Projection – a favorite tactic of enemies of liberty

Projection is a all-too-common psychological “defense mechanism.” It involves attributing one’s (supposedly undesirable) desirable actions, traits, feelings, or impulses to other people. For instance, someone who is dishonest might accuse others of being dishonest, thereby shifting attention away from their own dishonesty.

In American politics, and in business, we see examples of this on a daily basis. Often in the headline. Consider one this week:

The University of Virginia, famously established by libertarian and President Thomas Jefferson, has been pressured by the US DOJ (Pam Bondi’s gang) and their president has resigned to settle the legal action, which challenged the University’s decision to NOT terminate its DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion: or as we prefer: DIE: Double-dealing, Instigation, and Exclusion) programs.

So a bunch of the professors have published an open letter, according to Raw Story. The letter in part states: “We are alarmed by the attempted use of government power to impose an ideological agenda on an institution with a proud, 206-year tradition of liberty in thought and expression,” the letter reads in part.

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More distressing news about the wonderful “jab” (COVID-19 vaccines)

Without going into the highly-technical, mind-blowing details, this news came out this week, courtesy of Dr. William Makis and a correspondent of TPOL. Please share this information with others:


The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently made the explosive admission that Covid mRNA “vaccines” are tainted with unprecedented levels of DNA.

The federal agency made the admission after an FDA study confirmed that Pfizer’s Covid mRNA “vaccine” contains dangerous levels of excess DNA contamination.

As Slay News previously reported, leading scientists have been warning for some time that surges in deadly cancers among the Covid-vaccinated were caused by DNA fragments in the mRNA injections.

Those warnings have now been confirmed in a bombshell study conducted in the FDA’s own laboratory.

Tests conducted at the FDA’s White Oak Campus in Maryland found shocking levels of DNA contamination in the “vaccines.”

The residual DNA levels exceeded regulatory safety limits by up to 470 times.


It no doubt comes as no great surprise to most readers that this seems to be associated with Fauci and an HIV vaccine he helped develop. Once more, more and more is revealed about what happened five years ago and continues to haunt us and kill people prematurely. All courtesy of government and the mysterious powers behind the “throne.”

And a warning that such may be repeated in the future, even very soon.

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Growing tensions, stress ramping up in government circles?

In a week in which both Trumpistas and Never-Trumpers have labeled as a massive string of wins for The Donald, we point to information which seems to indicate further fracturing and even instability within the highest circles of the FedGov.

Including the Nine Nazgul, the Supreme Court of the United States. The following has been shared by a correspondent and matches what we at TPOL have been hearing online and in broadcasts. We’ve edited and added some thoughts:


The Supreme Court’s ruling to curb universal injunctions, which let individual judges block executive orders and proclamations across all fifty States, is viewed as a win for the Trump administration, giving it significantly more leeway to enforce its policies.

The Woke radical left (and their instigators and minions) are pretty much having a meltdown. The Huffington Post’s headline reads: “SCATHING SCOTUS DISSENTS – ‘LAWLESSNESS WILL FLOURISH’“ Unfortunately, for them, the quote is a fake-out. (Typical for the mainstream media, online content, and the Woke “alternative press.”) It is a phrase cut from a whole paragraph in the dissent written by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson.

What Jackson actually wrote was:

“I have no doubt that, if judges must allow the Executive to act unlawfully in some circumstances, as the Court concludes today, executive lawlessness will flourish, and from there, it is not difficult to predict how this all ends,” -Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson

That quote is bad enough without Huffington Post embellishing it. We note that more than a few relatively objective commenters have characterized her entire dissent as being unhinged (to be charitable).

Entirely on target, Justice Amy Coney Barrett, in an unusually aggressive tone, responded with this statement:

“We will not dwell on Justice Jackson’s argument, which is at odds with more than two centuries’ worth of precedent, not to mention the Constitution itself. We observe only this: Justice Jackson decries an imperial Executive while embracing an imperial Judiciary.” -Supreme Court Justice, Amy Coney Barrett

It is this aggressive (in words only, of course) tone of both KBJ and ACB that is of note to us here at TPOL. These are not words of restraint, respect, and conciliation which we are so used to hearing. One suspects that what is not said in writing is perhaps even more inflammatory. Perhaps the Nazgul are beginning to ignore who pays them and gives them the prestige and power?

The heat of summer – especially this year – is doing more than ramping up the street mobs, it seems. Of course, we recognize that large sums of money, not just brains cooking in sweltering temperatures, also have great effect on what goes on not just on the streets but in the air-conditioned buildings of DC.

And we here at TPOL certainly do not expect the Nazgul to suddenly support the Constitution, much less the cause of liberty. Just as we recognize that many libertarians are bemoaning other decisions published this week, sometimes for reasons we believe to be wrong. We continue to believe and spread the idea that the governments are far, far too powerful, and too stupid to use any power they have wisely.

Are we wrong to pray that Providence is throwing some wrenches into the mechanism?

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Kleptocracy? Democracy?

We at TPOL are far from the only people to disparage the standard reference to both the FedGov and the Fifty State governments as being “democracies.” But there is absolutely no argument that as time proceeds, more and more the American republics have deteriorated into democracies.

Too many people think that this is wonderful. “Majority rules!” “The voice of the people is the voice of God!” “Of the people, by the people, and for the people!” These and many more sayings are used to sell American children and newcomers on what a wonderful thing that democracy is. How perfect is democratic government?

Was Sir Winston Churchill, that mass-murdering imperialist and alcohol-dependent ne’er-do-well, right when he said “…democracy is the worst form of Government except all those other forms that have been tried from time to time…”? (Actually, see the next commentary for more on this.)

We submit, as lovers of liberty, of believers in personal and economic liberty, personal responsibility, and most importantly, in God, that quote is absolutely wrong. At least when we limit “government” to human, mandatory, government. Which is what every nation and state on this planet currently “enjoys.”

There are of course many reasons that democracy is not an acceptable form of government.

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Cities, wars, and culture

As the world seems intent on pretending that the latest Middle East crisis is over, and the Twelve Days of War is all that there is going to be, we here at TPOL have our doubts.

As do many others, especially lovers of liberty. The idiotic and often fatal games people in power play are not over. Iran, Israel, Russia, Ukraine, and especially the FedGov and the EU and UK all have their hands in the pot: and don’t care if they get burned, because only the expendables will really get hurt. The prospect that a Putin, a Supreme Leader, an Israeli PM or a British one, or a POTUS, are going to get injured and killed by “enemy action” from some other nation is of very low probability.

The possibility of an American airman or British trooper – or especially a Revolutionary Guard or IDF soldier or Russian infantryman or a dozen others? Injured, maimed, killed? The probability is near unity.

Why? Because power and wealth trump the value of human lives to those who have the power in this world: political and social and economic.

There have been times in history when that seemed to be changing – and perhaps it did: Exodus, the overthrow of the Roman monarchy, the American Revolution, the Texas Revolution? Perhaps. Perhaps even the English Civil War and before that the Medes and Persians defeat of Babylon, or whatever events led to the abandonment of the cliff dwelling in the Southwest might have changed things for a time.But as a rule, world history is full of tyranny, of masters lauding it over slaves (whatever they are called), and of men and women seeking and fighting for, and all too often dying without, freedom.

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The American Empire?

A guest editorial by Niall Ferguson [with comments from TPOL]

What’s odd about the last four years before Trump is that the Biden-Harris administration came in and was welcomed by liberals around the world. “The adults were back in the room.” American foreign policy was going to respect alliances again, and it all went disastrously wrong.

The allies have been sorely disappointed. [To put it mildly.] The net result of the Biden administration’s foreign policy was that an axis formed that didn’t exist in 2020, an axis that brought together Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea. And unlike the axis of evil of 2002 around the Iraq War, it actually exists. It’s not just an idea for a speech. These powers cooperate together, economically and militarily.

What went wrong? The answer is a disastrous failure of deterrence that really began in Afghanistan in 2021, got a lot worse in February 2022 when Russia invaded Ukraine, and got even worse in 2023 when Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad attacked Israel.

So I think one has to understand the reelection of Donald Trump as partly a public reaction against a very unsuccessful Democratic administration, a little bit like what happened in 1980 when Americans voted for Ronald Reagan and repudiated Jimmy Carter during the Iran hostage crisis.

I don’t think Donald Trump’s reelection is a big win for China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea. Quite the opposite. I think it’s bad news for them. [As the attack this weekend started to point out.]

I am always reminded when people talk about the liberal international order of what Voltaire said about the Holy Roman Empire: It was neither holy nor Roman, nor an empire. And the same is true of the liberal international order. It was never very liberal, very international, or very orderly. It’s actually an illusion that such a thing ever existed after 1945.

There was a cold war in which two empires, an American and a Soviet, struggled for power, and the United States at no point ceased to exercise power in the classical sense.

I read so many commentators saying, “How terrible and shocking it is that the United States is reverting to empire after the wonderful time of the liberal international order.” I wrote a book 20 years ago called Colossus, making the point that the United States has been an empire for many years and didn’t stop being an empire in 1945.

The interesting thing about the Cold War was that both empires accused the other of imperialism, each claiming that it wasn’t imperial. But they both, in fact, functionally were empires.

The United States today has much in common with the empires of the past, particularly in its ability to project military and naval power all around the world. So I think we should probably be a little bit more skeptical about the concept of a liberal international order.

What’s interesting about Trump is that he’s open about it. He wants Greenland. He wants to retake the Panama Canal. And so, in a sense, we’ve gone back to the era of President William McKinley at the turn of the 20th century.

But that’s not surprising, because Trump told us in the campaign back in the summer that McKinley was his hero, and that was not just the “tariff man” McKinley, but clearly also the McKinley who acquired, after the Spanish-American War, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines with an option on Cuba. So I think we are just back in a late 19th-century mode with Donald Trump.

One of the points I made in Colossus was that the United States is not actually very good at being an empire by the standards of, say, Britain in the 19th century. There’s a structural problem with an American empire, which is worth spelling out.

There are deficits that make it hard to be an effective empire. There’s a deficit in terms of manpower. I mean, America imports people. It doesn’t really export people. Very few Americans want to spend large amounts of time in hot, poor, dangerous places. Hence, the six-month tour of duty for the military abroad.

There’s another kind of deficit, which is the fiscal deficit. America can’t afford to occupy zones across the planet the way the British or the French did.

Presently, there is also the problem that America is now spending more on debt interest payments than on the defense budget for the first time in its history. When that is the case, you’re probably in trouble. That’s been true, more or less, of every empire since 16th-century Spain. [A good sign that the clock is winding down.]

And finally, there’s an attention deficit disorder, which I think is inherent in American public and political life. People lose interest in complicated, messy foreign adventures rather quickly, and that makes it very hard to complete them, whether it’s in Vietnam, Iraq, or Afghanistan. [Of course, it is not just foreign affairs that the ADD condition causes Americans to ignore: the continuing loss of liberty in our States is being ignored even more. And the connection between the two.]

All these are structural problems. The American empire is one of these strange cases of cognitive dissonance: Functionally, the United States has many of the characteristics of an empire, but Americans themselves don’t really want to be in the empire business, and this causes American power to oscillate. There are periods of strength, then there are periods of retreat. And after Trump overreaches, which he doubtless will, there’ll be another bout of retreat. We’ve seen this movie several times.

[And no doubt will see it again and again as the clock continues to tick down to midnight. Are we prepared to survive it and establish a full measure of liberty? We at TPOL pray that is so, and continue to work to that end.]

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War drums beating louder

Now that Israel has opened a second front in this current war – fighting both in Gaza and now blasting Iran hard – there are more and more Americans who want the US to get busy in the next phase of this forever war.

Will The Donald reject this and live up to his 2024 campaign promises? We are seeing and hearing very mixed messages. Most recently, The Donald has said he still wants to negotiate with Iran, and so will not make a decision about joining Israeli forces in actual combat for two weeks or so.

Which is, of course, business as usual: The Donald keeps everyone guessing, starting with the Democrats and the GOP/RINO never-Trumpers and continuing to include enemies and allies. And the markets. Many people claim that (again, claiming “as usual”) that the Israelis are leading the FedGov around by the nose. And of course, billions of dollars of damage to property, tens if not hundreds of people are killed while thousands are injured and stunned, at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars. And a lot more sheckels and rial (apparently no one uses dinar any more in Iran).

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Homeland war?

A correspondent writes (we’ve edited for privacy):

From a logical point of view, and knowing the declared attitude of some other nations, it would stand to reason that sending students here [to the States for university] would be one of the normal and expected activities. It seems that the citizens of America have become complacent through the enjoyment of long-lived peace and tranquility, bathing in a sea of affluence and conveniences, to the point of the current apathy that we see all around, and even in the [churches]. Sooner or later we will face the permanent consequences of this, and history will change. I fear that all temporary reprieves that come along, such as a Trump election, only serve to reinforce the false feeling of security in this country, thereby deepening the apathy.

Definitely a matter of great concern. You have put your finger on a major problem. 

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Another side to the story – Cali schools and immigrants

A TPOL correspondent shared this with us. Is this true, or just more propaganda? Remember, both sides of all major issues use propaganda. Readers, share your thoughts with us.

From an unnamed California school teacher….

As you listen to the news about the student protests over illegal immigration, there are some things that you should be aware of: I am in charge of the English-as-a-second-language department at a large southern California high school which is designated a Title-1 school, meaning that its students average in the lower socio-economic and income levels.

Most of the schools you are hearing about are Compton, South Gate High, Bell Gardens, Huntington Park, etc., where their students are protesting – these are also Title-1 schools.

Title-1 schools are on the free-breakfast and free-lunch program. When I say free breakfast, I’m not talking about a glass of milk and a roll. But a full breakfast and cereal bar with fruits and juices that would make the Marriott proud. The waste of this food is monumental, with trays and trays of it being dumped in the trash uneaten. (Our tax dollars at work!)

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Happy 250th birthday, United States Army

AUSA (Association of the US Army, a private organization) tells us:

Happy 250th!

From the Revolutionary War to today, America’s Army has steadfastly served and defended the nation before the nation was even born. On Saturday, the service marks its 250th birthday with events across the country and a huge bash on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

What to Watch: AUSA will mark the Army’s milestone birthday with a three-day, once-in-a-lifetime celebration in Philadelphia, the birthplace of American independence. From Friday through Sunday, there will be an enlistment ceremony for 250 new soldiers, reenactments, concerts, commemorative ceremonies and community tributes—culminating in a grand celebration on Independence Mall, where the American Army’s story began.

Freedom – and liberty – always has a price. That is the firm belief of all of us here at The Price of Liberty, as it was of our founder Lady Susan Calloway – Mama Liberty. That price is often paid not just in the blood of tyrants but in the blood of lovers of liberty. Sadly, many who have sacrificed limb and life have done so in a state of misunderstanding exactly what they were actually fighting for. And many more paid those prices because of the stupid actions of politicians and their own leaders. That should not distract from their service, nor from their sacrifice.

But, it does.

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