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Douglas v. Gibbs - Mr. Constitution

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By Douglas V. Gibbs

A listener on one of my programs posted in the chat a question about Trump’s plans to build a giant arch.  This particular chatter tends to troll the chat room, and I had not seen the news about President’s Trump’s proposal regarding the Triumphal Arch, so I told him I’d get back to him on it.  I didn’t want to fall into a gotcha moment in the middle of my broadcast.

It turns out that President Trump has indeed proposed the construction of a 250-Foot arch near Arlington National Cemetery.  The White House has released renderings of the proposed triumphal arch, a structure that would sit on the Memorial Circle roundabout at the southwestern end of the Arlington Memorial Bridge along the Potomac River. If constructed, it would become the tallest triumphal arch in the world.

Why not?  We’ve built grand monuments before. 

The renderings show the towering arch featuring a central figure resembling the Statue of Liberty, along with gilded eagles and lions.  Inscriptions on the structure include “One Nation Under God” and “Liberty and Justice For All.”

The base of the monument, if it gets constructed, would be guarded by four gilded lions, while two large eagles flank the central figure.  

According to sources, at 250 feet tall, the arch would stand more than twice the height of the Lincoln Memorial, which rises to 99 feet. It would also exceed the height of Mexico City’s Monumento a la Revolucion by about 30 feet and tower more than 80 feet above the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, which the design closely resembles.

With America’s 250th birthday coming up, it makes sense that Trump would want to construct something for the semiquincentennial celebration.  He builds things.  That’s one of the things he does.  And all I remember us getting in 1976 for the 200 year bicentennial was a mural along the 91 Freeway in Southern California, which was finally, recently, touched up and made readable, again.

Trump believes America’s capital ought to be adorned with things that echo America’s greatness.  He’s got a number of plans for things like a National Garden of American Heroes, which would feature 250 statues, as well as renovations to the White House, and of course the Triumphal Arch.

“I am pleased to announce..[a] MOST BEAUTIFUL Triumphal Arch…This will be a wonderful addition to the Washington D.C. area for all Americans to enjoy for many decades to come!” the president said on X.

Funding for the arch would come in part from federal sources, as opposed to the Grand Ballroom with is slated to be paid for by nothing but private funds.  A recent spending plan for the National Endowment for the Humanities includes $2 million allocated directly for the project, along with $13 million in matching grants reserved for its development.

Trump showcased models of the arch during a White House fund-raising event tied to his proposed $400 million ballroom, a 90,000-square-foot expansion that would replace the East Wing.

Approval for the arch remains forthcoming.

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By Douglas V. Gibbs

I remember when my parents’ black and white television showed the amazing scene of the moon landing.  I was just a little tyke, but the image remains branded on my brain to this day.  As a child I became obsessed with space.  I have drawings from my elementary school years of the solar system I fashioned, and space capsules I dreamed my be the next to visit the moon.  Then, after six landings, the lunar exploration ended.  

The cancellation of Apollo missions 18-20 was driven by budget concerns.  And, I am not sure the politicians had the stomach to push like President Kennedy had.  The political reality was that the Nixon administration (a Republican president) was facing significant budget pressures from the Vietnam War, domestic spending priorities, and economic challenges. The Apollo program was extraordinarily expensive (about $280 billion in today’s dollars), and with the Cold War race to the Moon already had already been won.  Public and political support for the continued massive spending had simply diminished.  It not only was outside our budget, but it no longer paid political dividends, either.

NASA’s mission shifted to things like Skylab and the “Mission to Planet Earth.”  The scientific community had developed new interests in studying Earth from orbit, which did in fact yield valuable climate and environmental data – especially considering the growing theories about how humanity may, or may not be, influencing changes in the climate’s global temperature.

The Space Shuttle program seemed to be a return to the space exploration thing I found myself interested in, and it turned out it had been conceived during the Nixon administration as a more cost-effective way to maintain space presence, but it had its share of setbacks, as well.

The Columbia disaster investigation revealed technical and organizational issues at NASA, rather than insulation changes driven by environmental concerns that some of the hard-lefties tried to claim.  The foam insulation problem was a known issue that wasn’t adequately addressed across multiple administrations.  With these kinds of internal issues, and again the budgetary concerns, the Space Shuttle program eventually also came to an end.

Then, President Trump emerged with the kind of energy that President Kennedy provided.  And, a new two-step space race was emerging – first, returning to the Moon, and then achieving a human landing on Mars.  The Artemis program represents a new American commitment to return to the Moon, with NASA’s budget receiving support across political spectrums. The rise of commercial space companies like SpaceX has also transformed the economics and capabilities of space exploration in ways that weren’t possible during the Apollo era.

The torch lit by Apollo was never truly extinguished, but merely passed to a new generation of dreamers and builders. As we stand on the precipice of humanity’s return to the Moon and our eventual journey to Mars, we are reminded that the spirit of exploration is not bound by budgets or political cycles, but by the unquenchable thirst for discovery that defines our species. The legacy of those early astronauts who first left their footprints in the lunar dust lives on in every rocket that pierces the heavens and every child who looks up at the night sky with wonder. America’s greatest days in space are not behind us, but ahead, waiting to be written by those bold enough to reach for the stars once more.

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by Douglas V. Gibbs

The Founding Fathers viewed freedom of speech as a fundamental, natural right and an indispensable “bulwark of liberty,” necessary for checking tyranny and discovering truth. They championed robust political debate and conscience-based religious freedom, believing that suppressing opposing views leads to oppression, whereas free speech allows folly to die of its own poison.

Benjamin Franklin and George Washington stated that without freedom of speech, society would be led like “sheep to the slaughter,” and James Madison described it as a principal pillar of free government. They viewed public debate as a duty, allowing the people, as the “only censors of their governors,” to correct errors in government. They argued that the freedom to think and express thoughts is essential to human liberty, protecting both the majority and minority.

The founders championed the right to criticize government, rooted in events like the John Peter Zenger case, which affirmed the right to challenge officials. When it came to religious speech, Thomas Jefferson advocated for complete liberty of conscience, arguing that government has no jurisdiction over human opinions, a view designed to ensure freedom for all faiths.

“Freedom for the Thought We Hate” developed through the Enlightenment, recognizing that protecting speech is critical to liberty even when it is disagreed with, as freedom of thought is not merely for those who agree with the majority, but for all. They believed that free deliberation allows truth to survive while “folly” dies of its own poison.

While the Founders often held high standards for civil discourse, they aimed to protect the right of dissenters to live in peace, rather than demanding ideological conformity.

This foundational principle of free speech stands in stark contrast to how it is being challenged today. As a constitutionalist, I disagree with a vast array of my opponents’ views and what they have to say. I debate them, try to correct them, and warn them that their opinions, behaviors and even lifestyles are dangerous, filled with potential consequences that is dangerous for them and perhaps even society. I also petition government for a redress of these things, and I vote to put people in office who agree with my stance on things – but you will never hear me say, no matter how much I disagree with someone’s opinions, that the law should be used to silence them or to only celebrate my way of thinking.

The opponents of the Constitution, however, seems to think that their leftwing thinking gives them the authority to intimidate you, silence you, and destroy your right to free speech. They seem to say, “we believe in free speech as long as it agrees with us.” Totalitarian governments do not tolerate criticism. The CCP arrests dissenters, and Iran executes them. Does not the progressive leftists in this country realize that their crusade to silence MAGA, Trump and Christians bears a resemblance?

This troubling trend manifests in various ways across our society. We are reminded of the story of Paige Ostroushko who, along with her family, violently assaulted Turning Point USA journalist Savannah Hernandez. Based on what was said, it was an attack against Hernandez for ideological reasons, with Ostroushko calling Hernandez a “fu**ing piece of sh** Turning Point b**ch.”

This type of behavior is not an isolated event. We can go all the way back to 2015 when we saw anti-Trump gangs chasing down MAGA supporters like animals, and attacking them in groups of violent mobs, beating them down to the ground.

The intimidation extends beyond physical violence to threats against public figures. Erika Kirk, the widow of Charlie Kirk who founded Turning Point USA, recently canceled an event appearance after receiving serious threats. She was set to appear alongside Vice President J.D. Vance, who still attended despite Erika canceling her appearance.

Perhaps most concerning are the systematic attempts to codify speech suppression into law. In California, Democratic legislators are working on legislation to silence citizen journalists like Nick Shirley who exposed the Somali daycare fraud scandal in Minnesota. The new law, AB 2624, would silence citizen journalists and threatens these journalists with large financial penalties to dissuade them from reporting on public interest stories in the name of protecting migrants from being reported for wrongdoing. In short, expose corruption, and you will be punished. Your freedom of speech will be silenced to protect the guilty.

The federal government has also been complicit in this assault on free speech. During Biden’s presidency, the federal government collaborated with pro-abortion groups to silence pro-lifers, according to a recent report released by the Justice Department. The Biden-era Justice Department aggressively applied the FACE Act against pro-life activists, operating using a two-tiered system of justice conducting selective prosecution based on beliefs. The Biden Justice Department monitored pro-life activists for years before charging them, while providing significant support to abortion clinics and ignoring or downplaying vandalism and attacks against pregnancy resource centers. The report says federal prosecutors “authorized aggressive arrest tactics” and withheld evidence that defense counsel requested while also attempting to screen out jurors based on religion. The Biden DOJ requested an average sentence of 26.8 months for pro-life defendants in FACE Act cases, compared with 12.3 months for pro-choice defendants.

It’s one thing to disagree with someone, and engage in civil discourse – it’s another to use violence or the law to silence the speech of someone else, the latter being actions the leftist democrats have been guilty of for a very long time, violating the very principles behind what brought us the Bill of Rights in the first place.

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