Wednesday, December 18, 2019

Wildfires, Bushfires, and Bad Climate Policies

Seems the same sorts of bad policies are causing out-of-control fires in both the western United States, California specifically, and also in Australia.  In both places, it appears that the demands of so-called environmentalists are causing more harm than good, and bringing about more intense and widespread fires.  Some articles on the subject:

Wildfires Caused By Bad Environmental Policy Are Causing California Forests To Be Net CO2 Emitters

Forest Fire burning in Butte County Ca as seen from Chico neighborhoods and new housing development
Getty
In the past two years, wildfires scorched 2.9 million acres in California, including five of the state’s 20 deadliest fires killing 131 people.
Former California Gov. Jerry Brown grimly warned that because of man-made climate change, these destructive wildfires are the “new abnormal” that threaten “our whole way of life.”
Newly elected Gov. Gavin Newsom’s rhetoric has been more balanced.
As with Brown before him, Newsom blames climate change for the fires, saying during the campaign last September that, “The science is clear — increased fire threat due to climate change is becoming a fact of life in our state. Drier, longer summers combined with unpredictable wet winters have created dangerous fire conditions.”
Claiming that climate change causes wildfires naturally leads to a demand for action, with Newsom promising an aggressive progressive pushback against the Trump Administration’s effort to cut red tape regarding vehicle mileage standards, power plant carbon dioxide emissions, and oil and gas extraction.
That’s politics. Governing often dictates practicality. Here Newsom appears set to do more to combat wildfires than the tentative half-measures signed into law by Brown. Newsom is calling for improved wildfire surveillance and warning systems, better urban planning, and helping property owners clear brush.
Regarding reducing the fuel load, in an interview four months ago, Newsom said that there are “Hundreds of millions of dead trees” in the state and that it cost his father $35,000 to clear “a small little patch of dead trees” on his property.
Newsom didn’t admit it, but the outrageous cost to remove a few dead trees from private land is a consequence of California’s Byzantine environmental regulatory patchwork.
This is California’s big secret: it’s not climate change that’s burning up the forests, killing people, and destroying hundreds of homes; it’s decades of environmental mismanagement that has created a tinderbox of unharvested timber, dead trees, and thick underbrush.
This dangerous situation attracted attention from President Donald Trump who, during the height of California’s wildfires last year insisted that “There is no reason for these massive, deadly and costly forest fires in California except that forest management is so poor."
The irony is that forest management is so bad on public lands that a new report, ordered by the California legislature in 2010, shows that the portion of California's National Forests protected from timber harvesting is now a net contributor to atmospheric carbon dioxide due to fires and trees killed by insects and disease.
Every year about 3.8 billion board feet of new timber grows in the Golden State, capturing almost one metric ton of CO2 per acre in the productive timberland areas. Trees grow until they die, burn, or get harvested. If harvesting declines, tree mortality and fires increase. It’s the tyranny of math.
In the early 1990s, a series of restrictions were placed on logging in the West to protect the Spotted Owl. As it turned out, nature was more complicated than expected, with owl numbers continuing to decline—even after the California timber harvest plummeted—due to predation from other raptors.
In the meantime, the harvest fell below the growth rate in the 1990s, to about 1.5 billion board feet per year over the past decade. The tree harvest on federal lands is now one-tenth of what it was in 1988, President Reagan’s last full year in office.
The California forest report draft concludes by observing that the “Current flux [of CO2] may not be sustainable without forest management!” while citing the challenge of “Aging of forests on federal lands.”
Unlike much of the American South and East, California has a distinct wet season, with Pacific storms rolling in by November or December and wrapping up by March. In even the wettest years (2016-17 was the wettest in 122 years) much of California is bone-dry by late fall. Thus, it isn’t climate change that sets the conditions for fires—it’s California’s natural weather pattern. Comparing acres burned in wildfires to weather and tree harvest data, there appears to be little link to climate—but a big connection to the growing forest fuel load, especially on government land.
Which brings us back to policy. If federal and state environmental policies continue to make it difficult and costly to harvest timber and manage the fuel load, then the wildfires will continue and they will be bigger and deadlier. This will, in due course, cause some politicians to blame the fires on climate change.
In the meantime, the timber harvest infrastructure is less than one-third of what it was 30 years ago, meaning that even if politicians were sincere in wanting to manage the public forests, there few people remaining to manage them.

To sum it up,  the policies of refusing to allow the trees to be harvested, or areas to be cleared, means hotter, more dangerous fires, and everyone suffers.  These policies aren't helping the animals they were supposedly going to help, either.  The article ws written by Chuck DeVore, who also wrote this excellent piece:

It’s Not Climate Change To Blame For California’s Fires And Blackouts. It’s Democrats

Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom and his political allies claim climate change is driving California’s increasingly intense and deadly wildfires.
That’s nearly true. Climate change assumptions drive the state’s energy and environmental policies. This has resulted in people being killed in terrible wildfires, electrical blackouts to millions of people causing $5 billion so far in lost economic activity, all while diverting limited resources to a fool’s errand.
For instance, California’s large and heavily regulated public utilities—PG&E, SDG&E, and SCE—prioritize wind and solar power, leaving little for powerline maintenance and upgrades. Simply put, the utilities are doing exactly what the regulators tell them to do. They make money for their investors on wind and solar; they don’t on powerline maintenance.
Examining California’s determined push to decarbonize its economy shows a policy unsupported by logic, and shaky on fact.

Regulations Strangle Power Sources

First is the matter of leakage. California already has among the highest electrical prices in the nation, its gasoline prices are often the highest, and its regulatory burden, most of which is connected to environmental concerns and related lawsuits, have all acted to push energy-intensive manufacturing out of state.
Some of this activity has moved to Texas and other states. Some has moved to China and other Asian nations. As a result, goods that used to be made in California are made elsewhere, often generating more harmful pollution. The majority of the increase in ozone levels on the Pacific Coast traces its origins to Asia, mostly China, where coal-fired powerplants emit nitrous oxides that, when combined with volatile organic compounds and sunlight, create ground-level ozone that irritates lungs and increases rates of asthma.
As for the state’s main concern—greenhouse gas emissions—California’s policies aren’t helping much in that department, either. California features one of the most efficient economies in the world, with stringent air quality standards. But as energy-intensive manufacturing moves out of the state and California imports back those same goods, the net effect may be greater emissions due to the shipping increases.
This can be seen in California’s oil production. The modern fracking revolution has passed California by as politicians yearn to wean the state from oil and gas. In 1986, California produced 59.5 percent of its oil needs, with only 5.7 percent of oil coming from foreign suppliers, the remainder being shipped down the Pacific Coast from Alaska.
Last year, California’s oil production dropped to half of what it had been 32 years earlier. As a result, the state was forced to import 57.5 percent of its oil from foreign countries, mostly from Saudi Arabia. Oil tanker traffic off of California’s coast has skyrocketed. Meanwhile, Texas oil production has quadrupled in the last dozen years.
Then there’s the issue of relative scale. The People’s Republic of China, where a well-placed bribe to a Communist Party apparatchik can allow a factory to belch pollution, is the world’s biggest emitter of carbon dioxide. If you can believe China’s economic growth numbers, seven months’ worth of emission increases from China would wipe out all the gains made by eliminating California’s carbon emissions. All of them.

Poor Forest Management to Blame for Wildfires

I was in Los Angeles last Friday for a panel discussion of the area’s Green New Deal plans. Smoke from a wildfire greeted me on the flight into Burbank. At the panel, a professor of sustainability from a California university made a claim I’d heard before: California’s wildfires have doubled due to climate change, per the National Climate Assessment (NCA).
The NCA made the wildfire claim based on a study that concluded, “We demonstrate that human-caused climate change caused over half of the documented increases in fuel aridity since the 1970s and doubled the cumulative forest fire area since 1984.”
But they added a caveat: “Additionally, we treat the impact of (man-caused climate change) on fire as independent from the effects of fire management (e.g., suppression and wildland fire use policies), ignitions, land cover (e.g., exurban development), and vegetation… These factors have likely added to the area burned… Such confounding influences… contribute uncertainty to our empirical attribution of regional burned area to (climate change).”
The main evidence the study’s authors offer is the relationship between fuel aridity and total area burned, comparing the period 1984 to 1999 to 2000 to 2015.

The same data are presented differently here.

Something else happened in the early 1990s: environmentalists concerned for the spotted owl prevailed upon the Clinton administration to dramatically curtail the timber harvest in much of the western United States. Logging activity plummeted, and employment in the forest industry in California fell by half.
While correlation does not necessarily prove causation, it can be a strong clue. Let’s look at that last chart again, but add the amount of timber harvested in the West per the U.S. Forest Service.

We see that as the timber harvest plummeted, with a concurrent drop in active forest management practices, the area burned by wildfire grew as the fuel load increased.

Too Little Forest Attention, Too Late

With the retreat of the timber industry came an inevitable buildup of uncleared brush as well as runaway tree density, with it becoming common to have four times the number of trees per acre as is considered healthy. During California’s frequent droughts—historical evidence suggests they have been common since way before the industrial revolution—the higher tree density leads to stressed trees that became vulnerable to bark beetle infestations.
Between the drought and the bugs, millions of trees died—trees that had to be left in place because regulators, environmentalists, and politicians couldn’t muster the will to permit harvesting or clearing before they became worthless and deadly matchsticks. In 2012, the Forest Service estimated that 77 million acres, mostly in the West, was at risk due to insects and disease.

California’s politicians, including Newsom, are waking up to the connection between forest management and wildfires, although it is too little, too late. Newsom signed 22 wildfire-related bills in the closing days of this year’s legislative session, admitting during his campaign for office that California had “Hundreds of millions of dead trees” while noting that it cost his father $35,000 to clear “a small little patch of dead trees” on his property.
The year before, outgoing four-term Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown flipped on his longtime opposition to active forest management when he signed two bills into law.

Data Linking Wildfires, Climate Is Heavily Compromised

On an even more fundamental level, what if the temperature data the climate change-wildfire connection study used was inaccurate? A study of the U.S. surface temperature record presented at the 2015 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union indicated that the 30-year temperature trend was about two-thirds as strong as the official National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration record, due to massive urban encroachment on weather station sites. Only 410 of 1,218 weather stations in the continental U.S. were unperturbed by, for example, an asphalt parking lot built next to what was once a weather station out in a grass field.
Largely because of the urban heat island effect, weather stations in California and Nevada were particularly affected. In California and Nevada, the temperature increase per decade from 1979 to 2008 was 0.04 degrees centigrade when using unperturbed sites, versus the official record increase of 0.24 degrees, a six-fold difference.
Back to the blackouts. To deflect blame from his administration, Newsom continues to point to climate change—along with capitalism, saying last Friday, “It’s more than just climate change. It’s about the failure of capitalism to address climate change.” Vox’s Ezra Klein picked up on this theme, tweeting in a pre-apocalyptic funk about the smoke and blackouts:
This is what it will be like every year, from now on. I keep thinking of something @dwallacewells wrote in the Uninhabitable Earth: ‘Especially those who have imbibed several centuries of Western triumphalism tend to see the story of human civilization as an inevitable conquest of the earth, rather than the saga of an insecure culture, like mold, growing haphazardly and unsurely upon it.’ ‘That fragility, which pervades now everything humans might do on this planet, is the great existential insight of global warming.’

Meanwhile, PG&E is struggling to find the qualified crews to do the dangerous work of clearing trees from almost 2,500 miles of powerlines across the vast northern reaches of the state. That isn’t surprising, given that California and federal regulators armed with anti-logging policies put most of those people in the unemployment line, and they’ve moved on to other jobs or even states.
Klein is right that “This is what it will be like every year, from now on.” But it’s not because “Western triumphalism” led to an effort to conquer the earth. Even California’s Native Americans constantly burned its forests to foster their food supplies. No, it’s because California’s leaders, comfortable in the civilization bequeathed to them by their forebears, forgot that untamed nature is deadly.
Chuck DeVore is vice president of national initiatives at the Texas Public Policy Foundation and served in the California State Assembly from 2004 to 2010.

Yet Democrats want to force everyone to accept their ideas on climate change?  No, thanks!

In Australia, seems we have a similar issue.  The Aborigine people had solid methods for controlling fires, which are going to happen in arid areas, but apparently those methods aren't being used enough, and the results are devastating:

Indigenous fire methods protect land before and after the Tathra bushfire

On a hot, dry day in March 2018, 20 separate wildfires ignited across the Bega Valley in New South Wales.
One fire that began at Reedy Swamp north of the town of Bega tore through close to 1,000 hectares before reaching the beachside township of Tathra.
Six months on, a forest of bare, blackened trees frames the town, where more than 100 homes were destroyed or damaged.
But on a small patch of bushland on the south-western edge of Tathra, a patch of green shows where the fire came to a halt.

The land is part of 71 hectares owned by the Bega Local Aboriginal Land Council (LALC) at Tathra West.
The title to the land was transferred in 2016, 17 years after it was granted to the Bega LALC under the Aboriginal Land Rights Act process.
In 2017, the Bega LALC began a cultural burning program as part of the management strategy for their landholdings.
With training and support from the Far South Coast Rural Fire Service (RFS) and local RFS volunteers, the cultural burn crew prepared and burnt 3.5 hectares of land at Tathra West using methods informed by traditional knowledge.
Six months on from the 2018 wildfire, the land where cultural burns were undertaken in 2017 is sprouting with native grasses, in stark contrast to the scorched trees and dense bracken that mark the surrounding landscape.

"The old people wouldn't have allowed big bushfires destroying the landscape, that's like burning their house down," said Indigenous fire practitioner Victor Steffensen.
"The land is their food, their livelihood, their country, their home.
"If they'd allowed wildfires to burn the country to a cinder, they wouldn't have survived for so many thousands of years."
Mr Steffensen is a Cape York man who shares his traditional knowledge with Indigenous fire crews around Australia. He first visited the Bega LALC crew in February 2018.
"Helping these young fellas to rebuild their knowledge of their country and applying fire starts to bring out their identity again.
"We're not just dropping a match, we're reading country. Fire is a management tool to get the country healthy again, and that opens the door to cultural knowledge."

"There's a lot more care taken with a cultural burn than with a hazard reduction burn," said George Aldridge, a cultural burn crew member with the Bega LALC.
"We're making sure we're not burning habitat trees and logs [and we're] keeping the fire cool so we don't bake all the seeds and nutrients that are in the soil.
"Over time, we're going to get less leaf litter and bracken, and more grasses and bush foods and medicines come up."

Burning to heal after wildfire

Four months after the Tathra bushfire, the Bega LALC returned to the burnt out bushland to conduct cultural burns to help promote healthy regrowth.
"The principle of burning these areas so early after a fire is to try to create a bit more diversity of plants coming back," said Dan Morgan, an Aboriginal community support officer with Local Land Services.
"When the soil is disturbed through hot fires or land clearing, you get invasive natives like bracken coming back that choke out the area.
"Where we've burnt after the fire, we're seeing less bracken and more native grasses, little herbs and shrubs coming through."
As part of their ongoing land management, the LALC crew conduct flora and fauna surveys to evaluate biodiversity outcomes from the cultural burns.
"From the test burns that we've done in these areas, we're documenting what has grown back that we didn't see beforehand," said cultural burn crew member Bronwyn Luff.
"It's nice to see the regrowth of new seedlings.
"A lot of my friends I grew up with live around Tathra. I just feel really good that we have done this work, it makes us feel like we're helping our surrounding community."

"The hazard reduction methods we've been using for well over a century clearly aren't working," said Don McPhee, a land management consultant for the Bega LALC cultural burning program.
"Whether it's wildfire or conventional hazard reduction burns, we've got this repeating cycle of hot fires and plants coming back that like really hot fires, leading to extreme fuel loads building up again."
The Bega Valley Rural Fire Service's district officer for fire mitigation, Garry Cooper, has been directly involved with the Bega LALC cultural burning program from the beginning.
When the program began, the RFS delivered basic fire training and conducted the first burns with support from the Bega LALC crew.
Now, the Bega LALC crew do their own preparation and burning on country without RFS support.

"Cultural burning is very labour intensive, and that's challenging when you're trying to achieve a fuel reduction objective at the same time," Mr Cooper said.
"But there's a lot of knowledge here that we need to be looking at. It's a win for the community, getting that fuel reduction work done, as well as bringing life back to the land."
The cultural burning program was primarily funded by the Aboriginal Community Support Program from South East Local Land Services.
Additional funds were raised by the Tathra Mountain Bike Club at its 2017 Enduro event to support future Bega LALC cultural burning operations on the Tathra West property.

"The current funding we have allows for about 15 days of field work, which includes preparation as well as burning," said Glenn Willcox, CEO of the Bega LALC.
"We're looking to secure long-term funding to allow us to do more planning and give the crew members more certainty about our ability to keep doing this work.
"We have evidence that the work that we did in Tathra last year had a significant impact on the effect of the wildfire in March.
"If we can keep doing this work on the Bega Land Council land that forms the interface with townships in Merimbula, Tura Beach, Mirador, as well as Tathra, we can reduce the risk of a repeat of what happened in Tathra in 2018."

"What Indigenous fire represents is thousands of years of getting to know the landscape," Mr Steffensen said.
"It means connecting to the landscape, looking after the landscape and becoming part of that country again.
"When we look at the damage caused by bushfires, tens of billions of dollars of damage, why can't we put good money into looking after the land, and evolving this culture to be closer to the landscape in the future?"
"It's very homing, knowing that this cultural knowledge isn't going to be forgotten," said cultural burn crew member Peter Dixon.
"It's sort of a calming feeling. It's our cultural obligation to do these sorts of things, has been for thousands of years."

Then there is the admission that not burning enough of the fuel loads, so when fies strt, they are worse there:

‘We don’t do enough’: Deputy Premier admits government’s failed bushfire prevention


The NSW Deputy Premier admits the government “don’t do enough hazard reduction” but is blaming the Greens for it.
As more than 140 fires continue to burn across the state, questions are being raised about why they’re so severe.
The left of politics says it’s climate change but the right says it’s down to massive fuel loads which haven’t been burnt off.
Deputy Premier John Barilaro claims it’s a result of Greens ideology.
“I think all governments have been guilty of pampering to the Greens for the last two decades.
“We’ve allowed them to stop us from hazard reduction, from burning the fuel of the forest floors… and we haven’t done it. We just haven’t done it.
“We’ve got to do better and I know that we don’t do enough hazard reduction… because of the ideological position from the Greens.”

More links for those fires:

https://m.facebook.com/SkyNewsAustralia/videos/616905545715773/

https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/national/incredibly-stupid-nsw-firebugs-to-face-longer-minimum-jail-time/video/628c81e49b769fa8c1e0246770df0e20

And an older story: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/opinion/fuel-burns-will-save-us/news-story/30f559f3ffd71ca2372c306e29b19c2d

When it's not bad policies causing these issues, should we then blame global warning/climate change?  Nope.  Remember the devastating fires in the Southeast a fe years ago?  Much of that was arson:

Southeast Fires Update: At Least 2 Dead as More Than 30 Large Blazes Continue to Burn

Arson to Blame For Many of the Fires

Many of the fires are the result of arson, officials say, and three people have been arrested thus far, according to the Associated Press.
Police in eastern Kentucky say they have arrested a man described as a "wannabe meteorologist" who deliberately set a wildfire in an attempt to garner a larger Facebook following. Johnny Mullins, 21 of Jenkins, Kentucky, faces a charge of second-degree arson for a blaze in Letcher County, Jenkins Police Chief James Stephens told the AP.
A view of the Party Rock fire in North Carolina from the Bat Cave Baptist Church.
A view of the Party Rock fire in North Carolina, near the town of Bat Cave.
(John Cayton/Facebook)
"(Mullins) likes to do Facebook videos and have people follow him on his 'weather forecast,'" Jenkins Police Chief James Stephens told the AP. "So that's pretty much why he did what he did. He enjoyed the attention he got from the Facebook stuff."
According to Stephens, Mullins posted selfie videos on Facebook that were recorded in front of various fires. He called them "Weather Outlook" segments and received 2,900 views on his final video, which he posted Nov. 6.
Another unidentified teen was also arrested on suspicion of arson in Harlan, Kentucky, and a man was charged in Tennessee with setting fires and vandalism that caused more than $250,000 in damage outside Chattanooga.
According to the Courier-Journal, at least 150 of 210 wildfires — or 76 percent — that have broken out since October in Kentucky are arson-related, the Kentucky Energy and Environmental Cabinet reported.

More to that article, but that's the key information.  I've long wondered about that, why so many fires were arson, in a key election year.  It's clear, though, that these are not being caused by "climate change", as the environazis define it.

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Replies to Closed Threads on Another Blog

Sorry, folks, but this isn't a standard blog.  Instead, this is to respond to some folks from other threads, because those were closed, and thus the conversations just ended.  Frustrating when that happens!  So, that's all this is, but be patient, a real blog is coming soon!

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Miracle Rescue!!

This is pretty amazing.  One, he had enough air, and two, someone managed to spot him and get him out!

Here's the story:

Alaska hiker buried upside down in avalanche for over an hour saved in 'miracle' rescue

A hiker in Alaska buried upside down in an avalanche for more than an hour was dug out alive on Saturday after another hiker spotted his legs sticking out of the snow.
The avalanche occurred on Flattop Mountain around 1 p.m. a slab of frozen debris 2 to 3 feet thick got dislodged and fell down the slope amid strong winds, the Chugach National Forest Avalanche Information Center reported in a news release.
Alex Kuprienko, of Anchorage, said he was hiking the mountain trail around 2:30 p.m. when he noticed two feet kicking out from the fresh avalanche debris.
The avalanche occurred around 1 p.m. on Alaska's Flattop Mountain. (Chugach National Forest Avalanche Information Center)

"Honestly, at first I thought it was a kid playing around in the snow, didn't think much of it," Kuprienko told KTUU-TV, adding that because no other people were there, he decided to look closer. "I went up, and sure enough, there was a guy buried in the snow with his legs sticking up. So, he was on his back, face-up, but obviously head-down into the snow."
The avalanche had pinned the hiker under the large blocks of debris, making it impossible to free himself. Kuprienko said he wasted no time, foregoing gloves, and started to dig through the snow with his bare hands. He was able to free the man in about five minutes, he said.

The hiker was fully buried, but had been able to kick his feet out from the snow. (Chugach National Forest Avalanche Information Center)

The trapped hiker, who was not named, showed signs of hypothermia but was conscious, the avalanche center announced. Kuprienko said he called 911 and helped the man to the parking lot below the trail, where medics were waiting.
"Obviously, this is a miracle that he was able to breathe for that long," Kuprienko told the Anchorage Daily News of the hiker being trapped for over an hour.
The avalanche reportedly fell in large blocks, which allowed air pockets to form within the debris. The victim’s head was 2 to 3 inches below the ice and snow, rescuers said, and he likely was able to breathe because he was near a pocket of air.
"It's unbelievably lucky," Wendy Wagner, director of the avalanche center, told the paper.
"It's really rare that someone has a positive outcome after being trapped under the snow for over an hour."
Truly amazing!!  God said it was not that man's tie to go!



Another Case To Push Gun Control

Well, this is interesting.  The story posted a good five hours ago, and updated within fifteen minutes of my reading the article.  Yet, though with a "lone gunman", especially if he's white, we have a life history within thirty minutes to an hour, somehow, we still don't know why this shootout occurred?  I call BS.  I think they know exactly what happened, and it doesn't fit the narrative.  There is a lot of seriously stupid activity surrounding this case as well.  Here's the article:

Jersey City gun battle leaves 6 dead, including police officer

Six people, including a New Jersey police officer, were killed in an hourslong standoff and shootout that brought a Jersey City neighborhood to a standstill Tuesday, investigators said.
The shootings unfolded in a cemetery and a convenience store near the Sacred Heart School.
Of the six people who died, one was Detective Joseph Seals, 40, who was married with five kids. The others killed included two of the three suspects in the case, as well as three civilians.
A second officer was struck in the shoulder by gunfire, and two others were hit by shrapnel, Mayor Steven Fulop said.
It was unclear what happened to the third suspect, described as a 6-foot-tall black male wearing all black clothing.
The circumstances of the shootout also remained uncertain and the situation forced every public school in Jersey City into lockdown mode.
The FBI was assisting Jersey City police.
"Our thoughts and prayers are with the men and women of the Jersey City Police Department, especially with the officers shot during this standoff, and with the residents and schoolchildren currently under lockdown," Gov. Phil Murphy said in a statement. "I have every confidence in our law enforcement professionals to ensure the safety of the community and resolve this situation."



Loud volleys of gunfire could be heard at regular intervals but subsided around 2 p.m. in the city, which is just across the Hudson River from Manhattan.
Dozens of bystanders pressed against the police barrier to film the action on cellphones, some whooping when gunfire bursts filled the air.
Andy Patel, who works at a liquor store about three blocks away from the site of the shooting site, said there had been consistent gunfire fire about an hour Tuesday afternoon.
"I can hear the gunshots. It's like firecrackers going off. They were shooting like crazy about an hour ago. Then it stopped for like 20 or 30 minutes. The cops were clearing everyone off the streets," said Patel.
President Trump tweeted: "Just received a briefing on the horrific shootout that took place in Jersey City, NJ. Our thoughts & prayers are w/ the victims & their families during this very difficult & tragic time. We will continue to monitor the situation as we assist local & state officials on the ground."


The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said it was responding. The New York Police Department sent emergency services personnel, and the forces counterterrorism unit was monitoring the situation.
Several schools in the area were placed on lockdown while the situation is ongoing, officials said. Jersey City Public Schools tweeted "all students and staff are safe."

So, this is what I am seeing.  We have three suspects, two now deceased, and the third is the only one for whom we have a description, which is black male.  We have a location at a convenience store, and a presumably nearby cemetery, making the most likely scenario that these guys, probably all black males,  were robbing the place, and police showed up, a gunfight ensued, spilling into the cemetery as they tried to flee.  Bystanders were shot as well because, gee, they were trying to record the action, instead of being concerned about their own safety.  A cop, with a family, was sadly shot and killed as well.  But they can't see a motive, or a reason?  Add in the fact that even though this was an isolated event, thy locked down all schools in that town.  Anything to push the anti-gun narrative, right?  Can't blame white guys, so claim no reason known, and hope we all forget about it?  Yet this is exactly the sort of case that comprises most of the gun violence in this country - criminals and gangs using guns in the commission of their crimes.  Not "lone shooters", not "angry white nationalists", but usually non-white criminals.  Why can't the media report the truth, already? 

Friday, December 6, 2019

Another Saudi Terrorist!!

This time, a shooter, in a "gun free zone", on a military installation.  If the military folks could carry, would he have been able to do as much damage?

Report: Pensacola Shooting Perpetrated by Middle Eastern Foreign National

Pensacola
Joel Pollak/Breitbart News
2:15
The gunman who opened fire at Naval Air Station Pensacola, killing three, is reportedly a foreign national from a Middle Eastern country.
The gunman opened fire Friday morning, killing three innocents and causing numerous others to be transported to the hospital for injuries.
The Associated Press reports that the Pensacola gunman was an aviation student from Saudi Arabia.
NBC News reports that the gunman’s name was Mohammed Saeed Alshamrani.
On December 6, 2019, Breitbart News reported that Naval Air Station Pensacola is a gun-free zone. The station’s firearm policy, as described by Commander, Navy Region Mid-Atlantic, notes:
While federal and state laws differ widely on the subject, regulations pertaining to the registration, transportation, and storage of firearms on Naval Installations in the Mid-Atlantic area of responsibility are clear. According to the instruction, all hands share responsibility for adhering to regulations pertaining to the registration, transportation, and storage of firearms in the AOR.
The policy also points out that “state issued ‘concealed weapons permits’ are not recognized on any Navy installation.”
The firearm policy allows guns to be brought on base after obtaining approval from a commanding officer but notes that such firearms “may only be stored in the installation’s armory.” Moreover, during transport onto the installation, all firearms are to be “unloaded and secured with a trigger lock and ammunition must be carried in the farthest most possible location away from the firearm.”

Three Dead in Pensacola Naval Air Station Shooting

69846536_2422941957796964_3011167915861868544_n
NAS Pensacola/Facebook
1:26
Three people are dead after a gunman opened fire at the Naval Air Station in Pensacola on Friday morning, according to Pensacola News Journal.
Escambia Sheriff’s spokeswoman Amber Southard said the shooter is also dead.
Baptist Hospital confirmed it is treating five patients related to the shooting, while six were transported to Ascension Sacred Heart.
“There’s probably been 100 or so various law enforcement vehicles zooming down the wrong side on Navy Boulevard,” said Escambia County Commissioner Jeff Bergosh. “There’s been ambulances, fire trucks. It’s my understanding there’s multiple causalities. I haven’t heard of any fatalities yet.”
The White House said President Donald Trump has received a briefing on the shooting.
NAS Pensacola employs more than 16,000 military and 7,400 civilian personnel, according to its website. One of the Navy’s most historic and storied bases, it sprawls along the waterfront southwest of downtown Pensacola. The base dominates the economy of the surrounding area and includes the National Naval Aviation Museum, a popular regional tourist attraction.

Not a lot of details thus far, but how did a foreigner manage to get a gun onto the base, when American military personnel aren't even allowed to carry there?  You'd think commons sense would mean always searching such peope before allowing their entry.  Then again, common sense would ean allowing military people, who can be armed in other nations, the ability to defend their home base. 

Please share any links and updates you find, and remember to pray for those affected.

Wednesday, December 4, 2019

New Rules To Require Work For Welfare!

Well, it's about time.  In states that have passed such laws, not only does welfare participation decrease, but so do poverty rates.  Be sure to check the video I will add at the end, to fully understand why we need this new rule.

USDA Set to Finalize SNAP Proposal to Promote Work

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is set to finalize a proposal to reform the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) by encouraging those receiving benefits to work.
The final rule proposes that those who are able-bodied working adults without dependents between the ages of 18-49 who receive food stamps for more than three months in a 36-month period must work, go to school, receive job training, or volunteer to receive benefits.
The rule does not apply to those who are over 50 years old, disabled, pregnant, or caretakers for children.
The law allows states to waive out of this time limit requirement due to poor economic conditions, but before the rule was put into place, areas with unemployment as low as 2.5 percent were eligible for waivers, according to the USDA.
According to the USDA, the reason the rule was put into place was because of record unemployment, decreasing the need for people to be on food stamps. Statistics from the U.S. Department of Labor show that the unemployment rate is 3.6 percent and there are a record seven million job openings.
“We need to encourage people by giving them a helping hand but not allowing it to become an indefinitely giving hand,” Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said in a statement. “Now, in the midst of the strongest economy in a generation, we need everyone who can work, to work. This rule lays the groundwork for the expectation that able-bodied Americans re-enter the workforce where there are currently more job openings than people to fill them.”
The USDA estimates that approximately 755,000 people would discontinue participating in the nation’s food stamp program under the work requirements rule, and the rule would reduce federal spending by $7.9 billion over five years.
State agencies would also play a special role in putting those on food stamps back to work.
Under the 2018 Farm Bill, state agencies would have the ability to administer employment and training programs to help food stamp recipients “gain the skills, training, or work experience they need to enter, reenter, or remain in the workforce,” according to a USDA letter on SNAP Employment and Training Resources Available to States.
These programs provide everything from job training to necessary work items such as work boots, uniforms, and subsidized transportation.
The USDA’s rule is taking what many states have done on an individual level since 2013 and is taking it nationwide. Since those reforms have been put into place, food stamp enrollment has been declining nationwide.
There are currently 36,401,408 individuals and 18,462,672 households enrolled in SNAP. But USDA officials say those numbers are “preliminary” due to the 2018 government shutdown, which affected food stamp distribution at the start of 2019.
When Trump took office, 42,297,791 individuals and 20,937,903 households were enrolled in food stamps.
Although food stamp participation went up slightly for July and August in the short term, a longer-term look at the data among the states shows that there is a decline in the number of people on food stamps.
Of the states that reported data, 46 out of 50 states reported a percent decrease in the number of people on food stamps over the past year. North Carolina was excluded from the count because it is missing data reports from February 2018 to the present.

Now, as for why we need such laws, just listen to this young woman:



No Crimes Cited in Impeachment Report!!

NO crimes, so why is there an impeachment, again? Oh, right, because the Left has no one who can beat our president, that's why!!

Adam Schiff’s Report Cites No ‘Bribery’ or ‘High Crimes’; Only Tweets

The House Intelligence Committee report released by chairman Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) on Tuesday cites no constitutionally permissible grounds for impeachment against President Donald Trump — other than tweets.
Article II, Section 4 of the U.S. Constitution provides that impeachment shall be for “Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.” Notably, the Framers of the Constitution ruled out “maladministration” as a reason.
In Schiff’s 300-page report, Democrats failed to cite any specific grounds for impeaching the president.
Notably, though Schiff and others attempted to argue that the president had possibly committed “bribery” by allegedly asking the president of Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden in exchange for U.S. aid, there is no discussion of bribery whatsoever in the report — other than references to Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani’s claims that Biden might be guilty of bribery because his son was on the payroll of Ukrainian gas giant Burisma.
The only references to any “crimes” allegedly committed by the president is a discussion of “witness intimidation.”
Schiff and his Democrat majority attempt to argue that President Trump committed that crime by tweeting criticism of several witnesses against him, including calling them “Never Trumpers” and drawing attention to their testimony.
The report also cites Trump’s tweets criticizing former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch during her testimony, which clearly did not obstruct her testimony and which she would not have known about had Schiff not read them — partially — to her in the middle of the hearing. (Among Trump’s criticisms was that “the new Ukrainian President spoke unfavorably about her in my second phone call with him,” which Yovanovitch could not explain.)


The report also cites, as an example of witness intimidation, Trump re-tweeting a reference to testimony by Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, confirmed that Ukraine offered him the post of defense minister on three occasions.



The report also cites, in a general sense, the crimes of “obstructing Congress,” “concealing material facts,” and “retaliating against employees who provide information to Congress.” Democrats provide no real evidence to support the latter two charges. They merely claim that Trump threatened retaliation by tweeting a quote from Rush Limbaugh about “dismissing everybody involved from the Obama holdover days,” which Trump never did.

As for “obstructing Congress,” Democrats did not wait for the courts to adjudicate balance-of-power disputes between the executive branch and the legislative branch over the requested information and witnesses: the rush to conclude the impeachment inquiry in a hurry, even without key witnesses, was their decision and theirs alone.
The Trump administration has also maintained that the House impeachment inquiry is not legitimate on procedural grounds. It began without any formal authorization; it was conducted largely in secret, by the Intelligence Committee and not the Judiciary Committee; and it departed from precedent by refusing to grant the president due process rights, such as representation by counsel in hearings. That is why the White House has not complied.
Moreover, as liberal law professor and former Obama administration official Cass Sunstein argued in 2017, “obstructing Congress” is not sufficient grounds for impeachment if the inquiry itself is not legitimate.
He wrote: “Presidents should cooperate with legitimate investigations, but it is not a high crime or misdemeanor to refuse to cooperate with a congressional investigation into an offense that is not independently impeachable. Congress cannot gin up an impeachable offense by investigating an offense that is not impeachable, and then encountering presidential resistance.” Democrats have offered no independently impeachable offense — at all.
Shifts report never explicitly accuses Trump of “abuse of power.” But even that is not impeachable — firstly because Republicans have argued that Trump was not seeking a political favor from Ukraine, but exercising a constitutional duty to fight corruption and election interference; and secondly because it is not an impeachable offense.
As Sunstein wrote: “Almost every American president has, on more than one occasion, passed the bounds of his power, in the sense that his administration has done something that it is not lawfully entitled to do.”
So instead of “Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors,” Democrats are trying to impeach the president on the basis of tweets he posted in his own defense against their own, arguably partisan, inquisition.

In other words, they have nothing, and everyone knows it.  You can't accuse someone of a crime, then claim it's a crime to protest the false accusation.  You can't run a kangaroo court and claim someone who refuses to participate in the farce is a criminal.


Would-Be School Shooter Thwarted by Brave Officer with Gun

This is how this sort of thing should always play out.  Good job officer, much better than the Coward from Broward who allowed students to be killed.

Innocents Spared as Good Guy with Gun Shoots Armed Student


No innocents were harmed as a good guy with a gun shot an armed student Monday morning at Wisconsin’s Waukesha High School.
Fox News reports the school where the incident unfolded is located just west of Milwaukee.
Shortly after 10 a.m. a resource officer entered a classroom where a 17-year-old reportedly had a gun. The officer tried to “deescalate” the situation, ordering the student to show his hands, but the student allegedly responded by keeping them in his pockets.
The student then allegedly “removed the handgun from his waistband” and pointed it at the officer, who then shot the student.
Andrew Pollack, whose daughter Meadow was killed in the Parkland High School attack, responded to the actions of the good guy with a gun by tweeting:


A similar scenario unfolded Tuesday at Oshkosh West High School.
The Oshkosh Police Department used a Facebook post to explain:
"There has been an officer involved shooting at Oshkosh West high school. The school is currently locked down and parents can be reunited with their children at Perry Tipler Middle school. A student was armed with a weapon and confronted a school resource officer. The student and officer were both injured and transported to local hospitals."
 News 8000 reports that the armed student at Oshkosh West High School “reportedly confronted a school resource officer,” and was shot thereafter.

So, two would-be shooters stopped by good guys with guns, and no innocent people hurt, let Leftists want to rmove all guns from the schools?  How many would have been killed had there been no one armed to stop those two?   Seems that's what the Left actually wants.

Thank God those schools had armed guards to protect the students and staff, and thank God those guards were willing to do their jobs, and not hide outside. 

Saturday, November 30, 2019

Trump Thanksgiving Round-Up

Here's a nice collection of stories about the president and the Thanksgiving holiday.  Intros only with the link, so go to each one for the full story:

Donald Trump Surprises Troops in Afghanistan for Thanksgiving

US President Donald Trump serves Thanksgiving dinner to US troops at Bagram Air Field during a surprise visit on November 28, 2019 in Afghanistan. (Photo by Olivier Douliery / AFP) (Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images)
OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images
3:39
President Donald Trump has made a surprise visit to Afghanistan to address U.S. troops on Thanksgiving Thursday.
The president arrived at Bagram Air Field around 8:30 p.m. local time and spent roughly two-and-a-half hours in the war-torn country. The media was under “strict instructions” to keep the visit under wraps for security reasons, CBS News reports.

No surprise there.  The military loves the guy, and he's good to veterans as well.  This is a president that cares about the troops, unlike his lawless predecessor!

Of course, the idiot MSM can't even get this right:

Donald Trump Mocks Newsweek for Fake Thanksgiving Headline

US President Donald Trump speaks to the troops during a surprise Thanksgiving day visit at Bagram Air Field, on November 28, 2019 in Afghanistan. (Photo by Olivier Douliery / AFP) (Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images)
OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty
President Donald Trump mocked Newsweek after they reported Thursday he spent Thanksgiving golfing and tweeting. In fact, the president was secretly traveling to Afghanistan to visit deployed American troops.
“I thought Newsweek was out of business?” Trump wrote on Twitter, sharing a screenshot of the article and photos of him with the troops in Afghanistan posted by his son Donald Trump Jr.

Nice to see him holding them accountable!

While they were compiling their lies for their Fake News stories, he was busy acknowledging the history of the day and reasons to be thankful:

Donald Trump Celebrates Unity and Gratitude in Thanksgiving Proclamation

US President Donald Trump arrives for a "Keep America Great" campaign rally at the BB&T Center in Sunrise, Florida on November 26, 2019. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)
MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty
1:41
President Donald Trump recalled the spirit of unity and gratitude in his Thanksgiving proclamation for 2019.
Trump noted the pilgrims spent their first Thanksgiving seated in unity with the Wampanoag Tribe after they helped them survive in the New World.
“That first Thanksgiving provided an enduring symbol of gratitude that is uniquely sewn into the fabric of our American spirit,” Trump wrote.
The president also recalled America’s first president, George Washington declared a National Day of Thanksgiving after the Revolutionary War and the new Constitution and President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a day of Thanksgiving after the battle of Gettysburg.

The First Lady was not idle either:

First Lady Melania Trump Honors Military, Wishes All a ‘Blessed Thanksgiving’

First lady Melania Trump smiles during an event to pack "comfort kits" to be sent to troops overseas for the holidays, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2019, at The American Red Cross National Headquarters in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
2:07
First Lady Melania Trump took to Twitter on Thursday to wish Americans a “blessed Thanksgiving” and thank those in the military serving overseas.
“May you all have a blessed Thanksgiving! Enjoy time with your family and friends. To those in our military who are serving overseas, you are in our thoughts and prayers – our nation is thankful for all you do!”

Classy lady, and certainly a patriotic American who is proud of her country!

People in Hong Kong appreciate our president as well, for all he's done for them:

Hong Kong Protesters Hold ‘Thanksgiving’ Rally after Trump Signs Support Bills

Pro-democracy protesters take part in a Thanksgiving Day rally at Edinburgh Place on November 28, 2019 in Hong Kong, China. Protesters gathered to say thank you to the United States after US President Donald Trump signed legislation supporting the Hong Kong pro-democracy protesters, with new legislation requiring annual reviews of …
Chris McGrath/Getty Images
3:48
Thousands of demonstrators in Hong Kong staged a “Thanksgiving” rally on Thursday evening in response to President Donald Trump signing two bills in support of the city’s pro-democracy movement.
Demonstrators took to the streets shortly after the president signed the legislation. Some draped themselves in U.S. flags and expressed gratitude for the administration’s support.
“The rationale for us having this rally is to show our gratitude and thank the U.S Congress and also President Trump for passing the bill,” student Sunny Cheung, 23, told Reuters. “We are really grateful about that and we really appreciate the effort made by Americans who support Hong Kong, who stand with Hong Kong, who do not choose to side with Beijing.”
“I was confident Donald Trump would sign the law because we are fighting for universal freedom. Everyone globally should support that,” another young woman told the news outlet. “But we do want to give thanks to those around the globe that support us, a small city like Hong Kong, we thank them for their attention.”

Hong Kong Protesters Hold Trump ‘Rocky Balboa’ Posters at Thanksgiving Rally

Pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong held up posters featuring U.S. President Donald Trump depicted as “Rocky Balboa” at a special rally on Thanksgiving Day to thank the president for signing legislation supporting their cause.
On Wednesday, Trump tweeted a humorous image of his face superimposed on Sylvester Stallone’s body, circa 1976, in the role of prizefighter Rocky Balboa.
https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1199718185865535490
Left-wing Hollywood personalities were outraged, and mainstream media fact-checkers tittered in disapproval, but most people took the tweet as a joke.
Except in Hong Kong. There, protesters appear to have taken the image seriously, as a depiction of American resolve against China.
On Wednesday, President Trump signed two relevant bills into law. One, the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act, “mandates sanctions on Chinese and Hong Kong officials who carry out human rights abuses and requires an annual review of the favorable trade status that Washington grants Hong Kong,” the Associated Press reported. The other bill prohibits the export to Hong Kong of non-lethal arms used by police to suppress protests.
It was not clear at first whether the president would sign the bills, though they had overwhelming support in Congress. Trump is in the midst of delicate trade talks with China, and while he has sometimes used the Hong Kong issue to gain leverage, he has also appealed to China by supporting talks instead of confrontation. In a statement Wednesday, he said: “I signed these bills out of respect for President Xi, China, and the people of Hong Kong.”

You've gotta love this!  He's so adept at trolling the Left, and people love him for it!

Then, there is a nice flashback article for you, and some history:

Ronald Reagan’s 1985 Thanksgiving Address: ‘Thank God for the Bounty and Goodness of our Nation’

Former President Ronald Reagan delivered a memorable Thanksgiving address in 1985, with his words continuing to ring true 34 years later.
The 40th president delivered brief remarks on the cherished holiday, urging Americans to thank God for the liberty they enjoy in the United States.
“You know, the Statue of Liberty and this wonderful holiday called Thanksgiving go together naturally because although as Americans we have many things for which to be thankful, none is more important than our liberty,” he said, painting a stark contrast between the freedoms Americans enjoyed and the oppression that remains a reality for so many across the globe:

Historian Wilfred McClay: Thanksgiving Established Fundamental American Values Centuries Before 1776

Fundamental American values manifested in the story of Thanksgiving centuries before the Declaration of Independence and Constitution, explained Wilfred McClay, author of Land of Hope: An Invitation to the Great American Story and professor of history at the University of Oklahoma, in a Tuesday interview on SiriusXM’s Breitbart News Tonight with hosts Rebecca Mansour and Joel Pollak.
Mansour invited McClay’s assessment of criticisms of the November holiday among left-wing teachers calling for students to “unlearn” a “feel-good” Thanksgiving “myth.”
McClay said of leftist contempt for Thanksgiving, “I think it’s a reflection of what — for some people — is the obsession with the politicization of all aspects of life, and everything has to be brought into conformity with some kind of ideological worldview.”

McClay continued, “It’s almost like a kind of revolutionary religion, like in the French Revolution, the way they abolished the calendar, and tried to reinvent civilization from the bottom up. It’s the kind of mentality [against] something that really … is one of most admirable holidays imaginable. Of course, we aren’t the only ones that have Thanksgiving in the world, but it is integral to our essential practises, and it’s an expression of gratitude.”
“It has religious roots,” said McClay of the history of Thanksgiving. “In the 1620s — there’s some debate over when the first Thanksgiving was, whether it was in Virginia or whether it was in Plymouth, but it’s in the 17th century — it had religious overtones, particularly with the Pilgrims in 1621.”
McClay added, “It is an amazing story. Of course they had come in pursuit of freedom to practise their religion and raise their children as they saw fit. They had come from the Netherlands, where religious liberty was available to them, but it was a hard place to live for various reasons, and particularly for their children, to have them grow up not speaking English and all of that, so they got on the Mayflower and came on over.”
“It was a terrible, brutal first winter,” stated McClay. “They suffered from disease and exposure, and about half of them died. Many of them never came off the ship because they saw the landing as so dangerous, but they did have favorable contacts with some of the native tribes, the Patuxet Tribe [and] Squanto, and he taught them how to cultivate corn, what plants to eat and what plants not to eat.”
“[Squanto] was an intermediary,” explained McClay. “He helped [the Pilgrims] form relationships with the Wampanoag Tribe. … They had this celebratory feast in November 1621 to celebrate a successful harvest of corn that Squanto had helped show them [how] to cultivate. So that’s seen as the historical origin of it, and it was, by all accounts, by everything we know about it, and we don’t know a lot.”
McClay remarked, “Puritans were great about keeping journals and diaries. They saw success or failure as evidence of the degree to which they were being faithful to God. … That’s what their settlement was all about. They saw this as a mission, this errand into the wilderness.”
“Ten years later, John Winthrop, who led the Massachusetts Bay Colony, which became Boston — he gave this magnificent speech … where the phrase ‘city on a hill’ comes from — makes it very clear this was a religious enterprise, so they’re grateful to God [for] the success in finally getting through — or at least having the materials to get through — the coming winter,” added McClay.
Fundamental American values were being developed by the early colonists, explained McClay.
“What they did was enact social compact theory that had been sort of kicked around in Europe — especially in Britain — for awhile,” McClay noted. “They created a body politic out of the consent of those who were aboard the ship, and they had the foresight to realize they should [and] could do that … two centuries before the Declaration of Independence, the idea that government is based on the consent of the governed, which of course is one of the fundamental American ideas. So all of this is prefigured by the Mayflower Compact.”
McClay said, “There’s a kind of audacity about these [first colonists] that we miss, I think, in the historical accounts. Their journeys were dangerous. The habitats into which they were coming were brutal, and they lost many lives, and yet they had this sense that …. they were on a mission of God, ‘The eyes of all people are upon us.’ … They were so deeply committed to the vision of what they were doing, and that was the germ of what became, ultimately, a great nation.”
The Puritans sought religious restoration via their settlement enterprise, explained McClay.
“[The Puritans] wanted to just have a faithful remnant of a church that they thought had become corrupt in England, and in Europe, in general,” McClay shared. “What they really wanted to do was recreate what [William Bradford] called, ‘the primitive church,’ and that doesn’t mean people running around with spears and that sort of thing. It meant a church that resembled the church of the time of the apostles and Jesus and immediately after Jesus’s crucifixion and resurrection, the early time of the church, when it was simpler, when you didn’t have a lot of pomp and ceremony and popes and bishops running around in fancy robes and the accumulation of wealth and worldly power.”
McClay added, “It’s proper, I think, that we really trace Thanksgiving more to the Puritans, to a kind of reverent Thanksgiving.”
“[Left-wing criticism of Thanksgiving] doesn’t touch the validity of the holiday for us, because we don’t necessarily ground what we value of Thanksgiving in that historical episode. It’s not like the founding is, where it really matters what the language of the [Declaration of Independence] and Constitution was, and we want to try to stay as close as we can to the original intent of those documents. We don’t have that same kind of relationship to the first Thanksgiving, so I think it’s kind of a phony charge, what it does reflect to me is this pervasive politicization of American life, particularly from a left, radical, critical perspective.”
McClay described Thanksgiving as an “aspirational” holiday.
“A myth, properly understood, is not a falsehood,” McClay said. “We say that we believe all men are created equal. In some literal way, of course that’s not true, so what do we mean? Do we mean all men are created equal in the eyes of God? Maybe, although secular people might object to that formulation, but we certainly mean we have a kind of aspiration towards recognition of — in some ultimate way that’s very hard to define — the equal worth of all individual people. That’s really, I think, fundamentally religious. It’ s hard to imagine that existing out of a Juedo-Christian understanding of human beings.”
McClay went on, “We have this day because we aspire to reconciliation to one another and a recognition of just how profoundly indebted we are to those who came before us, to our parents, to our surrounding society, to our neighbors and friends, that there’s so much that we take for granted every single day.”
“How are you going to go through life?” asked McClay. “How are you going to go through the world? Are you going to go through it thinking that everything is your due and everything you don’t get [means] you’re being cheated by the world? Or do you think, ‘Why do I have something rather than nothing? Isn’t that great?'”
McClay continued, “The Christian view — I’m sweeping widely, here — is that we don’t really deserve anything. Our sinful nature is that we don’t really have anything coming to us, that it’s God’s graciousness that is the source of all these good things that we really don’t deserve.”
“It is a time in which we recognize our own insufficiencies, that we are not islands unto ourselves and that we depend on others, and that there are so many people in our lives to whom we owe profound gratitude, and just the bounty of existence,” determined McClay. “These are all reasons for gratitude.”
McClay contrasted gratitude and ingratitude.
“Gratitude is the proper disposition of a healthy human soul, and it’s the proper disposition of a good citizen in a democratic society,” assessed McClay. “If we lose those things and we become, sort of, brats — and I’m not meaning to say all the radical critiques of American society are bratty, most of them are, but not all of them — brattiness is a kind of ingratitude and a feeling that, ‘I deserve it all and whatever I don’t get is a form of expropriation.’ It’s the seed of other good things, other forms of mutual appreciation and reconciliation that can occur, and to take that away atomizes people.it leaves people without a means to reach out to one another.”
Left-wing critiques of Thanksgiving are generally a part of a broader political campaign to undermine America’s founding, concluded McClay.

That one, you have in full, because it's a great message, and one a lot of people don't hear these days.
Hope you all had a great holiday, with people you love!