Fake Conservatives

Excellent post on X by David Limbaugh, brother of the late Rush Limbaugh. This has always been my concerns as well. Please take a read. Rh

David Limbaugh 

I try not to make politics personal too often (though I know I sometimes fail). But one thing that gets under my skin is people who either a) pretended to be conservative and cultivated a wide following and then dramatically changed their tune, or b) were ACTUALLY conservative and later changed — without admitting they’ve changed but instead still claim the conservative banner under which to peddle their new poison. This confuses the H out of their naive or ignorant followers and damages the conservative brand and long-respected conservative institutions.

A particularly egregious version of this is when purportedly conservative Christians now promote (overtly or subtly) antisemitism, and slander Israel – often denying their animus and saying their focus is purely based on disagreements with Israeli policies and actions. Many of these people have also adopted and advocated some utterly bizarre historical and political opinions apart from antisemitism, which causes even further confusion.

I’ll add that many of the people doing this, as part of a cynical calculation, are playing to younger audiences and those with grievances and looking for someone to blame. Common sense, tradition, and especially the Bible frown upon corrupting, confusing or leading youth astray. I could cite the Scriptures but the cynics would just say they’re not applicable to this situation – and they can believe that all they want.

So much of this has become personal. And those of us defending conservatism and standing up for the Jewish people are not the ones who have made this personal. I don’t apologize for being personally repulsed by what’s going on.

I leave open the possibility that some purveyors of this toxicity may actually be out of their minds or unwittingly under evil influences (though the latter’s hard to believe), but even if that’s the case, they deserve to be called out too. The stakes are too high. We have a country to save. We have values in which we believe and try to live by. These are strong, bright red lines we must draw.

As to those to whom any of the above applies, why don’t you just admit you have animus for Israel and/or Jews? Why don’t you admit you have become political liberals in the name of conservatism? If you’ll just come out in the open and admit who you are and what you’re about, we can fight you openly and the public can make informed choices. I happen to believe truth and decency will win in the end, but first we need to call out the deceit.

Sorry if this sounds harsh, but it’s the way I see much of what’s going on “inside” the conservative movement.

David Limbaugh

Trump’s Abortion Pivot Sparks Outcry: ‘This Is Wrong … And We Cannot Be Silent’

By Suzanne Bowdey

The shock hasn’t worn off for pro-lifers, who continue to watch with dismay as Donald Trump and his Catholic running mate, Senator J.D. Vance (R-Ohio), seem to publicly disavow years of conservative principles on the unborn. Reaction is still pouring inover the former president’s tweet that his administration would be “great” for “reproductive rights,” a euphemism for abortion that many see as a devastating surrender in itself. It would be one thing, the editors of National Review wrote, “for a Republican candidate for national office to say that a federal law against abortion is unattainable, or even undesirable,” given the current political realities. But at this point, they continue, “pro-lifers have to wonder if there’s any difference left between the parties on abortion.”

Of course, as veterans of the movement know, the warning signs loomed large well before July’s Republican National Convention, when Trump’s inside circle hinted that abortion would no longer be an issue of common concern but a political inconvenience that the former president would try to avoid at all costs. The ensuing party platform cemented those fears, shredding paragraphs of pro-life vision and values in exchange for four sentences that promised merely to “oppose Late Term Abortion” and support mothers.

Even that seems to be in doubt after Vance’s Sunday interview, in which he walked back any support for a 15-week federal threshold for abortion, which is past the point unborn babies can feel pain. Asked whether or not he would commit to not “impos[ing] a federal ban on abortion,” Vance replied, “I can absolutely commit that.” He continued, “I think it’s important to step back and say, ‘What has Donald Trump actually said on the abortion question, and how is it different from what Kamala Harris and the Democrats have said?’ Donald Trump wants to end this culture war over this particular topic.”

In what appears to be a big departure from Trump’s first term as president, Vance wouldn’t even commit to the 45th president’s former positions — which, until recently, were considered the bare minimum of bipartisan federal policy: blocking taxpayer-funded abortion at home and abroad, stopping the military’s war on the unborn, and ending the shipment of abortion pills to pro-life states.

It is terribly troubling the “new stance” of Trump on abortion. We all knew it was coming but still deeply concerned of a move away from Moral Conservative values. We always have to compromise. We are used to it, but still not happy about it. Rh

Youngkin Feels the Heat over Same-Sex Marriage Betrayalby Suzanne Bowdey

More than a week after Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin’s (R) surprise signature on a controversial same-sex marriage bill, people everywhere are still trying to make sense of the decision. No one is quite sure what the openly religious businessman was trying to achieve, since the law has no practical effect except outraging the governor’s conservative base. And while there’s never a good time to insult your staunchest supporters, the move seemed especially tone deaf in a country moving awayfrom the extremism he endorsed. 

The warning signs have been everywhere — from the blistering criticism that GOP defectors faced on same-sex marriage in Congress to the polling. Whether the media wants to admit it or not, Americans are starting to back away from the experiment Obergefell unleashed on the country. Liberals know it. During the Respect for Marriage Act debate, Senator Krysten Sinema (I-Ariz.) told reporters that “the opposition was very, very strong.” “The attempts to derail this piece of legislation,” she admitted, “were probably more focused and robust than any other bills I’ve worked on in the last two years.” 

The country’s growing wariness for LGBT radicalism is obvious in everything from Time magazine’s panicky articles to surveys about marriage and the morality of same-sex relationships. Even some young people are jumping off the Left’s sexual bandwagon, hinting that they’ve finally had enough of this in-your-face agenda. It’s no wonder that Youngkin is facing fiercer-than-expected backlash. More and more Americans seem to be looking for the exits on this same-sex marry-go-round — only to watch leaders they trusted climb aboard. 

In the days since the bill became law, there’s been a united front of disgust for the governor’s departure from core values. From college Republican groups to grassroots leaders, Youngkin’s name conjures up the same words: “major disappointment.” Victoria Cobb, head of the Commonwealth’s socially conservative Family Foundation, said she actively lobbied the governor to veto the bill, amend it, or just let it become law — and yet, “he chose to affirmatively put his signature on it,” she lamented. Not only will this “divide Virginians,” Cobb insisted, but there are “obvious … worldview implications of redefining the bedrock institution of marriage in law.” She pointed out that some language in the policy even “paves the way to erasing girls form sports or worse.”

Local church leaders, who’d considered Youngkin an ally, didn’t hold back their frustration. To the governor’s claim that it shields people in Virginia pulpits, Nate Schlomann, executive pastor of the Village Church in North Chesterfield fired back that it isn’t the pastors who need protection. There was “no reason” for Youngkin to sign this, Schlomann explained. “We already have First Amendment protections as pastors,” he said. “My concern is that the logic of this bill will make all other Christians more vulnerable to persecution for their beliefs in the future.” 

And frankly, Schlomann said, “If Equality Virginia is celebrating your actions, you probably were not looking out for conservative Christians. This is a betrayal.”

Occoquan Bible Church’s David Schrock agreed. “When Youngkin was voted into office, Christians across the state of Virginia breathed a sigh of relief. He ran on a platform to honor faith, to protect families, and to reverse the liberal overreach of his predecessor,” the pastor pointed out. “But with this unexpected and unnecessary decision, Youngkin has not only reversed course: he has effectively broken the trust of the people who voted for him. For Christians, he has signed a bill that enshrines so-called same-sex marriage into law, but also he has exposed countless conscientious Virginians to legal threat.”

But perhaps some of the most powerful pushback came from Cornerstone Chapel’s Gary Hamrick. The senior pastor of one of northern Virginia’s largest churches was unequivocal when he addressed Youngkin’s mistake from the pulpit. “We have a moral obligation,” he told all three services, “I don’t care whether you’re governor or whether you are a housewife or whether you are a business owner; whether you’re a teacher or whatever capacity you serve — we always have a higher moral obligation to the word of God and God’s standard than man’s law. And whenever man’s law is in contradiction [with] the higher standard, we better take the higher standard every time.”

Hamrick explained that he’d texted privately with the governor, who graciously replied and offered to write a personal message to Cornerstone’s church family. The two men discussed the letter in a lengthy phone call that Pastor Gary detailed on “Washington Watch” with Family Research Council President Tony Perkins. Like Cobb, Hamrick felt Youngkin’s gravest offense was “as a believer, for him to put his signature to a law …. that is a clear violation of the higher moral standard of God’s law. That’s where I strongly disagree with what he did,” he said. “And for believers to know that he’s done this, it felt like a betrayal.”

Like so many people, Hamrick admitted, “… [W]e thought that he was going to govern in a way that was consistent with our biblical values. And on this one, in my opinion … he got this one wrong. He’s still a brother. Again … he’s not a perfect person. We’re all flawed, but he got this one wrong,” Pastor Gary emphasized. “And I just tell our folks, this is a good reminder: Put your confidence in the Lord, not in a political leader. They will sometimes disappoint. I, as a pastor, will sometimes disappoint. We are flawed people. And so keep your eyes on Jesus. That’s the bottom-line message.”

Perkins, who’s experienced this kind of political backstabbing firsthand, applauded Hamrick for reaching out and having a conversation with the governor. “This is where I think the role of pastors [is] so important, because, while he did not change this — this law is in effect now — I do think that next time he’s going to be a little more cautious,” he predicted. “I’ve actually encountered that myself … [and] the elected official in the particular case I was dealing with said, ‘You know what? I just wasn’t thinking through it. I should have called. Next time, when there’s an issue like this, I will.’ And I think part of it is helping people walk through this [to understand] how God speaks with clarity to so many of these issues.”

Unfortunately, that won’t save the thousands of Virginians who’ll almost certainly be affected by Youngkin’s treason. As Perkins pointed out, “Downstream from Governor Youngkin is going to be a teacher … a police officer, a fireman who is a believer and understands the Word of God as supreme. [And] they may lose their job as a result of what the governor did…”

Unfortunately, this happens far too often with the Republican Party. We vote for someone we think we can trust. only to have them turn tail and run from the very people that work so hard to put them into Office. The good people of Virginia who voted for him should immediately recall him, if possible from the governors mansion. RH

Happy New Year

I’m not big on New Year’s resolutions, most of which we break long before Valentine’s Day. But I am big on the Biblical concept of putting things behind us and looking forward. The Bible tells us in 2 Corinthians 5:17 that “old things are passed away, behold all things are new.” The only time I look back on ‘22 is to rejoice in the victories God has wrought. Flipping a school board to conservative majority, and building my organization to where Christian Conservatives is now a part of the vernacular of our community. The new year is a clean slate of abundant possibilities. A clean slate to make it what we will. For me I want to drive a state into the ground and say I will not go back to any former issues, sin, or attitudes. I am here and I am only going forward, getting better and realizing the abundance that God has for me. New year means new challenges and new demons to conquer. Issues are before me and I am asking for direction on what and how to tackle them. I am asking for three things, 1- Revelation to grasp the hidden, 2 – Vision to know my focus, and 3 – Wisdom to apply knowledge to the problem. Let’s do this, 2023 you better know my name cause I’m going to conquer you!! Rh

We Flipped a School Board

It has been a long 20 months, but the only reason I founded Christian Coalition was to impact our school boards with Godly values and running moral conservative candidates. Thank God we found them.

The vetting and endorsing process was filled with sleepless nights. We lost some friends along the way and we made many new ones. Being a Pastor I was shocked that Patriots would tell me right off the bat, that our battle was a spiritual one. They seemed to know what many in the church didn’t. They also knew to win, we had to fight like our children and our grands lives were at stake, and they were. We did and we WON!

Flipping 3 seat up for re-election gave us a majority for the first time in anyone’s memory. We stopped indoctrination of our kids and turned a new page. Won’t be easy but we are not going anywhere. The Bible says to fight and then stand. The word “stand” is a military word, meaning after the battle we continue to be vigilant and on guard for the next attack. It will surely come, but we will fight it off.

How did we win? Prayer, leg work, volunteers and the strength of God.

Also good Conservative candidates is a must! No weak kneed moderates need apply. Stand for your values. Identify and attack. Conservatism (according to Rush Limbaugh) works every time.

Man I miss him. Rh

Epstein Island Is the Perfect Representation of the Two-Tiered Justice SystemBy J.D. Rucker • Aug. 2, 2022

Imagine if an Average Joe Citizen had evidence against him that he had sex with underage girls. You don’t have to imagine it, actually, because we see it in the news on a regular basis. Average Joe Pedophile would almost certainly be arrested, charged, tried, convicted, and jailed.

Now, imagine if leftists entered the Capitol Building without authorization. You don’t have to imagine it, actually, because that’s exactly what happened in June when the “Colbert 9 Insurrectionists” did it. And of course, these leftists were released after a short time being under arrest with no further repercussions.

The two tiers are easily definable. Anyone who is conservative, isn’t rich, and doesn’t check off any of the intersectionality boxes gets hit by the Justice Department as well as most city and state prosecutors with the full force of the law. Anyone who is leftist, rich, or checks off any of the intersectionality boxes gets light treatment. And no two cases make this more apparent than comparing the various heinous crimes committed on Epstein Island to the minor nuisances committed by January 6 mostly peaceful protesters.

Justice has her eyes wide open in the United States of America. she picks and chooses those to prosecute. Truth has fallen in the street and is trampled, we must restore the rule of law or we will lose this country in the next few years. rh