Max Boot, a Post columnist, is the Jeane J. Kirkpatrick senior fellow for national security studies at the Council on Foreign Relations and a global affairs analyst for CNN. A National Review article in January warned: “The native-born are having fewer children, leading to a fear that new entrants into American society will replace the existing culture rather than assimilate into it.” This is, sadly, a return to the roots of a magazine that defended Jim Crow in the 1950s (and even the early 1960s) and South Africa’s apartheid regime until its dissolution in 1994.
Listen, you’re reading this on the Internet, so I assume you can figure out how to reach my bosses and the human-resources people, maybe even the people I love. CNN’s Max Boot Mocks Trump Voters Sheltering in Homes, Says How Good They Had It With Obama, Weeps Hillary Not in Charge Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Posted at 1:30 pm on March 22, 2020 by Nick Arama The rival who said the way he described his relationship with old segregationists was “hurtful”!
As I wrote in the piece, Phyllis Schlafly was a human being with flaws. Kat Timpf explains why a 16-year-old Maryland girl shouldn't be charged with child-porn distribution after making a video of herself. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)When you wonder if Never Trump folks can go lower, they always seem to show that they can.At a time when priorities should be on pulling together, they are never off-message. We would like to show you a description here but the site won’t allow us. In his book I find forgiveness easier for all parties involved.If Boot’s primary objection to Schlafly’s alleged JBS membership is her failure to publicly acknowledge that she was once a Bircher, I likewise lament her public omission of that fact. There are various measures for these things, but according to Progressive Punch ("Leading with the Left"), Kamala Harris is the fourth farthest-left of any senator with a score of 96.76 percent out of 100 on "crucial votes," despite moderating very slightly in the ... Utterly lacking in empathy, Trump is incapable of rallying a shell-shocked nation. We can make some surmises based upon their past actions as well as statements now.They let over 17,000 people die with the Swine flu, and Max didn’t give a darn about that, no reason to panic.Why swine flu is no reason to panic: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/blogs/index.php/boot/64561. The misuse of the "neocon" label reached an absurd extreme in a Post op-ed by Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), [who wrote:] "I have been consistent of talking about the neocon thinking that led to the Iraq blunder and what followed." Max Boot, by contrast, was a card-carrying member of the conservative movement for three decades. Trump fostered a banging economy, had the lowest unemployment levels in 50 years, brought the Dow up to nearly 30,000 and created millions of jobs.Under Hillary Clinton (or Barack Obama for the matter) they would have had none of the good economy that Trump brought because of his positive business, tax, and deregulation policies.But let’s look at what would have happened if they were in charge. Bio. Max Boot. In return for being so flattered, Boot’s readers In and of itself, Boot’s techniques are both tiresome and reprehensible.
New York governor Andrew Cuomo rejected calls for an independent investigation into deaths of coronavirus patients in state nursing homes, saying such an investigation would be "political."
Max Boot on Real Time with Bill Maher (via YouTube). It is always and only about attacking and undermining President Donald Trump, even if that means attacking or mocking Trump supporters.Here’s CNN analyst, WaPo columnist, and Never Trump guy Max Boot mocking Trump voters who are sheltering in their homes, wondering if they get it how much better they had it under Obama, saying now maybe those Americans will stop bragging about their stock market gains.As they shelter in their homes and the economy grinds to a halt, I wonder if Trump voters now realize how good they had it under Obama? It was coasting on the more or less good governance of its prior two mayors and on its ancestral role as the global nexus of finance and capital. While I congratulate Max on the length of his thread, I worry that he may be dodging central parts of my “specious argument” as he attempts to refute it. Pretty extreme. In a column that ran early last year, Boot listed “18 reasons Trump could be a Russian asset.” At the end of the piece, he concluded that he could not “think of anything that would exonerate Trump” of the charge that he had “been compromised by a hostile foreign power.” While he concedes that his case, as presented, fails to convict the president of treason “beyond a reasonable doubt” — the president should be so lucky — he quips that if “Trump isn’t actually a Russian agent, he is doing a pretty good imitation of one.”Conspiracy theorists always think that theirs is the only one of many grounded in reality, and I do not doubt that Max Boot is convinced that Donald Trump is quite possibly a “Russian agent.” I will say again what I said before: It behooves someone who believes the president to be a possible Manchurian candidate to be a bit more tolerant of conspiratorial excess.Again: I wonder, by this standard, what we are to make of Max Boot. We couldn’t have avoided the coronavirus, but we could have ameliorated its effects. So, it’s Kamala.