| ◼ We wish them a long marriage era.
◼ A disturbed and evil man killed two children in cold blood, ages eight and ten, and injured 18 more people on Wednesday morning. As of this writing, at least a dozen remain hospitalized. His targets were the students and parishioners of Annunciation Catholic school and church in Minneapolis—and while the students attended the first all-school Mass of the fall term. Police have identified the murderer—a 23-year-old man who petitioned the State of Minnesota to legally change his name in 2020 in accordance with his self-proclaimed gender identity. He turned his own weapons on himself in a final bout of homicide. As the transgender identity of the shooter became known, as if on cue, many Democrats and trans activists reacted with fury at anybody who pointed this out, belittling the faith of the Catholic students in the process. “Anybody who is using this as an opportunity to villainize our trans community or any other community out there has lost their sense of common humanity,” Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey declared. Frey then dismissed anyone offering “thoughts and prayers right now.” When they were attacked, Frey thundered, “these kids were literally praying.” Yes, they were, which is part of what makes this murderer’s crimes so horrific. In fact, the murderer’s video and written manifestos make clear that he targeted the Christian students specifically: “Where Is Your God?” he wrote sardonically in silver paint on one of his magazines. Frustrated by the roadblock that the U.S. Constitution and the American people pose to their anti-gun agenda, some Democrats have chosen to mock those who turn to prayer when confronted with unspeakable evil. Their dismissive attitude toward prayer is rooted in arrogance. In the immediate aftermath of a horrific event, prayer can address pain in a way that legislation, which at a minimum takes time to debate and pass, cannot. When people pray, they can find strength in the face of helplessness, wisdom at a time when nothing makes any sense, and comfort when the soul is being drawn into the abyss of grief. Prayer is efficacious and ennobling. It was not in vain that the Psalmist declared that the Lord “healeth the broken in heart, and bindeth up their wounds.”
◼ The search warrants executed last week at John Bolton’s home and office trace, at least in part, to the memoir the former national-security adviser penned about his tenure, portraying President Trump as corrupt and incompetent. After an experienced official cleared the 500-page tome for publication, determining that it did not reveal classified information, Trump officials carried out an irregular reassessment, purported to find national-defense intelligence, and accused Bolton of risking catastrophic damage to the intelligence-collection system. By then, Bolton’s publisher had printed and publicized 200,000 copies; a federal judge sharply criticized Bolton, who had not waited for a formal approval, but allowed publication to go forward. The Biden DOJ looked into it but eventually dropped a criminal investigation. According to leaks, the Trump administration’s revival of it stems from indications—from U.S. monitoring of a foreign government that was spying on Bolton—that, in amassing material for the book, Bolton transmitted classified documents over nonsecure channels to people close to him. One rationale for the searches is that if Bolton possessed copies, it would authenticate the documents and corroborate the allegation. We’ll see. But it was impossible not to notice the president’s observation that Bolton now knows how Trump felt when Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home was searched.
◼ Trump says he fired Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook. Cook says she will continue in her position and is suing to keep it. Can Trump fire her? It’s not a question of the president’s ability to fire officials in so-called independent agencies, because Trump is claiming to fire her for cause, which is permitted under the Federal Reserve Act. The cause is alleged mortgage fraud, by claiming two homes as principal residences simultaneously. The allegation was made by Trump loyalist and Federal Housing Finance Authority Director Bill Pulte, who has also made it against Trump enemies such as Adam Schiff and Letitia James. It appears that the president is using the FHFA to scour the financial records of his political opponents. That doesn’t mean, though, that a serious matter hasn’t been uncovered here. To know whether Cook’s firing is justified, we’ll need to know more, and we’ll no doubt learn more as her lawsuit progresses.
◼ Even by Trump’s standards, the sudden reversal on Chinese students studying at American universities is bizarre and erratic. In May, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced, “Under President Trump’s leadership, the U.S. State Department will work with the Department of Homeland Security to aggressively revoke visas for Chinese students, including those with connections to the Chinese Communist Party or studying in critical fields.” Then out of the blue on Monday, Trump announced, “We’re going to allow their students to come in. We’re going to allow it. It’s very important, 600,000 students. It’s very important.” That would represent more than doubling the number of Chinese students currently in the United States. Asked about it the next day, Trump said, “I’m getting along very well with President Xi. . . . I like that other countries’ students come here. And you know what would happen if they didn’t; our college system would go to hell very quickly.” The White House then “clarified” that Trump does not favor any increase in visas for Chinese students. Maybe the “deep state” is protecting us from the Chinese Communist Party.
◼ Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick voiced the latest bad idea to arise from the Trump administration’ s determination to blur the distinction between the public and private sectors. He says the government will take equity stakes in defense-related companies. The purported justification for this is found in the notion that, as the U.S. is such a significant client of such businesses, “the American people” should share in some of the value being created in them. The taxes being paid by these companies, their shareholders, and their employees is, it seems, not enough, nor is the fact that private sector dynamism has designed and built the advanced weaponry that helps keep the U.S. safe. But even partial ownership by the U.S. could deaden these firms’ entrepreneurial verve. It would also weaken their international position: The U.S. is the world’s leading arms exporter. And, as so often is the case, this administration is not giving adequate consideration to the ways that the power it accumulates might be used by a hard-left Democratic successor, such as in this case, when it came to weapons programs of which it disapproved. |