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Re: Dems fall for ‘fantasy economics’, eyes wide shut to Jew-hate

From phoenix <j63840576@gmail.com>
Newsgroups or.politics, seattle.politics, ca.politics, fl.politics, alt.law-enforcement, rec.aviation.military
Subject Re: Dems fall for ‘fantasy economics’, eyes wide shut to Jew-hate
Date 2026-06-27 09:32 -0600
Message-ID <naa8olF2b9iU1@mid.individual.net> (permalink)
References <KYR%R.15937$DyOf.5445@fx24.iad>

Cross-posted to 6 groups.

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a425couple wrote:
> from
> https://nypost.com/2026/06/26/opinion/dems-fall-for-fantasy-economics-eyes-wide-shut-to-jew-hate-and-other-commentary/ 
> 
> 
> Dems fall for ‘fantasy economics’, eyes wide shut to Jew-hate and other 
> commentary
> By Post Editorial Board
> Published June 26, 2026, 8:44 p.m. ET
> 
> 23 Comments
> 
> Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Darializa Chevalier
> Mayor Zohran Mamdani, celebrates with Democratic congressional candidate 
> Darializa Avila Chevalier during an election night watch party Tuesday, 
> June 23, 2026, in New York.
> Haley Brown / NY Post
> See more of our coverage in your search results.
> 
> Add The New York Post on Google
> Libertarian: Dems Fall for ‘Fantasy Economics’
> 
> Democrats’ “leading lights are not especially sharp” on economics, but 
> the DSA crowd is leading them into pure “economic fantasyland,” warns 
> Reason’s Peter Suderman. Darializa Avila Chevalier is a “committed 
> economic socialist” fighting for “Medicare for All,” even though the 
> plan is so “unwieldy” it failed even in Sen. Bernie Sanders’ home state 
> of Vermont. Claire Valdez supports the Green New Deal, though the cost 
> is estimated “at over $90 trillion,” triple the country’s annual GDP. 
> Some might argue these new socialists aren’t “representative of the rest 
> of the party,” but mainstream Dems “have been embracing fantasy 
> economics for years,” and this week’s DSA wins “are just the latest sign 
> that the fantasy is taking over.”
> 
> Canada beat: Eyes Wide Shut to Jew-Hate
> 
> A Montreal shooting with obvious “antisemitic elements” that left two 
> people dead received “virtually no Canadian coverage,” despite the 
> killer’s overtly anti-Jewish manifesto, frets Casey Babb at The Free 
> Press. “Articles from major outlets” across Canada focus instead on the 
> murderer’s “violent incel” and “anti-feminism” ruminations. This 
> “omission” is “striking” because “Canada has arguably become one of the 
> most antisemitic countries in the Western world,” with “countless 
> shootings at Jewish day schools,” “firebombing of synagogues and acts of 
> vandalism.” The situation for Canadian Jews seems “unlikely” to improve, 
> and in response “Jews in Canada have already begun retreating inward.” 
> “Fear among Jews is palpable,” with many Jews in Canada “now asking 
> themselves how much worse things can get.”
> 
> 
> Oil-industry analysts “are eating a lot of humble pie lately,” snarks 
> CNN’s David Goldman. “Despite the biggest oil supply shock in history, 
> oil prices in recent months never approached their record set in 2008. 
> Gas and diesel prices didn’t surpass their 2022 highs. And, just as 
> President Donald Trump predicted, oil prices have, in fact, fallen ‘like 
> a rock’ after the United States reached an agreement with Iran.” So how 
> did “all the experts” get it “so wrong”? Well, for starters, the world 
> had 407 million barrels in storage going into the war. Trump then lifted 
> sanctions on Russian and Iranian oil. China shifted to coal power plants 
> instead of oil. Brazil and Venezuela ramped up supplies. Turns out the 
> oil market is “significantly more flexible than even the most 
> knowledgeable experts anticipated.”
> 
> More From
> Post Editorial Board
> Elected officials, parents, teachers, and students rally at City Hall 
> calling on the Mayor and Schools Chancellor to impose a two-year 
> moratorium on generative AI in New York City public schools. June 24, 2026.
> Don’t trust NYC educrats to get anything about AI right
> Advocates celebrate after the Rent Guidelines Board approved a rent freeze.
> Mamdani’s rent freeze means big trouble for MOST tenants, and maybe for ALL
> FILE - Tucker Carlson attends a meeting with President Donald Trump and 
> oil executives in the East Room of the White House, Jan. 9, 2026, in 
> Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)
> Republicans should cheer the exit of sad Tucker Carlson
> Get opinions and commentary from our columnists
> Subscribe to our daily Post Opinion newsletter!
> 
> Enter your email address
> By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
> 
> LA watch: Pratt Couldn’t Beat Demographics
> 
> “A Trump-like performance,” such as Spencer Pratt’s in Los Angeles, “can 
> make a primary interesting,” remarks City Journal’s Jesse Arm. But it 
> can’t “make someone mayor.” People in LA don’t “need to be persuaded 
> that their city is badly governed,” and Pratt overperformed “in 
> fire-adjacent and hill-adjacent precincts across the Westside and San 
> Fernando Valley.” But “many places that people associate with the 
> cultural idea of Los Angeles” where Pratt became popular, such as Santa 
> Monica or Beverly Hills, “don’t vote for mayor of Los Angeles.” In the 
> end, “demographics” worked against Pratt, who had little more than “a 
> Republican coalition with a few local enhancements.” Nonetheless, Pratt 
> proved that “a blunt, local critique of progressive governance can 
> resonate” even in a city like Los Angeles.
> 
>  From the right: Time To Ditch ‘Disparate Impact’
> 
> Equal Employment Opportunity Commission “bureaucrats” embody “everything 
> that’s wrong with the administrative state,” rails The Wall Street 
> Journal’s Jason L. Riley. Supporters of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 
> which created the EEOC to oversee its Title VII employment provisions, 
> insisted the bill didn’t authorize “disparate impact,” i.e, the use of 
> “racially disproportionate” results to determine discrimination; rather, 
> discrimination had to be “intentional,” not merely “inferred” from 
> outcomes. Nonetheless, the EEOC soon “determined that statistical 
> disparities could be used,” even if discrimination was unintentional, 
> and the Supreme Court backed it. Now the Justice Department is moving 
> “to rein in EEOC’s use of ‘disparate impact.’ ” Finally: “It’s long past 
> time we clean up this mess,” and Team Trump “has taken an admirable step.”
> 
> — Compiled by The Post Editorial Board
> 
> Filed under antisemitism  canada  civil rights  democratic socialists of 
> america  department of justice  donald trump  editorial  fast takes 
> Green New Deal  hate crimes  iran  los angeles  oil prices  race spencer 
> pratt  6/26/26
> Read Next
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> 
Maybe it's because anyone who had sympathy for Israel over the Oct. 7th 
kidnappings and rapes begins to realize that it all works out in the 
end. From starving little children to riddling 8 month old toddlers with 
automatic rifle fire, Israel balanced the scales. Oct. 7th? Just another 
day in the life.
-- 
We eat the night, we drink the time
Make our dreams come true
And hungry eyes are passing by
On streets we call the zoo

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Dems fall for ‘fantasy economics’, eyes wide shut to Jew-hate a425couple <a425couple@hotmail.com> - 2026-06-27 11:26 -0400
  Re: Dems fall for ‘fantasy economics’, eyes wide shut to Jew-hate phoenix <j63840576@gmail.com> - 2026-06-27 09:32 -0600
    Re: Dems fall for ‘fantasy economics’, eyes wide shut to Jew-hate a425couple <a425couple@hotmail.com> - 2026-06-28 19:29 -0400

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