republican President George Bush. The pressure was on Republicans in Congress to support his initiative to give China permanent most favored nation status and allow it to join the World Trade Organization.

It was a tough political decision for me, but it was one that was consistent with my principles. My district was full of anti-trade textile workers, but I was then—and remain today—an avid believer in the power of free enterprise, free markets and free trade. But I was no "globalist," was always a hawk on illegal immigration and was skeptical of what George Washington called "entangling foreign alliances."

Free trade, to me, never meant open borders or one-sided trade agreements. "Free trade" simply means expanding the benefits of free enterprise and free markets to nations and people who have too long been denied it. Free enterprise is why America is rich, strong and secure. Extending market freedoms and opportunities beyond our borders will expand prosperity in America and around the world.

When President Bush asked my support to establish freer trade with China—a poor nation of a billion people, long oppressed by a violent communist regime—I won't say the vote was easy, but it seemed like the right thing to do. I believed that trade would stabilize China's economy and improve their abysmal politics. Freedom is contagious! I had great hopes not only for the jobs and wealth that would come to America by opening China's huge new market, but the benefits that normalized trade would have for human rights, political freedoms and international security for the Chinese people. I believed free and fair trade with China would be a win-win for everyone.

I was right about free trade, but wrong about it being fair. And I was wrong about China.

The United States invited China into the global economy as a partner, but for three decades the Chinese government has betrayed that good faith and abused that privilege. They lie. They cheat. They steal. And all this was before they triggered a global pandemic with their political corruption (and, perhaps, their scientific incompetence). They run racist concentration camps for ethnic and religious minorities. Free trade has not made the Chinese people free.

Human rights in China remains a disaster. The Chinese government uses the internet as a sophisticated tool of political surveillance and oppression. There is no freedom of speech and Big Brother is always watching and ready to put critics of the government in jail. And there is no sign of reform on the horizon. The Chinese Communist Party just announced a new law giving the Chinese government access to the communications and intellectual property of any company operating inside its borders.

Meanwhile, our trade agreement with China is supposed to be enforced by unelected and unaccountable international bodies like the World Trade Organization (WTO). The WTO, like so many other entities corrupted by Chinese and global corporate influences, governs international trade like little dictators. This isn't free trade as Americans understand it; it's just corruption and cronyism.

But we can't continue to blame them. It's time to blame ourselves for letting them get away with it. Chinese communists, corporate thieves and oily international bureaucrats are shady by definition. They have no reason to serve America's interests. That's our government's job, and they haven't been doing it.

Congress has been so eager to serve the interests of America's multinational companies that they have been blind to the damage un-free trade is actually doing. We have cheered so loudly for the lower prices and higher stock values that we have ignored the high costs—to our sovereignty, our strategic position and our jobs. And we have allowed China to use its massive trade surplus with America to build a dangerous military with our dollars and stolen military secrets. Donald Trump understands this; it's a big reason why he's president.

I still believe in free trade and engagement, but it has to be smart and strategic. China, for all its faults, seems to understand this. They don't see the American people as a partner; they see us as prey. They don't see the WTO as an honest broker, but as a tool and a weapon to wield against us.

We need to face the fact that the Chinese Communist Party cannot be trusted—and cannot be held accountable through anti-American bureaucracies. We need to reclaim the sovereignty we loaned out to the WTO and develop an economic strategy to contain and constrain China—such as bilateral agreements enforced by Americans.

American cannot be truly free if we rely on an adversary for our most fundamental needs, like drugs and medical supplies. We must modernize our tax system, regulatory policies and our trade policies to give American companies a chance to compete and win against China and every other country in the world.

We gave China a chance. They blew it. It's time to face the fact this so-called "partner" is in reality a corrupt, aggressive and vicious rival—strategically, militarily and economically. It's time for Congress to face that fact and act upon it.

To view online: https://www.newsweek.com/ive-changed-my-mind-about-china-america-should-too-opinion-1504210





This email is intended for [email protected].
Update your preferences or Unsubscribe