'Hypocrisy is palpable': Former Trump lawyer blows up liberals' gaslighting about Antifa crackdown



Democrats, deep-staters, and the legacy media gleefully cheered on the Biden administration as it confronted imagined far-right terrorism here in America and brought the weight of the government down on supposed extremist groups, including peaceful pro-life protesters and traditional Catholics.

At the time, lawmakers such as then-Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.) demanded a more liberal application of foreign terrorist designations, while Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and other Democrats championed legislation that would define domestic terrorism as a crime.

Now that Democrats are no longer in control of the White House or Congress, the left is far more circumspect about beefing up the government's ability to identify and act against domestic terrorist groups.

Fresh off designating Antifa as a terrorist organization, President Donald Trump issued a national security memorandum on Thursday establishing a strategy to "investigate, disrupt, and dismantle all stages of organized political violence and domestic terrorism."

Citing the deadly attacks on U.S Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, the deadly Black Lives Matter riots, the assassination of Charlie Kirk, the assassination of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, the attempted assassination of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, and the two known attempts on his own life, Trump stressed that "this political violence is not a series of isolated incidents and does not emerge organically."

'"Instead, it is a culmination of sophisticated, organized campaigns of targeted intimidation, radicalization, threats, and violence designed to silence opposing speech, limit political activity, change or direct policy outcomes, and prevent the functioning of a democratic society," Trump noted in the memo. "A new law enforcement strategy that investigates all participants in these criminal and terroristic conspiracies — including the organized structures, networks, entities, organizations, funding sources, and predicate actions behind them — is required."

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Trump's memo sets the stage for the relevant authorities not only to go after those who are recruiting, grooming, and funding would-be terrorists but to revoke tax-exempt status for NGOs linked to domestic terrorism and to designate qualifying groups as "domestic terrorist organizations."

Liberals of various stripes have concern-mongered about the president's memorandum.

For instance, Patrick Eddington, a senior fellow at the libertarian CATO Institute, suggested that Trump's memo made former President Harry Truman's Executive Order 9853 — an order designed to root out communists and Soviet sympathizers in the federal workforce during the Cold War — "look tame by comparison."

Pulling a similar thread, Douglas Charles, a history professor at Penn State Greater Allegheny, insinuated to the Los Angeles Times that this initiative might be a "McCarthyism redux."

The NGO Human Rights First claimed that the president's strategy "presents a serious threat to our core freedoms."

Uzra Zeya, CEO of Human Rights First, suggested further that the Trump administration was using the "scourge of political violence as a pretext to seek to silence voices it sees at odds with its political agenda."

'This is a shameful and dangerous move.'

California Gov. Gavin Newsom's office claimed within hours of the order's signing on Thursday, "Trump is waging a crusade of retribution — abusing the federal government as a weapon of personal revenge. Today it's his enemies. Tomorrow it may be you."

Hina Shamsi, the director of the American Civil Liberties Union's National Security Project, characterized the initiative as an attempt to intimidate Trump's critics.

"After one of the most harrowing weeks for our First Amendment rights, the President is invoking political violence, which we all condemn, as an excuse to target non-profits and activists with the false and stigmatizing label of 'domestic terrorism,'" Shamsi said. "This is a shameful and dangerous move. But the president cannot rewrite the Constitution by memo."

The White House has suggested that such critics are effectively political hacks engaged in another gaslighting campaign.

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said in a statement to Blaze News, "Left-wing organizations have fueled violent riots, organized attacks against law enforcement officers, coordinated illegal doxxing campaigns, arranged drop points for weapons and riot materials, and more."

'The fact of the matter is that there is a concerted effort, by enemies of the United States both foreign and domestic, to destabilize our country.'

"The Trump qdministration will get to the bottom of this vast network inciting violence in American communities, and the president’s executive order designating Antifa as a domestic terrorist organization is just the beginning," Jackson continued. "Anyone attempting to downplay left-wing political violence or point the finger at Republicans following the slew of left-wing violent attacks are not credible at all; they're simply partisan actors ignoring reality."

John Eastman, a former Trump lawyer and the founding director of the Claremont Institute's Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence, emphasized the timeliness and importance of the president's counterterrorism initiative, calling it "a much-needed and perfectly legal response to the recent spate of domestic political violence and, as importantly, the coordinated conspiracy that funds and incites it."

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Eastman also rebutted Eddington's suggestion that the memo was reminiscent of Truman's executive order.

"There is nothing in it remotely comparable to President Truman’s 'loyalty oath' executive order, because it says nothing about federal employees (unless, of course, they are part of a conspiracy to commit violence against the United States and its citizens)," Eastman told Blaze News.

"As for those who are screaming that this violates core constitutional protections such as those in the First Amendment, inciting violence and funding violence are no part of the speech protected by the First Amendment," Eastman continued. "And the hypocrisy is palpable, coming as these complaints do from the 'silence is violence' crowd. Trump's memo targets actual violence, and those who object that it is too broad are playing semantics."

"The fact of the matter is that there is a concerted effort, by enemies of the United States both foreign and domestic, to destabilize our country. Not only is the President's memo a welcome recognition of the stakes that is well within his authority, it is also in furtherance of his solemn duty to protect the United States, its Constitution, and its citizens," Eastman added.

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Appeals court's decision in Trump's birthright citizenship case sets up HISTORIC battle before Supreme Court



President Donald Trump signed an executive order on his first day back in office titled "Protecting the Meaning and Value of American Citizenship." The order, which was set to go into effect on July 27, made it U.S. policy not to issue citizenship documents to a person whose mother was unlawfully in the country and whose father was neither an American citizen nor a permanent resident at the time of the person's birth.

Liberals, apparently content to cheapen citizenship by dealing it out wholesale to children born to noncitizens on American soil, filed numerous legal challenges to prevent Trump from making good on his campaign promise to end birthright citizenship.

The challengers have won the various legal battles fought to date; however, the outcome of the war over this hot-button issue will likely be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court in short order owing to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals' Wednesday ruling, which upheld a nationwide pause on the enforcement of the policy.

'This is still at a preliminary stage — not a ruling yet on the merits.'

On Jan. 21, the states of Arizona, Illinois, Oregon, and Washington filed a lawsuit in the U.S District Court for the Western District of Washington claiming that the executive order violates the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and the Immigration and Nationality Act. The complaint advanced by Democratic state attorneys general suggested further that Trump lacks the authority to determine who should and should not be granted American citizenship at birth.

In a move of the kind that the U.S. Supreme Court would later claim likely exceeds the equitable authority given to federal courts by Congress, Seattle-based U.S. District Judge John Coughenour granted a universal injunction, blocking the law's implementation.

A three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit Appeals Court ruled 2-1 on Wednesday to keep in place Coughenour's injunction.

The two judges in the 9th Circuit majority were both appointed by Bill Clinton. The lone dissenting judge was a Trump appointee who said the states had no legal right to bring the case.

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Ronald Gould, one of the Clinton judges, noted in the majority opinion, "We conclude that the Executive Order is invalid because it contradicts the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment's grant of citizenship to 'all persons born in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof.'''

Gould wrote further that the "district court did not abuse its discretion in issuing a universal injunction in order to give the States complete relief" and that the "universal preliminary injunction is necessary to give the States complete relief on their claims."

The appeals court declined to tackle the individual plaintiffs' claims as they are already covered by a class action in the case Barbara v. Trump.

On July 10, a U.S. district judge in New Hampshire granted class action status to a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union challenging Trump's order, certifying the babies of illegal aliens and temporary migrants as a class.

Judge Joseph Laplante, a George W. Bush appointee, then issued a preliminary injunction in Barbara, temporarily shielding the supposed class from the order's enforcement.

Although Laplante paused his decision to allow for the Trump administration to appeal, absent such an appeal, his order has reportedly gone into effect.

Dr. John C. Eastman, founding director of the Claremont Institute's Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence, told Blaze News that "the 9th Circuit decision is still only a preliminary decision, affirming a nationwide preliminary injunction for the States, which it found to have standing. Both of those parts of the decision are somewhat in tension with the Supreme Court’s decision on June 27 in the CASA case, but not entirely foreclosed by it."

'Those born to parents who did not agree to abide by U.S. laws are not citizens.'

"I suspect we’ll see if a request for stay filed with the Supreme Court in short order," continued Eastman. "But again, this is still at a preliminary stage — not a ruling yet on the merits, only on the 'likelihood' of the merits."

In contrast, Gerald L. Neuman, the J. Sinclair Armstrong professor of international, foreign, and comparative law at Harvard Law School, suggested the 9th Circuit Court's ruling "is clearly correct."

"As the opinion explained, the meaning of the Citizenship Clause is well-settled, and Congress shared that understanding when it adopted the INA in 1952," Neuman told Blaze News. "The dissenting judge on the panel did not disagree with this conclusion on the merits of the case, but raised procedural objections to the court’s ability to make its decision in the case before it."

Should the Supreme Court rule in the challengers' favor, Neuman indicated it "might base its decision directly on the constitutional provision, or on the statute, or on both."

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When asked about the significance of this case, law professor Gregory Germain of the Syracuse University College of Law told Blaze News, "I doubt that any of these lower court cases will be significant because I believe the Supreme Court will ultimately take the case and settle the question."

"I disagree with the 9th Circuit that the 14th Amendment's citizenship clause is clear on its face," said Germain. "The clause on its face contains a limitation on birthright citizenship, requiring that the child be 'subject to the jurisdiction' of the U.S. Why was that language put in the Constitution if it was intended to be meaningless? So that language means something — the issue is what it means."

Germain noted that the Supreme Court held in the case U.S. v. Wong Kim Ark that:

children born to permanent residents were subject to the jurisdiction of the United States even though the parents were citizens of China. But the Court also held that children of foreign soldiers occupying U.S. land or diplomats (or Indians) were not "subject to the jurisdiction" and not citizens. So the Court recognized that there were some exceptions to birthright citizenship, but did not clearly define them.

The Syracuse University law professor opined that it would be "perfectly rational" to say that children born on American soil to parents who have agreed to abide by American laws are citizens but "those born to parents who did not agree to abide by U.S. laws are not citizens."

Germain said that would be "consistent with Ark, because the parents were permanent residents who agreed to abide by U.S. law to obtain that status, and would rationally distinguish foreign soldiers and diplomats (both of whom are subject to U.S. law in many circumstances, even though they never agreed to abide), but also illegal aliens."

By adopting this approach, German indicated that the Supreme Court would have to "split the baby, so to speak, on Trump's executive order": Kids born to foreign nationals who are legally in the country and who agreed in visa applications to abide by American law would qualify, but children of aliens illegally in the country would not qualify for citizenship.

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