Mark Steyn bio

Introducing him at the United States Senate in 2015, Ted Cruz called Mark Steyn “an international bestselling author, a Top Five jazz recording artist, and a leading Canadian human rights activist“.

All of which happens to be true.

Mark is the author of After America, which was a Top Five bestseller in the United States and a Number One bestseller in Canada; America Alone: The End Of The World As We Know It, a New York Times bestseller in the United States and a Number One bestseller in Canada; and his most recent bestseller, The [Un]documented Mark Steyn.

A Marshmallow World“, his Christmas single with Jessica Martin, reached Number Seven on Amazon’s easy listening bestsellers, and Number 41 on their main pop chart. Their subsequent full-length Christmas album, Making Spirits Bright, reached Number Four on the jazz chart. Mark’s latest CD is his cat album, dedicated to his own beloved cat Marvin: Feline Groovy: Songs for Swingin’ Cats was a Number One jazz bestseller and a Top 30 album on Amazon’s pop chart.

Steyn’s human rights campaign to restore free speech to Canada led to the repeal by Parliament of the notorious “Section 13” hate-speech law, a battle he recounts in his book Lights Out: Islam, Free Speech And The Twilight Of The West.

Mark is also a popular guest host of America’s Number One radio show The Rush Limbaugh Program, as well as the top-rated Fox News TV show Hannity. In Canada, he can be heard on AM640’s John Oakley Show in Toronto. In 2017 he began his own Mark Steyn Show.

Trump’s Moral Holiday

The Florida-based Republican, Aaron Nevins, received and published Russian-hacked material—and in return, advised the hackers how to release their material to increase its damage to Democratic candidates. Nevins was not himself a high-ranking person in the Republican world. But the information Nevins obtained from Guccifer 2.0 was used by other Republican campaigns, including the national Republican congressional effort and Paul Ryan’s own super PAC. The earlier claim that Republicans were purely passive and unwitting beneficiaries of Russian espionage in the 2016 election has now been pierced.

In at least one instance, the cooperation was active, conscious, and initiated on the American side, not the Russian: collusion, in a word.

.. At the time, Kushner had already spent months trying to arrange fresh financing for a troubled building his family owns, 666 Fifth Avenue.

After one of those meetings, Kislyak arranged a meeting between Kushner and Sergey Gorkov, the powerful chief executive of a major Russian bank, Vnesheconombank, also known as VEB.

The U.S. had imposed financial sanctions on VEB because of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s military incursions in Ukraine and annexation of Crimea. (During this period the Russians were also meeting with Flynn, Trump’s incoming national security adviser.)

VEB has close ties to the Kremlin, and Gorkov attended a training academy for members of Russia’s security and intelligence services. A Trump spokeswoman has described Kushner’s meetings with the Russians as routine, which they may have been given his role at the time as Trump’s liaison to foreign powers.

But given the significance of 666 Fifth Avenue to Kushner and his family’s fortunes, it’s also possible that he saw the Russians as potential investors.

.. A remarkable number of those talkers condoned the attack, either outright or by pointing to other bad things that have happened elsewhere on earth at various points in the past. Rush Limbaugh went furthest, theatrically condemning the attack—but denigrating the reporter as a “smug and arrogant” Millennial “pajama boy” (a hugely derisive term in the conservative political lexicon) and praising Gianforte as “manly and studly.” (It’s hard to miss in some of the commentary from Trump’s elderly base a nostalgic yearning for lost physical prowess—and intense resentment of the vitality of younger generations with different views.)

.. Half a century ago, conservative commentators often blamed the riots of the 1960s on the “moral holiday” declared by permissive authorities. Leaders who might have delegitimized violence instead acquiesced in it, thus inviting more of it. For many conservatives, May 25 was a moral holiday of their own.

.. These four events each represent one of the great themes of the Trump era:

  1. The anti-alliance pro-Russia tilt of administration policy
  2. Collusion with hostile foreign nations for domestic political advantage
  3. Use of political power for personal financial advantage
  4. The breakdown of inhibitions and the weakening of sanctions against political violence.

.. But Greg Gianforte is headed to Congress. Jared Kushner and Donald Trump will soon return to the West Wing. There, they’ll continue to deploy the powers of the presidency to protect themselves. They’ll leverage dark and dangerous forces in American society to help them. Someday, maybe, they will cease to get away with it. But not yet.

 

Frum is right again

David Frum is right again. This is from a blog post he wrote in 2010.

When Rush Limbaugh said that he wanted President Obama to fail, he was intelligently explaining his own interests. What he omitted to say—but what is equally true—is that he also wants Republicans to fail. If Republicans succeed—if they govern successfully in office and negotiate attractive compromises out of office—Rush’s listeners get less angry. And if they are less angry, they listen to the radio less, and hear fewer ads for Sleepnumber beds.

That’s not just true of Limbaugh, but of all the press. It’s the distortion of getting our news from businesses who rep their own interests first. Their interests are not ours. For all the evidence you need, consider who sleeps in the White House.

The chickens have come home to roost. Loops have closed. Sowing happened ten years ago, reaping now. It’s time to step back from the failed theory that Repubs would know what to do if they won it all.

Why Trump desperately needs to keep conservative media outlets on his side

Alex Jones is doing his best to keep the faith, but it isn’t easy.

The Infowars founder and President Trump booster has been heartened by some of the president’s early-term moves yet frustrated by others.

.. he worries that Trump’s daughter, Ivanka, and her husband, Jared Kushner — both White House advisers — are liberal influences.

You know, he’s saying go after WikiLeaks, when WikiLeaks got him elected. That’s a stab in the back. And all this other craziness. And I don’t even know what to say, at this point, about that because it’s just such a flip-flop.”

.. No single factor can fully explain loyalty, but positive spin in the conservative press is surely a big one.

.. The message Trump voters have heard over and over is that their man deserves a long leash. So far, they seem willing to give him one. But things could change if commentators like Jones, Limbaugh and Hannity were to turn on Trump.

.. A new president typically enjoys a honeymoon period in which people who did not vote for him nevertheless say they approve of his performance. Barack Obama’s approval rating at this early stage of his presidency was 69 percent, for example; Trump’s is 42 percent. Just 7 percent of Hillary Clinton voters approve of Trump’s job performance.

.. he really needs to hold on to the supporters he already had. And to hold on to the supporters he already had, he needs to keep the conservative media voices that cheered him to victory on his side.