Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Fixing US campaign finance laws

 

Did the Supreme Court Steal the Midterm Elections?

Restrictions on party committees violated the Constitution—and gave Democrats an advantage.

Allysia Finley

ET


Can you believe it? The MAGA Supreme Court just rigged the November midterm election for Republicans. Or so goes the story in the liberal press last week after a 6-3 majority struck down federal limits on the amount of money that party committees can spend in coordination with candidates in National Senatorial Campaign Committee v. Federal Election Commission.

Reporters spilled little ink on the majority’s legal analysis, which detailed how spending limits violate the First Amendment’s protection of core political speech. Who cares about the Constitution when an election is around the corner?

“The Supreme Court Just Gave the G.O.P. a New Midterm Edge,” read a New York Times headline. According to Bloomberg News, the ruling by a “Republican-appointed supermajority gives the GOP a financial boost this campaign season” and “may have smoothed the way for Republicans to keep control of Congress in what would otherwise have been a difficult year.”

If Republicans keep control of Congress in November despite long odds, expect Democrats to blame the court’s conservatives rather than acknowledge that nominating and embracing socialist candidates hurt their party.

The justices and their liberal critics agree on one point: The removal of the longstanding limit on coordinated party spending will make campaigns more efficient and effective. Both parties will benefit from being able to better coordinate messages and ads. That should reduce political spending, not increase it as the left claims.

Democrats say the GOP will benefit more from the ruling, since Republican party committees are sitting on twice as much cash as Democratic committees. That also means that the status quo ante benefited Democrats. “We have to really take seriously the fact that we just lost a major advantage that the Democratic Party has had in the last decade,” Danielle Butterfield, president of Democratic super PAC Priorities USA, told Politico.

Republicans funnel more money to party committees, while Democrats give more to candidates. Because federal law and regulations require cable and broadcast TV stations to offer lower ad rates to candidates for public office—but not super PACs or party committees in the 60 days before a general election—Democrats have enjoyed an advertising advantage.

After the ruling, GOP candidates are likely to spend more of their war chests on TV ads while letting party committees focus on get-out-the-vote efforts. This could help Republicans—though mainly by neutralizing an advantage the unconstitutional regulation conferred on Democrats.

Still, if money could buy elections, Michael Bloomberg—who dumped $1.12 billion into his presidential campaign in 2020—would have been the Democratic nominee that year. Andrew Cuomo would be mayor of New York. And billionaire climate activist Tom Steyer would be the California governor in waiting, rather than an also-ran.

In the case of Mr. Steyer, who spent $216 million and finished third, political spending after a certain point (like tax rates on the Laffer curve) probably yielded negative returns as voters tired of his ads. New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani showed how social media can be a more effective medium to reach and galvanize young voters.

Left-wing insurgents demonstrated again in Colorado’s Democratic primaries last week that grassroots organizing and social-media prowess can make up for a financial disadvantage. Socialist Melat Kiros ousted Rep. Diana DeGette even though the 30-year incumbent and super PACs supporting her spent three times as much.

All that said, the court’s ruling could over time strengthen parties and help them quash primary challengers who hurt the party’s reputation and general-election prospects. More money may flow at the margin to party committees rather than super PACs, though federal limits on contributions to the former remain.

The liberal justices claim the NRSC v. FEC and Citizens United v. FEC (2010) turbocharge political spending and invite opportunities for quid pro quo corruption. That’s hard to figure. Since Buckley v. Valeo (1976), candidates have been able to spend unlimited amounts of their own money. Citizens United merely allowed corporations, including nonprofit advocacy groups, and unions to do so as well.

What has turbocharged political spending is the massive expansion of government, which raises the stakes of every election. As Justice Neil Gorsuch noted in a concurring opinion last week, citing an alphabet soup of federal agencies, “a business out of favor with the party in control of the White House might be able to stave off an FCC investigation. But can it survive a subsequent FTC rule declaring unlawful one of its longstanding trade practices? What about an in-house adjudication by OSHA? Or a prosecution for a new crime the SEC announces?”

Businesses donate to curry favor with the overlords who can make or break them (and their competitors). The left lambastes corporate spending, but their socialist agenda will encourage more of it.


Friday, June 26, 2026

Nationalism vs Globalism / Cultural Communism

 

Translated from French
The Western world is not “under communist domination” in the sense of the 20th century. There is no Gulag, no Gosplan. Yet a collectivist and globalist ideology has captured a large part of our institutions, our elites, and our collective imaginations. In the name of universal values (climate, diversity, human rights, global governance), entire swaths of sovereignty have been transferred to supranational bodies, international treaties, administrative agencies, and networks of influence that escape the democratic control of peoples. Our governments have not been “sold” in a criminal sense: they have embraced a worldview in which the nation-state is seen as a dangerous relic and the legitimacy of power is increasingly located beyond borders. What is called “far right” today is not an extremist ideology. It is the natural reaction of men and women attached to common sense, concrete freedom, and the preservation of their way of life. Citizens who refuse to let bureaucrats in Brussels, at the UN, or in Davos decide for them: • who enters their territory, • what they have the right to say, • what economic and cultural model they must accept. They are fought with such violence precisely because they represent the last obstacle to completing a project of dissolving national sovereignties in favor of globalized governance. A project that, beneath the trappings of progressivism and “global responsibility,” mechanically leads to more centralized control, less democratic accountability, and a forced homogenization of peoples. Nationalism = assertion that sovereignty belongs to the citizens of a nation and that freedom is exercised first within a concrete and controllable political framework. Globalism / Cultural Communism = progressive dissolution of borders, identities, and responsibilities in favor of opaque structures and norms imposed from above. This is not a matter of “nice guys” versus “bad guys.” It is a matter of ideas. Collectivist ideas that, when applied on a large scale in complex systems, invariably produce the same results: loss of social cohesion, insecurity, relative impoverishment of working classes, and concentration of power in the hands of those who master supranational levers. History never repeats itself exactly the same way. But the deep logics—erasure of the individual and the nation in the name of an abstract collective good—remain the same. And that is precisely why the defense of national sovereignty and concrete freedoms is demonized today with such intensity: it is the only bulwark still standing against a form of control that no longer needs tanks to advance.





Wednesday, June 24, 2026

The cheapest rocket

 

If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency and vibration. ~ Nikola Tesla

Elon Musk just explained why the most important AI company on Earth might be a rocket company. The human brain is 2% of body mass. It burns 20% of the body’s total energy. Intelligence has always been an energy problem disguised as an information problem. The entire tech industry missed this. Musk: “Those who have lived in software land don’t realize that they’re about to have a hard lesson in hardware.” Every new model is hungrier than the last. Every training run devours more electricity than the one before. The grid was not built for this. Utility companies move at geological speed. Interconnection takes years. Permitting takes years. Construction takes years. AI moves in months. Musk: “You’re going to hit the wall big time on power generation. They already are.” The obvious answer is private power plants next to data centers. Musk: “Where do you get the power plants? Where do you get the power plants from?” You cannot will a turbine into existence with venture capital. Every atom on Earth is bound by friction, gravity, and regulation. Most people stare at this wall and see the ceiling on intelligence. They are looking in the wrong direction. In orbit there is no night. No clouds. No seasons. No permitting. No grid. Unfiltered solar energy feeding silicon every hour of every day. Musk: “It’s 10 times cheaper because you don’t need any batteries.” That single number rewrites the entire economics of intelligence. Musk: “The moment your cost of access to space becomes low, by far the cheapest and most scalable way to generate tokens is space.” SpaceX is not a rocket company. It is quietly becoming the most important energy infrastructure play on the planet. Starship is not about Mars. It is about making orbit so cheap that building on the ground becomes the irrational choice. Every major leap in intelligence followed the same pattern. Not a smarter algorithm. A bigger energy source. Fire grew the human brain. Fossil fuels built the computer. The next source isn’t on this planet. The ceiling on intelligence was never artificial. It was always gravitational. The future will not be decided by who builds the best model. It will be decided by who builds the cheapest rocket.





Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Fake news about Tesla

 



NYT headline yesterday: A driver in a Tesla vehicle that was engaged in automated driver-assistance mode crashed into a house in Texas and killed a woman. Today: Tesla logs confirm the driver manually overrode the self-driving system and had the accelerator floored the entire time. The first headline (lie) gets all the clicks. The facts get overlooked. And the NYT doesn't bother with a correction because it doesn't fit their narrative.







That is why no one (except dems) believe any msm stories... We go to X to find the truth. The dems believe the stories on msm because they need the next narrative and want it to be true... all the previous have failed.




Fixing US campaign finance laws

  Did the Supreme Court Steal the Midterm Elections? Restrictions on party committees violated the Constitution—and gave Democrats an advant...