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December 2023

Advancing American Freedom to State Dept: “Redesignate the Houthis as a Terrorist Organization”

Advancing American Freedom led a coalition letter with 42 co-signers calling on the Department of State to redesignate the Houthis as a terrorist organization after they have fired missiles at Israel and continually attacked American and other ships in the Red Sea, forcing the world’s largest shipping companies to reroute vessels, disrupting global trade and increasing oil prices.

“Removing the Houthis from the list of terrorist organizations was one of the first mistakes of this administration,” said AAF Executive Director Paul Teller. “As the Middle East grows more unstable after Hamas’ unprovoked attack in Israel, the Houthis have added to the chaos, and there is no diplomacy that will dissuade them. The United States must return to a posture of clear-headed realism and treat our enemies as they deserve to be treated.”

Read the full letter here.

Putting the family back in the driver’s seat

December 8th, 2023

This week, the United States House of Representatives voted to block a proposed environmental regulation from the Biden administration that could have huge unintended consequences for American families.

Under Biden, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is trying to implement a partial ban on gas-powered vehicles. The proposed rule would require that two-thirds of new vehicles sold in the United States have no tailpipe emissions by 2032. Even low-emission hybrid vehicles—long pushed by progressives as a responsible alternative to gas-guzzlers—would find themselves banned under the rule. And as many have warned, the odds are extremely unlikely that the United States will be able to build enough charging stations to service all of these all-electric vehicles before the next decade.

Much of the debate over the proposed rule is about the logistics and costs of transitioning to these vehicles versus anticipated benefits the transition will bring, such as less pollution and lower fuel costs. But none of the EPA’s 263 page justification for implementing this rule ever once considers its potential impact on families, despite the clear lessons to be learned from relevant research on car seat laws.

Car seat laws are supposed to be about child safety, plain and simple. But it turns out they function as unintentional “contraception.” While most families want to have more than two children, these laws make it less feasible. Families often have to choose between an expensive vehicle upgrade or having fewer children than they hoped, because many vehicles are not capable of fitting three car seats in the back row. According to researchers, car seat laws have resulted in somewhere around 150,000 fewer births since 1980. By contrast, we can charitably assume that these seat belt laws have saved as many as 5,000 lives in the same amount of time. That is: for every life that was saved, three hundred children were never born as a result of these laws.

The poet Robert Burns warned that “the best laid plans of mice and men often go awry.” Nothing could be more laudable than policies aimed at protecting children, and no one could ever convincingly argue that a child’s life is worth less than the car seats mandated by laws in every state in the country. Yet even these “best laid plans” that directly save scores of children’s lives every year have invisible costs that run much higher than a car seat. And no one seems to have thought about designing a safe car seat that would allow for three children in the back seat.

But if Biden’s electric vehicle mandate remains in place, it could quickly eclipse car seat laws in its negative effects on family life and birth rates. For example, there are serious differences between gas- and electric-powered vehicles. The average drive range of an electric vehicle is about half that of its gas-powered alternative. Less range means more stops, which mean more time waiting with impatient young children on your commute or road trip. And each of those stops will be longer. Rather than a couple minutes to refuel on gas, families will have to wait hours to recharge. Car trips and road stops are already hard enough on young families; this rule could make them agony.

If car seat laws can drive away hundreds of thousands of potential new lives, it’s not hard to imagine that electric vehicle mandates could have negative impacts on families as well, whether by discouraging couples from fruitful multiplication—being stuck in a car with screaming infants could surely do that!—or dissuading families from going on long road trips to visit and care for extended family and friends.

Because we know that the family is a cure for so much of the isolation and hyperindividualism that plagues our country, administrative rules that make it harder to form and sustain families demand far more scrutiny from policymakers. While the vote against the rule in the House this week succeeded, it now moves over to the Senate, where, all too often, bills go to die.

But this critical effort need not die. While anything touching environmental policy typically gets locked into tired left-right political struggles, there is a small sliver of hope that this issue could be different. Despite benighted voting on other critical moral matters, some Democrats have been reexamining broader cultural issues that bear closely on the family’s wellbeing, Senator Chris Murphy foremost among them. And the Brookings Institution’s Richard Reeves has spurred renewed interest on the left in considering how boys are being left behind, and other critical family matters that used to be treated as nothing more than ‘conservative talking points.’

However, no matter the truth of our talking points, conservatives won’t succeed in rolling back harmful policies like the EPA mandate until we learn once again to think and speak with moral clarity. All the abstract statistics about GDP and greenhouse gases could only ever matter insofar as they hint at the kind of world we hope to pass on to our children and grandchildren. Surely, they deserve better.

Read more at WNG.org.

AAF in the Arena: Stop Pushing Illegal Abortions and Irreversible Surgeries on Confused Children

Hamas is just one part of the threat to Israel and the West

December 5th, 2023

In the wake of Hamas ’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel, most people, especially those on the Right, quickly recognized that Israel ’s battle to destroy Hamas was and is completely justified. Unfortunately, fewer seem to grasp that the destruction of Hamas, while necessary, is not sufficient for Israel’s security.

The fact is Hamas is just one part of a much larger threat that Israel has faced for years. Israel has had to also ward off attacks from the Palestine Liberation Army operating in Judea and Samaria, and other Palestinian terrorist groups such as Islamic Jihad, which recently announced it executed an innocent Israeli woman who had been held hostage for more than a month.

Israel must also contend with Iran and its terrorist proxy on Israel’s northern border, Hezbollah, which has repeatedly attacked Israel with missiles, drones, and artillery in recent weeks, and the Houthi rebels in Yemen firing long-range missiles at Israel and seizing civilian cargo ships in the Red Sea.

Perhaps most disturbingly, Israel is also threatened by the Palestinians who cheer on Hamas and support the total annihilation of the Jewish state. Hamas rules Gaza because it was freely chosen by Palestinians in democratic elections in 2006. One would hope that those same Palestinians would experience buyer’s remorse after the unthinkable slaughter of Oct. 7, when Hamas violated a ceasefire, launched a sneak attack, murdered 1,400 innocent Israeli children, women, and men, injured thousands, and kidnapped hundreds. But there are Palestinians who continue to support the terrorist organization even after it committed the worst act of terrorism since 9/11.

In fact, more than 75% of Palestinians have a favorable view of Hamas after the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks, according to a survey by Arab World for Research and Development. And nearly all Palestinians, a shocking 98%, said the slaughter made them feel “prouder of their identity as Palestinians.”

Once we accept that the problem Israel and its allies face is not limited to Hamas, a number of conclusions immediately become clear for the United States.

First and foremost, we should expect Israel’s defensive war to be longer, costlier, and deadlier than other flare-ups in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in decades past, and America must be prepared to support its friend and ally until its victory. Israel is surrounded on all sides by terrorist organizations and nations that wish the Jewish nation didn’t exist, and maintaining Israel’s sovereignty has a bloody price tag.

Second, we must secure our own borders. It is not a coincidence that the same groups calling for Israel’s destruction also call for the U.S.’s. As FBI Director Christopher Wray recently stated, “We cannot discount the possibility that Hamas or another foreign terrorist organization may exploit the current conflict to conduct attacks here on our own soil,” adding that the FBI has “multiple ongoing investigations into individuals affiliated with that foreign terrorist organization.” America must maintain its own security as it seeks to uphold Israel’s.

Third, the U.S. should not provide a single penny of funding to any Palestinian organization. It should be obvious by now that even humanitarian funding will be diverted to feed Hamas’s bloodthirsty war machine. Funds intended to save innocent lives will instead be used to take innocent lives.

Finally, it’s time for the foreign policy blob in Washington to wake up from the pipe dream of a two-state solution. It was never going to work. In fact, a two-state solution is not only unrealistic, but it would be undesirable for anyone who wants a stable and peaceful Middle East. If the last six weeks have made anything clear, it is that it was a mistake to trust Hamas with the limited amount of sovereignty it had prior to Oct. 7.

Now more than ever, we must recognize what is at stake for Israel and the Jewish people and remain committed to standing by our ally as it defends its right to exist. And that means approaching this conflict with a clear-eyed, realistic view that too many seem to lack.

Read more at the WashingtonExaminer.com