Wednesday, June 25, 2025

The War Powers Narrative Is False—And the Constitution Proves It - Charlton Allen

 

by Charlton Allen

Trump acted lawfully, decisively, and with precedent on his side—despite partisan claims that defy both the Constitution and common sense.

 

It wasn’t long after the smoke cleared in Isfahan, Natanz, and Fordow that the second explosion landed—on Capitol Hill. Except this one was pre-planned.

With the precision of a broken clock, Senator Tim Kaine (D-VA) preemptively introduced a War Powers resolution on June 16—five full days before the June 21 airstrikes—laying the groundwork for a headline-grabbing repudiation before a single B-2 Spirit had lifted off.

That’s right—before a single B-2 took flight, the legislative branch had already launched its own volley, aimed not at Tehran, but at the commander in chief. The phrase of the hour? “Unconstitutional.”

Except it isn’t. And never was.

The condemnation wasn’t just premature. It was constitutionally illiterate, strategically reckless, and politically performative.

Article II of the Constitution is clear: the president is the commander in chief of the Armed Forces of the United States. Full stop.

Article II, Section 2 vests operational command of the military in the president—not as ceremonial ornamentation, but as clear and foundational authority.

Let’s go further. The president’s authority isn’t grounded in the Constitution alone—it’s supported by statute as well.

The War Powers Act of 1973—ironically, the very law now being weaponized against Trump—explicitly acknowledges this power.

Section 2(c) of the Act, codified as 50 U.S. Code § 1541(c), affirms that the president may introduce U.S. forces into hostilities in response to “a national emergency created by attack upon the United States, its territories or possessions, or its armed forces.”

Over the past 46 years, Iran has unrelentingly targeted U.S. forces and interests.

It has proxied the killing of American troops through the IRGC and Hezbollah, kidnapped American citizens, murdered Americans, plotted to assassinate President Trump and others, threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz, and engaged in maritime piracy.

Tehran has operated as the chief patron of global terrorism—from Beirut to Baghdad to the Red Sea.

Iran also funds Houthi drone strikes on international shipping lanes and has made the destruction of both America and Israel the ideological touchstone of its regime.

For Tehran, nuclear weapons are not defensive instruments—they are the intended means to rain fire on the Western world and annihilate our civilization.

Whether acquisition was days, weeks, or months away should not matter. The goal has always been the same—and their determination is unwavering.

The national emergency is not hypothetical—it’s kinetic and enduring, spanning presidential administrations of both parties for decades.

President Trump took swift and decisive action to eliminate this threat—for now.

More to the point: Trump’s actions don’t require congressional preclearance of any sort.

The Constitution grants Congress the power to declare war under Article I, Section 8—but that’s a far cry from requiring approval for every individual use of force. And the distinction is deeply rooted in our constitutional tradition.

Alexander Hamilton, in Federalist No. 69, drew a sharp line between the powers of the president and those of a monarch.

Unlike the British king, who could both “declare war and raise and regulate fleets and armies,” the President would have “supreme command and direct the military and naval forces” once raised.

That is the core of Article II—and the proper response to those misrepresenting it today.

In our system, control of the military doesn’t mean congressional micromanagement.

The Framers established two distinct political branches: Congress to declare war when appropriate and the president to exercise military command as the sole commander in chief.

Each branch has a role. But only one can serve as commander in chief in the moment of decision.

Operational secrecy and unified command often demand action before congressional deliberation can even begin.

This is a design feature of our constitutional system, one that the Founders deliberately embedded, and every president has understood, whether they were Federalists, Jeffersonian Republicans, Democrats, Whigs, or Republicans.

From the founding of the Republic, this precedent has held.

American history is replete with examples of Presidents exercising military power:

  • Thomas Jefferson dispatched the U.S. Navy to engage the Barbary pirates in the Mediterranean.
  • Woodrow Wilson dispatched General Pershing to Mexico in 1916 and ordered U.S. forces to Russia during the Russian Civil War.
  • William McKinley deployed troops to suppress the Boxer Rebellion in China.
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered U.S. naval vessels to attack German warships in the Atlantic during the “Undeclared War”—months before Congress declared war in December 1941.
  • Ronald Reagan ordered airstrikes against Libya and ordered the invasion of Grenada.
  • George H.W. Bush launched the invasion of Panama in 1989.
  • Bill Clinton bombed Serbia, initiated Operation Desert Fox in Iraq, and deployed forces to Haiti.
  • Barack Obama authorized airstrikes in Libya and oversaw drone campaigns in at least seven countries.
  • Joe Biden ordered dozens of strikes in Syria, Iraq, and Yemen—including Tomahawk missile salvos that significantly depleted U.S. munitions stockpiles.

None of these actions involved formal declarations of war or new congressional authorization. Few drew more than muted protest. And none were denounced as “unconstitutional” by the opposition party’s leadership—until now.

And where, exactly, was the declaration of war for Korea? For Vietnam?

When was the last time Congress declared war? 1942—more than 80 years ago.

Now, suddenly, a limited strike on Iranian nuclear sites is the red line?

Spare us.

In 2016 alone, President Obama dropped over 26,000 bombs across seven countries—an astounding average of 72 per day—without a single new Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) from Congress. Some of these strikes occurred in undeclared war zones like Libya, Somalia, Yemen, and Pakistan—countries never named in the 2001 or 2002 AUMFs.

President Trump’s critics, who invoke the War Powers Resolution, often overlook the plain language of the Act. It does not require congressional approval before limited military action. It requires the president to notify Congress within 48 hours and to seek authorization only if hostilities persist for more than 60 days.

In this case, President Trump’s strikes were completed in a matter of hours—no prolonged engagement, no ground invasion, no sustained combat—and congressional leadership was promptly notified.

Not a single American was harmed—except, perhaps, the constitutional truth about the separation of powers. For that injury, Democrat leadership—and a handful of Republican outliers, such as Thomas Massie—owe the country an explanation.

To cry “unconstitutional” over a lawful, surgical strike is not just disingenuous—it’s a disservice to our military and citizenry. It undermines morale, misleads the public, and emboldens adversaries who perceive political division as a sign of weakness.

This latest operation was a precise, limited strike—squarely within the president’s constitutional authority and requiring neither a declaration of war nor preauthorization.

It was narrower in scope than operations ordered by Clinton, Obama, or Biden. Yet it achieved more: Tehran’s nuclear ambitions appear to have been kneecapped, and though a ceasefire was briefly in place, Israel has since accused the Iranian regime of violating it.

War powers debates can strengthen the Republic—when conducted in good faith and at the right time.

But reflexive, theatrical, hyper-partisan posturing is not statesmanship.

If congressional leaders truly wish to reassert their authority, they should start by respecting the Constitution and the actual text of the War Powers Act—not hijacking headlines after the commander in chief has done his duty. 

And certainly not with performative impeachment threats or demands that tie the president’s hands while our enemies reload.

The Constitution—including its carefully drawn separation of war powers—is not a suicide pact. And it must not be twisted into one by those seeking political advantage in a dangerous, often unforgiving world.

Charlton Allen is an attorney and former chief executive officer and chief judicial officer of the North Carolina Industrial Commission. He is founder of the Madison Center for Law & Liberty, Inc., editor of The American Salient, and host of the Modern Federalist podcast. His commentary has been featured in American Thinker and linked across multiple RealClear platforms, including RealClearPolitics, RealClearWorld, RealClearDefense, RealClearHistory, and RealClearPolicy. X: @CharltonAllenNC

Signing the Constitution

Image: Free image, Pixabay license.


Charlton Allen

Source: https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2025/06/the_war_powers_narrative_is_false_and_the_constitution_proves_it.html

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‘Serious questions’ if 11 arrested Iranians in the US illegally were part of bigger terror network - AAron Bandler

 

by AAron Bandler

“The Biden administration endangered Americans with its open border policies,” Lora Ries, of Heritage Foundation, told JNS. “We have no idea who entered this country the last four years.”

 

An ICE officer oversees an immigration enforcement operation on June 11, 2019. Credit: Courtesy of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
An ICE officer oversees an immigration enforcement operation on June 11, 2019. Credit: Courtesy of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested 11 Iranian nationals, who were residing in the country illegally, over the weekend, and a U.S. citizen, who “threatened to kill ICE law enforcement while harboring an illegal alien from Iran,” the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said on Tuesday.

“We have been saying we are getting the worst of the worst out, and we are,” stated Tricia McLaughlin, U.S. assistant secretary for homeland security. “We don’t wait until a military operation to execute. We proactively deliver on President Trump’s mandate to secure the homeland.”

Jason Brodsky, policy director for United Against a Nuclear Iran, told JNS that “Iran has long tried to establish surrogate networks inside the United States as a means of having the option to carry out terrorist plots upon the decision of the Iranian leadership.”

“This report about the ICE arrests raises many serious questions as to whether these individuals were part of a broader network the Islamic Republic sought to use to carry out terrorism,” Brodsky said.

The department identified one of the 11 as Ribvar Karimi, who “had an Islamic Republic of Iran Army identification card” on him and who served as an Iranian army sniper from 2018 to 2021. 

Karimi, who was arrested in Alabama, had been admitted into the United States in October 2024 on a visa for noncitizens who are engaged to citizens. 

“Karimi never adjusted his status, a legal requirement, and is removable from the United States,” Homeland Security said. “He’s currently in ICE custody, where he’ll remain pending removal proceedings.”

The ICE website listed Karimi as detained in Etowah County Jail in Gadsden, Ala.

Homeland Security identified another of the 11 as Mehran Makari Saheli, who was once a member of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and has admitted to having ties with Hezbollah, the department said. 

Saheli was sentenced to 15 months in prison for felony possession of a firearm. Despite an immigration judge’s order that he be deported in June 2022, Saheli has remained in the country. He was arrested in St. Paul, and the ICE website lists him in Sherburne County Jail in Elk River, Minn.

Lora Ries, director of the Heritage Foundation’s border security and immigration center, told JNS that “this is why mass deportations are necessary.”

“The Biden administration endangered Americans with its open border policies,” Ries said. “As a result, we have no idea who entered this country the last four years, where many of them are or how many are really here, but we know it was north of 11 million inadmissible aliens.” 

“This is also why radicals obstructing ICE operations need to be arrested and prosecuted,” Ries said. “They have no idea who ICE may be going after. It could be a known or suspected terrorist.”

 

AAron Bandler

Source: https://www.jns.org/serious-questions-if-11-arrested-iranians-in-the-us-illegally-were-part-of-bigger-terror-network/

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In America, It’s Not Your Auntie’s Antisemitism Anymore - Norman Krieg

 

by Norman Krieg

A virulent, old-world antisemitism is taking root in America, and it’s driven by the same forces that have always made Jews a target.

 

As the final blows upon Iran loom, and as the Deep State accepts a loss of a client state, it has decided to try and make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear. This is the chance to rip MAGA apart from within!

How?

By utilizing the oldest hatred in the book: Antisemitism.

Twitter, podcasts, and other social media sites are currently awash with a renaissance of Jew-hatred, complete with reprises of accusations involving well-poisoning, messiah-murder, and societal manipulation that many had thought had died off with the Holocaust and with the popularization of coherent thought. The stupefying thing is how easily the Candace Owens of the world are led into the fiery pit.

Esther denouncing Haman by Ernest Normand. Public domain.

Is it rank stupidity? Is it (to paraphrase her)...Satan?! Is it simply a human predilection for conspiracy theory to explain what it cannot understand? Or is there some latent but powerful reason for this pernicious hatred?

Hitler believed there was a reason. He saw Judaism as the primary threat to his weltanschauung. To him, humans were just advanced animals—meant to fight, dominate, and survive through strength. But Judaism taught something different; namely, that humans are made in the image of God. That we can rise above our instincts and choose to be kind, fair, and moral.

Circumcision, in Jewish tradition, is a symbol of this. It’s a daily reminder to every man to control his urges and try to be holy, rather than giving in to his base desires.

Hitler and his Nazi followers saw this idea as dangerous. They thought caring for the weak would weaken society. Instead, they believed in strength, power, and survival of the fittest. Hence the Riefenstahl film, “Triumph of the Will.”

Today’s conflict with Iran echoes old stories, like the one in the Book of Esther, when Haman wanted to eradicate the Jews throughout the Persian Empire. Haman beseeched the King to act by making the claim that the Jews followed a “different religion.” While the rest of the nations worshiped many gods, the Jews worshiped just the One, all-powerful God.

Further, as a pagan, Haman believed in gods of limited power, trusting, instead, in Fate and Fortune. Thus, he used a lottery to pick a date to attack the Jews. Ironically, that appeal to the pagan gods gave Queen Esther time to implore the One God for help and, ultimately, to stop Haman, consigning him to the dustbins of history and the pastry shelves of kosher bakeries. (Try the prune hamantaschen sometime: much superior to the apricot, or Heavens, the poppy).

As alluded to in the Book of Esther, Haman was a descendant of the Amalekites, an ancient tribal nation that attacked the weakest Israelites after they exodus-ed Egypt. The Bible says Amalek’s sin was preying on the ‘stragglers’—the vulnerable people at the back of the Hebrew pack.

To simplify things, Amalek and Haman stood for the pagan belief system, where strength rules and the weak are ignored or preyed upon. Judaism stood for the opposite: the idea that humans can and should rise above animal, bestial instincts. Some Nazi leaders understood this. Legend says that one, Julius Streicher, even called his Nuremberg Trial execution “Purimfest, 1946.”

Today, people like Candace Owens and others may not understand all this—but on some (below the belt?) level, they seem to resent the Jewish message that tells people to control their desires and act morally. Judaism introduced the idea of ethical living, which influenced Christianity, Islam, and even Greek and Roman philosophy.

And that’s where much of anti-Semitism comes from—not just jealousy or religious disagreement, but a deep discomfort with what Judaism profoundly represents.

It’s not about Jews being rich. Poor Jews have been persecuted throughout history, as well.

It’s not about deicide. The Romans did that, and furthermore, Jews never believed Jesus was divine, so they cannot stand accused of having killed a god.

It’s not about being “Chosen,: Jews believe being chosen means responsibility, not superiority. Gentiles only have to follow seven basic laws, while Jews have 613 commandments. Anyone can convert or choose to follow more.

It’s not about looks or sports skills. For every Gal Gadot or Sandy Koufax...um, there are a couple of others on the opposite side.

Anti-Semitism is the hatred of an idea: The idea that people should control themselves, care for others, and strive to reach the limits of humanity’s ability. Mankind is built in the image of God. Just as God is limitless in His powers and can rise above the strictures of Nature, Man can rise above his bestial nature and approach the heights of the Divine.

That’s hard for some to accept, so they hate the people who introduced it.

Of course, this essay doesn’t explain everything—antisemitism is a huge, complicated topic that goes back thousands of years. But this is a starting point.

Norman Krieg is a pseudonym.

 

Norman Krieg

Source: https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2025/06/in_america_it_s_not_your_auntie_s_antisemitism_anymore.html

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‘Not our night’: Cuomo concedes to Mamdani, alarming New York Jews - Vita Fellig, JNS Staff

 

by Vita Fellig, JNS Staff

Duvi Honig, of the Orthodox Jewish Chamber of Commerce, told JNS that he has "profound concerns regarding the intellectual rigor and judgment of the younger generation."

 

Former New York governor Andrew Cuomo concedes the Democratic mayoral primary to Zohran Mamdani on June 24, 2025. Photo by Vita Fellig.
Former New York governor Andrew Cuomo concedes the Democratic mayoral primary to Zohran Mamdani on June 24, 2025. Photo by Vita Fellig.

 

Andrew Cuomo, the controversial former New York governor who drew extensive support from the Orthodox Jewish community, conceded to Zohran Mamdani, an anti-Israel New York state representative, in the Democratic mayoral primary.

“Tonight was not our night,” Cuomo told about 200 supporters at an event at a carpenter’s union building in Manhattan on Tuesday night. “Tonight was Assemblyman Mamdani’s night, and he put together a great campaign.”

“He touched young people and inspired them and moved them and got them to come out and vote,” Cuomo said in remarks that ran about four minutes. “He really ran a highly impactful campaign.”

At press time, the Associated Press had Mamdani up with 428,411 votes (43.5%) to Cuomo’s 358,313 (36.4%), with 91% of the vote counted. Brad Lander, the New York City comptroller who is Jewish and who has encouraged his voters to cross list Mamdani, had 111,842 votes (11.4%).

None of the other Democratic mayoral hopefuls had more than 5% of the vote at press time.

“I called him, and I congratulated him,” Cuomo said of Mamdani. “I applaud him sincerely for his effort.”

Cuomo said that he aims “to look at all the numbers as they come in and this ranked choice voting and what the numbers actually say and do.”

The former governor has said that if he lost the primary, he would run for mayor on an independent party ticket. It also wasn’t clear what impact, if any, the “ranked” voting would have on the final vote tallies. A candidate needs 50% of the vote to win outright. Absent that, second-choice votes are tallied and lower-performing candidates are removed in subsequent rounds until a winner is declared.

Voters can rank up to five candidates. Asked for whom he was voting, New York City Mayor Eric Adams, who is running as an independent to retain his seat, told reporters, “one, two, three, four and five, Eric Adams.”

Speaking to supporters, Cuomo said that “there is no doubt that there are important issues that are facing this city. That’s why this election is so imperative.”

“That’s why so many people came out to vote, because these are real issues and they’re not getting better,” he said. “They’re getting worse and that’s why New Yorkers are as concerned as they are.”

“Again, I want to applaud the assemblyman for a really smart and good and impactful campaign. Tonight is his night. He deserved it. He won, and we’re going to take a look,” Cuomo said. “We’ll make some decisions, but I love each and every one of you and I thank you.”

Cuomo, who resigned as governor in 2021 amid sexual harrassment allegations, drew harsh criticism from many Orthodox Jews in the city over his policies during the pandemic, including restrictions on synagogues and Jewish schools. Still, Orthodox communities rallied around him to try to block Mamdani.

Henry Olsen, senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, stated earlier in the night that “Cuomo doing best in Orthodox Jewish areas in Brooklyn and the Upper East Side in Manhattan. Winning black areas but not with huge margins.”

He added a few minutes later that “scrolling through random precincts makes me alter my assessment of the black areas. Quite a few where Cuomo is winning big, and Adams is often the second choice not Mamdani.”

Cuomo carpenters
Former New York governor Andrew Cuomo concedes the Democratic mayoral primary to Zohran Mamdani on June 24, 2025. Photo by Vita Fellig.

Duvi Honig, founder and CEO of the Orthodox Jewish Chamber of Commerce, told JNS that the “recent surge of support for Zohran Mamdani among voters under 40 raises profound concerns regarding the intellectual rigor and judgment of the younger generation.”

“By backing a candidate who endorses positions associated with terrorism and Holocaust denial, in pursuit of illusory economic benefits, these voters reveal a troubling lack of historical awareness and a disconnection from reality,” Honig said.

Honig added that older Democrats, who sought revenge against Cuomo, “may inadvertently bolster Mamdani’s platform, which threatens public safety and undermines the core mission of the NYPD.”

“This situation not only poses a risk to the city’s security but could ultimately backfire on the very constituents who support him,” Honig said.

Mamdani has accused Israel of “indiscriminate,” “limitless” and “criminal killing of civilians” and has said he would have Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrested if he comes to New York City, where the United Nations headquarters is located.

After Mamdani claimed, when defending the phrase “globalize the intifada,” that the Holocaust museum used the word “intifada” to describe the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, the politician received a rare reprimand from the the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, which typically avoids commenting on politics.

The museum said, without naming Mamdani, that “exploiting the museum and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising to sanitize ‘globalize the intifada’ is outrageous and especially offensive to survivors.”

Honig thinks that Adams “could now garner greater support from New Yorkers eager to embrace an America-first agenda.”

“This alignment with the new administration’s priorities could foster bipartisan cooperation in addressing the city’s pressing issues,” he said. “As educated New Yorkers rally around Adams, his potential electoral success could lead to policies that benefit New York City immensely, positioning him as a stabilizing force amid a chaotic political landscape.”

John Podhoretz, the editor of Commentary magazine, stated that “the city with the largest Jewish population in the world will likely have as its mayor a man whose worldview and convictions stand in opposition to the fundamentals of Judaism itself.”

“I’m not kidding when I say that people like Mamdani are why there has to be a Jewish state,” Podhoretz wrote.

The National Republican Congressional Committee stated that “Democrats just nominated antisemitic, socialist, radical Zohran Mamdani as mayor of New York City and the new face of N.Y. Dems.”

“Mamdani pledged to defund the police, abolish prisons and institute socialist government grocery stores while massively raising taxes on working New Yorkers,” the NRCC said.

Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) suggested that many New Yorkers would flee to Florida, and Garry Kasparov, the half-Jewish world chess champion and activist, stated that “socialism is like polio. It comes back when people forget about the horrible damage it did last time.”

“Tonight, Democrats again failed to stand with Jewish Americans, this time in New York City,” the Republican Jewish Coalition stated. “Raging antisemite, anti-America, anti-Israel, Democrat socialist Zohran Mamdani will be a total disaster for Jewish residents.”

“This is yet another data point proving that Democrats continue to nominate and acquiesce to extreme, radical candidates who are antithetical to the priorities of the Jewish community,” the RJC said. “So long as Democrats refuse to change course, they will continue to hemorrhage Jewish support.”

Esther Panitch, a Democrat who is the only Jewish state representative in Georgia, stated, “I cannot overstate how scary this New York City vote is for pro-Israel American Jews,” which she said means “most Jews.”

“Antisemitism does have a place in New York,” she said.


Vita Fellig, JNS Staff

Source: https://www.jns.org/not-our-night-cuomo-concedes-to-mamdani-alarming-new-york-jews/

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Jonathan Turley: Supreme Court could soon give Trump 'enormous' victory in battle with left-wing judges - Taylor Penley

 

by Taylor Penley

Constitutional scholar weighs in on Trump administration's legal battles over deportations

 

 

 



A looming Supreme Court decision on nationwide injunctions could have "enormous" impacts on the Trump administration, George Washington University law professor and Fox News contributor Jonathan Turley said Tuesday.

The high court is poised to decide on the practice that can currently halt executive branch policies affecting the entire country. 

Conservatives have argued that injunctions have been strategically sought in left-wing jurisdictions as a strategy to frustrate the Trump administration's agenda on immigration enforcement and deportations.

"It's going to be an enormous decision potentially," Turley shared with "Fox & Friends," noting that a decision may come on Thursday.

SUPREME COURT RULES ON TRUMP'S THIRD-COUNTRY DEPORTATIONS, IN MAJOR TEST FOR PRESIDENT

Supreme Court

People walk past the Supreme Court on Thursday, June 27, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

"For the administration in the immigration areas, as well as other areas, the court could very well say, 'Enough. We're not going to have individual judges freezing the entire United States government on critical programs like this."

Turley said that many of the injunctions are brought in "favorable" jurisdictions in front of "favorable" judges who issue the injunctions to stop the president's policies in their tracks.

He cited U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy, a Boston-based federal judge who presided over a class-action lawsuit from illegal migrants who are challenging deportations to third countries – countries that are not their country of origin – including South Sudan, El Salvador and others that the administration has reportedly eyed in its ongoing wave of deportations.

SENATORS SOUND OFF AS SUPREME COURT HEARS CASE ON NATIONWIDE INJUNCTIONS

Donald Trump speaking

President Trump's immigration policies have been challenges in federal courts since he assumed office on Jan. 20. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

Murphy previously ordered the Trump administration to keep in U.S. custody all illegal migrants slated for deportation to a country not "explicitly" named in their removal orders.

This week, the court granted the Trump administration's request to stay the lower court's injunction blocking them from deporting individuals to third countries.

Turley broke down the ruling on Tuesday.

 

"The lower court judge said that, 'You're sending these people to countries that you've advised Americans to leave because of the violence.' But ICE is saying, 'Look, there's a reason why their home countries don't want them. Countries are not clamoring to get more felons to augment their home population, and that's not our fault. It's your fault. You committed crimes here, and you are deportable, and we're not a travel agency, so if your home country doesn't want you, then we're going to find the next best option.' 

"With this order, they're allowed to do that," he said.

Fox News' Breanne Deppisch, Shannon Bream and Bill Mears contributed to this report.


Taylor Penley is an associate editor with Fox News.

Source: https://www.foxnews.com/media/jonathan-turley-supreme-court-could-soon-give-trump-enormous-victory-battle-left-wing-judges

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Silicon Valley’s Red Pill Decade, Part One: Divorcing Wokeness - Edward Ring

 

by Edward Ring

Silicon Valley’s coders are dumping wokeness, rediscovering meritocracy, and quietly rebooting American politics—one red pill at a time.

 

Something is happening in California’s Silicon Valley that is going to change America and the world. It’s a cultural shift with implications that will have an impact as profound as what it has already done with its technology. It’s happening from the ground up, changing the attitudes of techies in the Valley and their counterparts across America. The signs were evident for years. They embraced progressive rhetoric. They supported the one-party, Democrat-run state. But everything just got worse. Unaffordable homes. Expensive energy and rationed water. Uncontrolled crime and homelessness. Ineffective, overpriced public education. Overpaid public employees, with their unions running everything. And a hostile state legislature that kept adding layers of harassment onto every private business.

From the outside looking in, it is reasonable to think the Silicon Valley elites and their progressive workforces were willing accomplices, if not the actual architects of California’s dysfunction. But even in the early days of progressive dominion over the state, the late 1990s and the early aughts, that was only partially true. California’s technology sector and Silicon Valley culture thrived in spite of California’s one-party state, not because of it. And as that state and its regulators became increasingly hostile, one by one, techies began to flip from blue to purple and from purple to red. Today, those flips are becoming a cascade.

The 2020s will be the decade that Silicon Valley returns to its roots. Despite the horrified commentary coming from the corporate left and its captive commentariat, these are not “techno-fascists.” And while the New Yorker, in a February 2025 feature article, may have recently popularized that phrase, what they characterize as “Elon Musk’s rampage on the federal government” is just the latest major episode in a cultural revolution. Techies are taking the Red Pill, and it’s going to change America.

The core ideology that has governed Silicon Valley for decades has been fundamentally libertarian. The valley is populated by entrepreneurs whose successes and failures have been forged in one of the purest ecosystems of meritocracy the world has ever seen. In this heartland of high tech, this epicenter of innovation, this digital wonderland where start-ups are spawned by the millions, thousands of successful companies emerge for just one reason: They build the most compelling products anybody has ever seen. They create industries that dominate the world, where a few years earlier, there was nothing. They invent wants that become needs that become necessities. They drive the future of the world. And the competition is ruthless and unrelenting. Those who have risen to the top in this Darwinian crucible are the smartest, richest, most creative, and most energetic people on the planet. It is Athens, Rome, and Chicago: it is every place that ever, in its prime, had rewritten the future.

Until social media came along, most of Silicon Valley’s top executives and successful investors were almost apolitical. If they had political leanings, they were moderate, pro-business Democrats without strong passions either way. The Valley had nurtured prosperity at a stunning rate, going through cycles of booms and downturns, but every iteration yielded more world-leading companies and more billionaires. Washington, DC, was on the other side of a big continent. Life was good.

The downward spiral began in earnest sometime around 2010 when the Pavlovian power of social media was mutually recognized by Silicon Valley companies that were exploding in revenue and reach and the deep state operatives running Washington, DC, who were confronting a new phenomenon that threatened to utterly demolish their ability to influence political narratives.

As Silicon Valley was morphing into more than just a purveyor of high-tech innovation and becoming, almost unwittingly, an extremely powerful arbiter of political dialogue, a quiet takeover was happening internally in its corporations. Under pressure to hire diverse workforces and unable to find and hire enough software engineers who filled those criteria, these companies swelled the ranks of their human resources and marketing departments, disciplines for which there was no shortage of “diverse” applicants.

These twin forces—a sudden focus by America’s elite political insiders on high-tech companies, along with a growing internal cadre of diversity hires—at first didn’t affect these companies or their cultures very much. They were enjoying one of the Valley’s biggest booms yet, so they could afford to hire a percentage of less productive employees in order to fulfill race and gender quotas. Overall, the internal and external pressure still wasn’t that intense, and for the most part, it all seemed consistent with their generally left-of-center and fairly unexamined beliefs.

But in 2016, Donald Trump was unexpectedly elected president, and everything changed. As is well documented by, for example, investigative writer Michael Shellenberger, former Rolling Stone journalist Matt Taibbi, former New York Times columnist Bari Weiss, and many others, enormous pressure to censor social media content was put onto these companies, in many cases—at least initially—with their willing complicity. The pressure campaigns were successful, and four years later, Trump lost to Joe Biden in a close and contested election.

And with Biden in the White House, the clown show began. What pressure had occurred between 2016 and 2020 may have raised eyebrows among the Silicon Valley elite and may have begun to stir feelings of resentment, but the Biden administration took everything to a much more intense and more absurd level. Under Biden, every imaginable left-wing, allegedly counter-culture obsession became mainstream and mandatory. Movements that had matured and mellowed—think feminism and gay marriage—suddenly became urgent and extreme again. Tolerance was passé. Active endorsement and promotion were the new norm, as was condemnation and cancellation of any content even slightly critical of these movements. At the same time, movements that had never concerned more than a minute fraction of the population abruptly also acquired urgency and extreme visibility—in particular, transsexual and transgender rights. And again, tolerance was no longer enough. Active endorsement was required.

Human resources departments that were now expanded and entrenched in large, high-tech companies took on these new mandates with enthusiasm. They took it upon themselves to move well beyond screening and hiring new employees or managing health benefits. Now they held company seminars, brought in diversity consultants, and packed employees into sensitivity trainings. They set up snitch lines to encourage anyone who felt marginalized or in any way mistreated to report the offenders and poured time and resources into adjudicating what in saner times would have been non-incidents. For every case of genuine harassment requiring corrective action, there were hundreds of microaggressions to be investigated, all of them consuming corporate resources, all of them given unwarranted attention.

And the tech bros who just wanted to write code and get rich started to notice that their workplace was becoming ridiculously unpleasant. Where there had always been a hierarchy of brilliant and action-oriented bosses taking the company to new heights, there were now commissars who cared more about whether or not you had complied with their directive to insert your “preferred pronouns” in your email signature. From top to bottom, the competent people began to feel more resentment. And then came the 2024 presidential election, where, despite all the coercion, despite all the censorship, in the biggest comeback in the history of American politics, Trump won again.

Now there was an administration in Washington, DC, that was proclaiming out loud the resentments that had been building up for years among the Valley’s most productive contributors. Talented employees and results-oriented executives were able to speak their minds again. It wasn’t as if they all became right-wing zealots. It merely meant they didn’t have to agree with every leftist orthodoxy imaginable. They were set free. And that shift, that small shift, in a place so consequential, shook the woke tower of Barad-dûr to its foundations. Put another way, it was a shift felt around the world.

This is the context in which to explain why the established American Left is terrified by the “techno-fascists.” But what is happening in Silicon Valley today should surprise nobody who has lived in that culture for more than this most recent generation. These are people shaped by a culture that thrives on competition and excellence. That culture is incompatible with woke ideology, and the collision between the two was inevitable.

Next week, we will explore some of the coalitions they’re building and why we have every reason to hope that Silicon Valley, abruptly turned purple, may even turn red. And true to form, it will be a shade of red that is a unique and potent expression of everything they’ve learned and every partner they’ve embraced.


Edward Ring

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2025/06/25/silicon-valleys-red-pill-decade-part-one-divorcing-wokeness/

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Trump administration secretly probing hundreds of scientists from 'countries of concern' like China - John Solomon

 

by John Solomon

Review of foreign scientists from countries like China began even before three Chinese scientists in Michigan were caught trying to smuggle dangerous pathogens into U.S.

 

The Trump administration has secretly launched an intensive vetting process for hundreds of foreign scientists brought into the United States from "countries of concern" like China, using visas procured with the help of the National Institutes of Health and other federal research agencies, officials told Just the News.

The review involving intelligence and security agencies began weeks ago over concerns prior administrations did not adequately vet the backgrounds of scientists or their ties to actors like China's military or its Communist Party.

But the initiative has taken on additional urgency after three Chinese scientists were arrested in the last month trying to smuggle into America dangerous pathogens like fungi and roundworms capable of destroying crops.

An open door to scientific espionage 

Officials told Just the News that as many as 1,000 scientists from countries of concern — a large number specifically from China — have been identified inside NIH alone, prompting a monstrous review by the agency's intelligence security office.

“The Trump administration is committed to safeguarding America’s national and economic security. Taxpayer dollars should not and cannot fund foreign espionage against America’s industrial base and research apparatus," White House spokesman Kush Desai told Just the News.

The rushed effort to vet scientists, especially from China, underscores the laissez-faire screening of foreign researchers that prevailed during the NIH’s leadership under Francis Collins and Anthony Fauci, who departed before Trump became president, officials said.

That lax system persisted under Biden despite multiple warnings from the GAO of the risks of undue foreign influence or theft of federal research.

GAO, the investigative and auditing arm of Congress, has issued more than a half-dozen reports in the last decade warning that NIH and other federal agencies and their surrogates inside universities lack the necessary safeguards to protect IP from foreign theft and research from foreign influence, especially with consultants or entities that work both for China and the United States.

“China is America’s top adversary, and foreign influence remains a key risk for the country’s national security,” a GAO report from last year pointedly warned. “DOD and DHS officials lack specific guidance on how acquisition personnel should collect information, assess, or mitigate potential national security risks when awarding contracts for consulting services.”

“U.S. research may be subject to undue foreign influence in cases where a researcher has a foreign conflict of interest,” the GAO added in a 2021 report that specifically highlighted vulnerabilities at the research universities that partner with NIH.

“…In the absence of agency-wide policies and definitions on non-financial interests, universities that receive federal grant funding may lack sufficient guidance to identify and manage conflicts appropriately, potentially increasing the risk of undue foreign influence,” the report added. 

A Chinese scientist defects, blows the whistle

Dr. Li-Meng Yan, a Chinese virologist who defected to the United States in 2020 and alleged the COVID-19 virus was man-made, told Just the News that most scientists in her home country who win a visa to the United States sign contracts with the communist government of China to use their time in America for their home country’s benefit.

“The scientists getting visas from China to the US, they are visiting scholars, and they have signed the contract with Chinese government to go back to China, serve for China with whatever they can get from the U.S.,” Yan said in an exclusive interview with the Just the News, No Noise television show set to air Thursday night. “That's why they get visas from the Chinese government.

“So from the beginning, they already made a deal with the CCP and they become the CCPs’ kind of agents. So China has these people come here, grab your intellectual properties, grab your technologies, compromise your people, and they are like the tumor, like the parasites that go into your body,” she added.

Such warnings from defectors like Yan and the repeated audits by GAO have spurred members of Congress to become more determined than ever to work with the Trump administration to vastly upgrade vetting and lower the number of foreign scientists who get visas.

“The Chinese have been infiltrating our intellectual property, both covertly and on the surface for us to see. Yet we have sat back and allowed it to happen,” Rep. Nathaniel Moran, R-Texas, told the John Solomon Reports podcast this week, “They've done it covertly through espionage and coming over and stealing certain trade secrets from business or military, but they've also done it above the board, right in front of our faces by infiltrating our universities with research and development grants.”

“We can't just let people do that and then see the Chinese take it from us and use it against us, and sit back and not do anything,” he added. “So we've got to strengthen our own systems from within, and we've got to push back in the trade world, in the tariff world and in the business practices world against China. That requires a strong executive, which we obviously have, and I think you're going to see that happen in the next three or four years.”

Several incidents contribute to urgency

Over the last month, three Chinese researchers who worked in Michigan have been arrested or charged by the FBI with smuggling pathogens illegally into the United States. Two were involved in the alleged smuggling of a toxic fungus and one brought in round worms, all pathogens that can harm American crops, officials said. The cases raised alarm about the potential for a new era of agroterrorism.

The ease with which Chinese doctors, scientists and professors, even outside the NIH's orbit, can enter the country and stay connected with Beijing's intelligence apparatus has been apparent for quite some time. 

In September 2020, Hao Zhang, with his conspirators who were company employees, hatched a plan to start a business in China to compete with their employers based on stolen proprietary semiconductor design and processing blueprints.

Zhang was sentenced to 18 months in prison and ordered to pay $476,835 in restitution following his conviction at trial on charges of economic espionage and theft of trade secrets. According to the Department of Justice, the scheme had begun as early as 2006.

In a curious and more recent case, the home of Xiaofeng Wang, a Chinese national and cybersecurity professor at Indiana University, was raided by the FBI in April of this year. According to The Guardian, Wang was never charged with a crime, but was summarily fired by Indiana University for reasons not made clear to the public, and his profile was removed from IU's website, although a screen capture shows his past connection to the state school. His whereabouts are at this time unknown.

Last year, the Biden administration implemented some new security procedures for federal research involving foreign countries, contractors or researchers, but it exempted those programs receiving less than $50 million in taxpayer funding. That left large numbers of visiting foreign scientists believed to have escaped a full vetting.

"It's a huge gap, and there is significant blindness to who some of these researchers were tied to overseas and what they are really working on," a senior U.S. official directly involved in the current review told Just the News. "The ongoing effort is enormously sensitive. It's labor-intensive. It involves the intel and law enforcement community. And it is essential to our security."

The Trump administration’s Department of Health and Human Service and NIH declined to provide Just the News precise numbers of scientists by country despite multiple requests, citing security concerns.

Around the time that the security vetting of foreign scientists quietly began, the Trump administration took another stark action: in April, the NIH told American researchers they could no longer direct federal tax dollars to foreign partners through sub-grants and secondary awards.

“If you can’t clearly justify why you are doing something overseas, as in it can’t possibly be done anywhere else and it benefits the American people, then the project should be closed down," Dr. Matthew J. Memoli, the NIH's deputy director, wrote the researchers, according to the New York Times.

Earlier this month, the Food and Drug Administration took another action, halting all clinical research trials that export Americans' cells to foreign labs in hostile countries for genetic engineering.


John Solomon

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/security/trump-administration-secretly-probing-hundreds-scientists-countries-concern

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China's Renaming Spree: Will the World Just Surrender to Silent, Obdurate Infiltration? - Rahul Mishra

 

by Rahul Mishra

The region is now a textbook case of how intangible symbolic acts, when repeated enough to become normalized, can evolve into tangible material dominance.

 

  • Just as China has been attempting to redraw maritime boundaries in the South China Sea —renaming reefs, building artificial islands and militarizing waters in defiance of international rulings — it is now exporting a similar playbook to land borders. These moves are about more than maps. They are about creating a norm of impunity, where might makes right and ambiguity is weaponized.

  • Over the past two decades, China has transformed contested reefs, shoals and rocks into militarily fortified islands, backed by creative "historical" narratives, domestic law, and a selective reading of international norms. The region is now a textbook case of how intangible symbolic acts, when repeated enough to become normalized, can evolve into tangible material dominance.

  • In 2020 alone, China, in the same way it has renamed places in Arunachal Pradesh, renamed more than 80 features in the South China Sea. These were not acts of housekeeping, but of strategic myth-making, designed to weave a narrative of historical ownership and administrative control. Each new name is backed by maps, public pronouncements and military deployments. Over time, this creates "facts on the ground" — realities that others must deal with, regardless of legality.

  • Finally, China employs narrative warfare, by leveraging state media and diplomatic messaging to delegitimize counter-claims and cast China as the aggrieved party.

  • China's renaming campaign is a test of whether the world will allow international borders to be changed -- not by war, but by quiet, obdurate manipulation. The question is not about words. It is about the survival of an international rules-based order that is being eroded by passively doing nothing to confront unyielding infiltration.

  • If the international community does not push back against China's provocations -- which may seem minor -- it risks enabling a model of complete surrender that bypasses diplomacy, multilateralism and international law.

Just as China has been attempting to redraw maritime boundaries in the South China Sea —renaming reefs, building artificial islands and militarizing waters in defiance of international rulings — it is now exporting a similar playbook to land borders. These moves are about more than maps. They are about creating a norm of impunity, where might makes right and ambiguity is weaponized. Pictured: A Philippine Coast Guard ship faces off against a China Coast Guard ship at Sabina Shoal in the South China Sea on August 26, 2024. (Photo by Jam Sta Rosa/AFP via Getty Images)

In May 2025, China announced a new list of renamed places in Arunachal Pradesh, India's northeastern state that Beijing insists on calling "Zangnan." It is the fifth such list since 2017, and not just symbolic. These cartographic aggressions of renaming places seem to be part of a long-running strategy to undermine territorial norms and chip away at international boundaries using lawfare, infrastructure and semantics (the branch of linguistics concerned with meaning).

In geopolitics, names matter. They signal claims, establish narratives and lay the groundwork for future confrontations. China's repeated renaming of places it does not control represents not only a challenge to India, it is an affront to the principles of the rules-based international order that the US and the West designed after World War II.

China's renaming spree appears to be a part of a broader playbook of coercive diplomacy. These symbolic acts are designed to distort facts on the ground — what scholars of international relations call "cartographic aggression." China's tactic of proposing a territorial swap with India in the 1960s has long been abandoned. Instead, China has turned to a kind of assertive incrementalism, using symbolic tools and legal justifications to try to legitimize claims and assert influence without resorting to war.

This strategy represents a direct challenge to the established norms of state sovereignty and peaceful dispute-resolution. China's naming campaign appears to be part of a larger tool kit of "grey zone" tactics -- those fall that below the threshold of open conflict but are designed to shift the status quo in China's favor. Examples include creating civilian settlements near disputed borders, coming up with its Land Border Law (2022), which mandates civilian involvement in border defense; blurring the line between state and civilian actors, and developing infrastructure in disputed territories, such as building a dam on the Yarlung Tsangpo River (which becomes the Brahmaputra in India) to create geopolitical leverage.

Such tactics -- exploiting legal ambiguity and just plain general inertia among many of the world's leaders -- reveal China's ambition to quietly but persistently reshape the international order to suit its own interests.

China's renaming of foreign territory without consent -- supported by its domestic law -- not only challenges the Westphalian principle of sovereignty, it also defies the UN Charter, which emphasizes peaceful resolution of disputes and respect for existing borders.

Just as China has been attempting to redraw maritime boundaries in the South China Sea —renaming reefs, building artificial islands and militarizing waters in defiance of international rulings — it is now exporting a similar playbook to land borders. These moves are about more than maps. They are about creating a norm of impunity, where might makes right and ambiguity is weaponized.

To understand China's actions in Arunachal Pradesh, one can simply look to the South China Sea, where Beijing has long implemented its strategy of "creeping sovereignty" and "cartographic aggression". Over the past two decades, China has transformed contested reefs, shoals and rocks into militarily fortified islands, backed by creative "historical" narratives, domestic law, and a selective reading of international norms. The region is now a textbook case of how intangible symbolic acts, when repeated enough to become normalized, can evolve into tangible material dominance.

China's infamous "Nine-Dash Line" — a vague, historically dubious U-shaped demarcation of nearly the entire South China Sea — has no standing in international law. In 2016, the Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague ruled in favor of the Philippines, declaring China's expansive claims invalid under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. China rejected the ruling outright and accelerated military construction on the Spratly and Paracel Islands.

In 2020 alone, China, in the same way it has renamed places in Arunachal Pradesh, renamed more than 80 features in the South China Sea. These were not acts of housekeeping, but of strategic myth-making, designed to weave a narrative of historical ownership and administrative control. Each new name is backed by maps, public pronouncements and military deployments. Over time, this creates "facts on the ground" — realities that others must deal with, regardless of legality.

Both in the South China Sea and at the India-China border, China deploys a familiar playbook:

  • Symbolic assertion, through renaming, map revisions, manipulated historical narratives, and legal engineering through domestic laws (such as the 2021 Coast Guard Law and the 2022 Land Border Law) to justify its aggressive posture.
  • Exercising physical control over disputed territory, through infrastructure militarization, such as building airstrips, ports, radar stations and villages disguised as civilian projects.
  • Finally, China employs narrative warfare, by leveraging state media and diplomatic messaging to delegitimize counter-claims and cast China as the aggrieved party.

The result is a slow erosion of the rules-based international order, replaced by an infiltrated norm in which power, patience and unilateralism dominate. China's actions in South China Sea are no longer a theoretical precedent — they are a foretaste of what China can accomplish when aggression, even of a symbolic kind, is left unchallenged. If the international community normalizes what has happened in the South China Sea, it risks doing the same with the Himalayas.

China's renaming campaign is a test of whether the world will allow international borders to be changed -- not by war, but by quiet, obdurate manipulation. The question is not about words. It is about the survival of an international rules-based order that is being eroded by passively doing nothing to confront unyielding infiltration.

If the international community does not push back against China's provocations -- which may seem minor -- it risks enabling a model of complete surrender that bypasses diplomacy, multilateralism and international law.


Dr. Rahul Mishra is Associate Professor at the Centre for Indo-Pacific Studies, JNU, New Delhi, and a Senior Research Fellow at the German-Southeast Asian Center of Excellence for Public Policy and Good Governance, Thammasat University, Thailand. He specialises in politico-security affairs of the Indo-Pacific region, and the role of major and middle powers, especially in the context of China's rise and the emergence of minilaterals in the region. He also lectures on government, politics, and ethnic dynamics of Southeast and East Asian region, ASEAN-EU regionalism, and comparative regionalism. Email: rahul.seas@gmail.com X account @rahulmishr_

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/21703/china-renaming-spree

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Israel launches ‘Safe Return’ outbound flight framework - JNS Staff

 

by JNS Staff

Up to 50 passengers are allowed per flight, although additional sea and land exit options are available.

 

An El Al flight takes off at the Ben Gurion International Airport, outside of Tel Aviv, June 19, 2025. Photo by Yossi Aloni/Flash90.
An El Al flight takes off at the Ben Gurion International Airport, outside of Tel Aviv, June 19, 2025. Photo by Yossi Aloni/Flash90.

 

Israel’s “Safe Return” framework for outbound travel officially went into effect on Tuesday, enabling Israeli citizens and tourists to leave the country by air, land, or sea amid the fluctuating tensions due to the Israel-Iran conflict.

Under the structure, approved Israeli airlines—El Al, Arkia, Israir and Air Haifa—are permitted to operate flights with a strict passenger limit of 50 per flight, aimed at reducing congestion and exposure at Ben Gurion Airport. 

Departing travelers must arrive at Terminal 3 via Gate 2 and are advised to arrive no earlier than two hours before departure. Security checks and check-in are conducted on the ground floor, with transfers to Floor 3 for boarding.

Sea departures are also possible, with ticket purchases arranged directly through shipping companies.

Land crossings into Jordan and Egypt remain another option, including the Taba, Jordan River and Yitzhak Rabin crossings. The Allenby Bridge (King Hussein) crossing, which links Jordan to nearby Jericho, is open only to non-Israeli passport holders.

Travelers who make their way to either of Israel’s neighbors can then continue with their outbound international flights.

Meanwhile, the United States has also begun facilitating voluntary evacuations. 

On Saturday, two U.S.-organized flights evacuated roughly 70 American citizens and legal residents to Athens. 

The operation, dubbed “Exodus,” came just before U.S. airstrikes on Iranian nuclear targets. On Friday, Washington evacuated 79 embassy staff and family members to Bulgaria. 

According to the Associated Press, 6,400 people signed up for information on U.S. evacuation assistance in a single day.

The U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem continues to advise Americans to enroll in the State Department’s STEP program and seek independent routes out of Israel if possible.


JNS Staff

Source: https://www.jns.org/israel-launches-safe-return-outbound-flight-framework/

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Researchers say National Climate Assessment full of flaws, ask Trump to reassess past versions - Kevin Killough

 

by Kevin Killough

Protect the Public’s Trust (PPT) and the CO2 Coalition are asking the Trump administration to fix flaws they say are in the previous assessments. This would bring the influential reports in line with Trump's “Restoring Gold Standard Science" executive order.

 

A government watchdog and a climate-science educational nonprofit are calling on the Trump administration to fix what they call “flaws” in the influential National Climate Assessment (NCA). These flaws, according to the groups, include a reliance on unrealistic emission projections, contradictions, and false information on heat waves, hurricanes and wildfires. 

The assessment is a Congressionally mandated report that the U.S. Global Change Research Program (USGCRP) delivers to the president at least once every four years. The report is intended to integrate, evaluate and interpret the scientific findings on the impacts of climate change. Critics and researchers have argued the report has been highly politicized and not always consistent with sound science. 

Gold standard science

In April, President Donald Trump cut funding and staff at the USGCRP, The New York Times reported, as well as other federal programs, which some scientists say will jeopardize the next installment of the assessment. The USGCRP website now has a banner at the top stating that the group’s operations are “currently under review.” 

Protect the Public’s Trust (PPT) and the CO2 Coalition are asking the Trump administration to fix flaws they say are in the previous assessments. In May, Trump signed an executive order, “Restoring Gold Standard Science,” which states that the federal government, since the pandemic, had used or promoted scientific information in a “highly misleading manner.” The order argues that the Biden-Harris administration had politicized science, which it says undermined scientific integrity. In the interest of restoring trust in science, the order directs government research to follow standards of science from the first Trump administration. 

In a letter sent to Michael Kratsios, director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, which advises the White House on scientific, engineering and technological aspects of national policy, along with PPT and the CO2 Coalition, they argue that the Fifth National Climate Assessment is “riddled with violations of the principles” expressed in Trump’s order. 

Michael Chamberlain, director at PPT, told Just the News that the flaws the CO2 Coalition scientists identify in the letter end up repeated in version after version of the assessment. 

“It makes you wonder whether it was designed for the NCA to drive policy, or were intended policy outcomes designed to drive the NCA. It's still being relied upon by agencies and individuals in the government to make policy. So that's one of the clearest reasons for it to be revisited as soon as possible,” Chamberlain said. 

Business as usual 

Among the issues with the NCA is the use of Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 8.5, which is an emissions scenario often referred to as “business as usual.”  The scenario projects outcomes if society takes no actions to adapt or mitigate changes to the climate. The scenario is used extensively throughout climate studies, but many researchers have pointed out that it’s entirely implausible.

Writing in the journal “Issues in Science and Technology” in 2021,  Dr. Roger Pielke, Jr., retired professor of environmental science at the University of Colorado-Boulder and Justin Ritchie, adjunct professor at the University of British Columbia’s Institute for Resources, Environment, and Sustainability, wrote that their research and those of their colleagues show the scenario is “outdated” and “misleading.” For example, RCP8.5 projects to 2100 a six-fold growth in global coal consumption per capita, despite expert predictions that coal consumption has or will soon peak. 

“Why does this matter? Because RCP8.5—the most commonly used RCP scenario and the one said to best represent what the world would look like if no climate policies were enacted — represents not just an implausible future in 2100, but a present that already deviates significantly from reality,” the researchers argue. 

Trump’s executive order also criticizes the Biden-Harris administration for using the scenario in its policymaking, noting that RCP8.5 predicts end-of-century coal use exceeding estimates of recoverable coal reserves. “Scientists have warned that presenting RCP 8.5 as a likely outcome is misleading,” the order states. 

Revisiting and removing RCP8.5 from inclusion in an updated assessment, PPT and the CO2 Coalition state in their letter, would be a first step towards bringing government climate science in line with Trump’s order. 

Omissions and contradictions

The letter also argues that the NCA fabricated, falsified and omitted contradictory data in order to support a net-zero emissions agenda. For example, the NCA presents a chart purporting to show that record high temperatures are occurring more frequently. The chart, the PPT and CO2 Coality contend, didn’t show daily temperatures. Instead, it shows a ratio of daily record low temperatures each year, with a noticeable upward spike in recent years.

The Fourth National Climate Assessment claims there has been a significant increase in acreage burned  in the contiguous U.S. based on a data set that begins in 1983. This omits data going back to 1926, showing that recent decades of wildfires have affected only 20% of the area that was burned in the 1920s and 1930s. These omissions, the letter points out, carried over into the Fifth National Climate Assessment.

The letter includes a report by Dr. William Happer, professor emeritus in the Department of Physics at Princeton University, and Dr. Richard Lindzen, professor emeritus of atmospheric science at MIT. The report outlines a number of similar issues with the NCA in its reporting on sea level rise, the relationship between carbon dioxide emissions and recent warming, and hurricanes. 

Involvement of advocacy groups

When the Fifth Assessment was released, Pielke also raised a number of issues with it in his “The Honest Broker” Substack. He said it is “much more a glossy promotional brochure than anything resembling a careful assessment of the scientific literature on climate change and the United States.” Pielke explains that scientific assessments are "crucially important,” but the Fifth Assessment only further politicizes science. 

Among the issues, he points out, is that several reviewers of the assessment asked the NCA to cite research he and his colleagues have done on extreme weather and economic losses, which show a downward trend. The NCA refused, saying that the comment is “inconsistent with the author team’s thorough assessment of the science.” In another comment, the NCA falsely claimed Pielke and his colleagues examined trends through 2005. They actually go to 2017. 

Pielke also points out that climate advocacy groups with financial interests in carbon removal were involved in the report. It also leads with the National Atmospheric and Oceanic Administration’s “Billion Dollar Disaster” tally, which Pielke’s research showed was flawed and lacking in scientific integrity. In response to Pielke’s research, the agency agreed in August to reassess the tally, but in May, NOAA announced the project would no longer be updated

Chamberlain said that he hopes the problems that PPT and the CO2 Coalition point out could just be shrugged off as sloppiness or honest mistakes, but the flaws they’ve found are too extensive and egregious. 

“Respected experts who care for the integrity of the scientific method above their preferred policy outcomes would never allow such inaccuracies to go unaddressed and simply carry over from version to version. The NCAs must be corrected, and the president should start from scratch,” Chamberlain said.  


Kevin Killough

Source: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/energy/researchers-say-national-climate-assessment-full-flaws-ask-trump-reassess

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