Donald Trump’s Mantra: No Truths. No Consequences.

Donald Trump’s Mantra: No Truths. No Consequences.

FRANK F ISLAM

In 2024, Donald Trump continues to perpetuate the Big Lie and to add a litany of new lies into his liar’s bushel basket. He does this in the hope that an agenda of no truths now, as it has in the past, will end up producing no consequences for him in the future.

In this blog, we look back briefly at Donald Trump’s lying before he became president and at his lying during his presidential tenure. After that, we examine his lying today.

Donald Trump’s Lying Pre-Presidency

Donald Trump himself admits he lies. but he doesn’t call it lying. According to Emily Price of Fast Company, in his best-selling book, The Art of the Deal, published in 1987, Trump wrote:

People want to believe that something is the biggest and the greatest and the most spectacular. I call it truthful hyperbole. It’s an innocent form of exaggeration — and a very effective form of promotion.

In a 2018 interview, Judy Woodruff of the PBS NewsHour, questioned Gwenda Blair, author of The Trumps: Three Generations That Built an Empire, published in 2000, about Trump’s use of “exaggeration.”

Woodruff said, “It is the case that — and you have written about this — that over time the president has been called out for exaggerations and for saying things that could not be borne out by the facts.”

Blair responded,

Yes, he has. He’s — but he’s made his brand — that phrase exaggerated hyperbole, he made that into a brand. He made that into a symbol of success. The whole idea of excess, you know, of bumping everything up, saying it was the biggest, the best, it’s always a superlative. …He was already — he made it his job to establish himself as someone who could stretch the truth, and that was part of his — stretch whatever he said. That was part of who he was. And I think that that has turned out to be very shrewd. He has been always a performer, always selling himself, and part of that sales job is to — that superlative thing, to push the boundaries of everything and to get away with it.

And, get it away with it, Trump did that time, and time and time again before he became president. For information and insights on what and how he did this, click here to read a Forbes article titled “Business the Trump Way,” published in April 2016 when Trump was running for president.

In 2024, it appears Trump’s getting away with it on the business front may be coming to an end. The decision and ruling in the civil case in New York against him for fraudulent behavior in securing loans from banks prevents Trump from being an officer or director of any New York business for three years, and calls for him to pay more than a $360 million penalty before interest. PBS reports that in her statement issued after the decision was rendered, New York Attorney General Letitia James, who brought the case noted, “Now, Donald Trump is finally facing accountability for his lying, cheating, and staggering fraud.”

Donald Trump’s Lying as the President

Even though there were two impeachment trials for some of Trump’s lying and manipulative behavior while president, he was never held accountable, as the Republican-controlled Senate acquitted him on all counts in each trial.

The impeachment trials were conducted on major issues. During his presidential tenure, as he did before he became president, Trump lied continually on issues big and small.

Shortly after Trump left office, on January 24, 2021, Glen Kessler, Salvador Rizzo, and Meg Kelly of the Washington Post reported:

By the end of his term, Trump had accumulated 30,573 untruths during his presidency — averaging about 21 erroneous claims a day.

What is especially striking is how the tsunami of untruths kept rising the longer he served as president and became increasingly unmoored from the truth.

Shortly before Trump left office, on January 16, 2021 Daniel Dale of CNN published a piece on the 15 Most Notable Lies of Donald Trump’s Presidency. He began that piece by stating,

Trying to pick the most notable lies from Donald Trump’s presidency is like trying to pick the most notable pieces of junk from the town dump.

There’s just so much ugly garbage to sift through before you can make a decision.

Dale’s most notable 15 included:

  • The most dangerous lie: The coronavirus was under control
  • The Crazy Uncle lie award: Windmill noise causes cancer
  • The most depressing lie: Trump won the election

In conclusion, we should remember that on January 22, 2017, two days after Trump was inaugurated, Kellye Anne Conway, Senior Counselor to President Trump, was on the Meet The Press with Chuck Todd. Conway tried to defend press secretary Sean Spicer’s misrepresentations of the size of Trump’s inaugural crowd as “alternative facts.” Todd replied that “Alternative facts are not facts. They’re falsehoods.”

Donald Trump’s Lying Post-Presidency

Alternative facts and truthful hyperboles. Those were Donald Trump’s domains as a businessperson and as president.

They have remained his domains since he left the White House. He has employed them over the past three years to construct his own artificial reality and post-truth world.

He resides in that world. In that world, his lies have become darker and more dangerous as he feels more and more threatened by his current circumstances. He portrays himself as a victim to persuade his acolytes that an attack upon him is an attack upon them and their future, and the future of this nation.

He uses three primary means to communicate to those in MAGA-world and beyond: Truth Social; speeches at political events; and comments after actions related to the civil and criminal charges against him.

Trump on Truth Social

Trump founded Truth Social in October 2021 to be a social media platform to compete with Twitter. As with many areas of Trump’s involvement, the opposite of what the platform is called is true. Its more accurate title would be “Lies Unsocial.”

Trump uses, and has used, Truth Social since it launched in February 2022 to post his rants and musings.

One of the most egregious of his postings to his personal platform was the following, which he put up on February 19, President’s Day — the day after the death of Russian activist and opposition leader Alexei Navalny in a Russian penal colony:

The sudden death of Alexei Navalny has made me more and more aware of what is happening in our Country. It is a slow, steady progression, with CROOKED, Radical Left Politicians, Prosecutors, and Judges leading us down a path to destruction. Open Borders, Rigged Elections, and Grossly Unfair Courtroom Decisions are DESTROYING AMERICA. WE ARE A NATION IN DECLINE, A FAILING NATION!

This posting shows that for Trump, the only thing that matters is Trump. His equivocation of himself to Navalny is ludicrous. Another accurate title for his social media platform could be “It’s All About Me.”

Truth Social’s owner the Trump Media and Technology Group was taken public on March 26. For what this may mean in terms of Donald Trump’s future “bamboozling” of investors, refer to the Washington Post opinion piece, “Trump’s new stock deal is just another pig in a poke,” by Adam Lashinsky,

Trump at Political Events

Trump’s rambling ranting and railing at political events are ripe with false assertions and untruths. Two prominent locales for his commentary this February were the annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) and A Black Conservative Federation gathering in South Carolina.

Jonathan Swan and Michael Bender closed their New York Times article on Trump’s remarks at CPAC by noting:

… the theme of retribution coursed through CPAC.

“I stand before you today not only as your past and future president, but as a proud political dissident,” Mr. Trump said.

“For hard-working Americans,” he added, “Nov. 5 will be our new liberation day — but for the liars and cheaters and fraudsters and censors and impostors who have commandeered our government, it will be their judgment day.”

At that, the crowd whistled and roared.

Early in his Washington Post article covering Trump’s commentary at the Black Conservative Foundation convening, Josh Dawsey cites the following remarks:

A lot of people said that’s why the Black people liked me, because they had been hurt so badly and discriminated against. And they actually viewed me as I’m being discriminated against … Maybe there’s something to it,” he said, right after talking about the charges. (Trump’s originally 91, now 88 felony charges in his four criminal indictments.)

“When I did the mug shot in Atlanta, that mug shot is number one,” Trump said. He added that the Black population “embraced it more than anyone else.”

He also said: “I’m being indicted for you, the Black population.”

Trump on Civil and Criminal Charges

Trump has not held back in his comments regarding the civil and criminal charges against him. Associated Press News (AP) begins its article on his testimony at his civil trial in New York by observing:

A defiant Donald Trump sparred with a New York judge and slammed the state attorney general suing him Monday, using the witness stand at his civil fraud trial to defend his riches and lash out at a case that imperils his real estate empire

The former president’s barbed testimony spurred the judge to admonish, “This is not a political rally.”

According to the AP article, here is some of what Trump had to say in his testimony:

“This is the opposite of fraud,” he declared. Referring to James, a Democrat whose office brought the lawsuit, he said, “The fraud is her.”

“I’m worth billions of dollars more than the financial statements,” he said Monday on the stand, telling a state lawyer, “You go around and try and demean me and try and hurt me, probably for political reasons.”

“All I did was authorize and tell people to give whatever is necessary for the accountants to do the statements,” he said. As for the results, “I would look at them, I would see them and maybe on some occasions, I would have some suggestions.”

In terms of suggestions, Trump had one major one that is transcendent. It is the claim that as a president and former president, he is immune from prosecution.

An appeals court in DC heard Trump’s immunity claim and rejected it. On February 28, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to review the appeals court decision in the week of April 22 (now scheduled for April 25). After the Court’s decision was announced, Trump posted the following on Truth Social:

Without Presidential Immunity, a President will not be able to properly function, or make decisions, in the best interest of the United States of America.

Presidents will always be concerned, and even paralyzed, by the prospect of wrongful prosecution and retaliation after they leave office. This could actually lead to the extortion and blackmail of a President.

(We will comment on the Supreme Court’s involvement in this case in our next blog.)

The Impact of Trump’s No Truths. No Consequences Approach

Trump has mobilized his MAGA army of tens of millions of Americans in support of his no truth, no consequences agenda. They embrace him and his truthful hyperbole and alternative facts as they march forward in collaboration with him.

Dan P. McAdams, Professor of Psychology at Northwestern University explains the rationale for this inseparable engagement in Chapter 5, Truth, of his The Strange Case of Donald J. Trump: A Psychological Reckoning, published in 2020. An abstract for that chapter states:

For Trump, truth is effectively whatever it takes to win the moment, moment by moment, battle by battle — as the episodic man, shorn of any long-term story to make sense of his life, struggles to win the moment. Among the many reasons that Trump’s supporters excuse his lying is that they, like Trump himself, do not really hold him to the standards that human persons are held to. And that is because many of his supporters, like Trump himself, do not consider him to be a person — he is more like a primal force or superhero, more than a person, but less than a person, too.

While McAdams focuses on the psychological reckoning of Trump and his supporters in his book, the reckoning could very well be an existential one for our American democracy if Trump manages to return to the White House and can exercise his claim to immunity with impunity.

We warned about the emerging threat to American democracy in our blog, “The Cancer Cult is Infecting our American Mind and Memory,” posted in September of 2021. Since then, the threat has not decreased. Rather, it has increased substantially. Because of this, we offer a slightly modified and updated commentary from that blog:

Forward momentum is what the United States needs desperately right now to improve the health of the fragile crucible called our democracy. The platform for positive momentum must be provided by institutional players such as businesses, educational institutions, religious groups, non-profits, governments, and elected officials.

The source for the momentum, however, must come from “we the people.” That’s the truth — not a truthful hyperbole or alternative fact.

Joe Klein begins his New York Times article on Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan by quoting Senator Moynihan saying, in a lecture at Harvard in 1986, “The central conservative truth is that it is culture, not politics, that determines the success of a society. The central liberal truth is that politics can change a culture and save it from itself.” Klein proceeds to observe that “Moynihan, an apostle of complexity, lived at the intersection of these two truths.”

In 2024, because of the changing dynamics, all of us live at the intersection of those two truths. And given the radically changed nature of the Republican Party since the emergence of the Tea Party, the Freedom Caucus, and the ascendancy of Donald Trump and his cultish supporters, politics now is culture, and vice versa, for many members of that party.

To establish the necessary forward momentum, there is a need for a counterbalance that can only come from concerned citizens who are committed to moving this democracy forward in a positive way. As Adlai Stevenson so aptly put it, “As citizens of this democracy, you are the rulers and the ruled, the law-givers and the law-abiding, the beginning and the end.”

When a large group of citizens does not want to play by the rules or to be law-abiding, it could spell the end for this democracy that obliterates its beginning. The citizens who understand this must be willing to step forward.

In doing so, they must recognize that while the perception of the conservative or Republican will differ from that of the liberal or Democrat, the definition of facts should not. Those citizens who understand this perspective will have the right starting point in order to collaborate and compromise to come up with a mutually agreeable solution to our problems.

They will move the American experiment forward and continue the progress toward a more perfect union rather than a regression toward an autocracy.

Donald Trump’s Mantra: No Truths. No Consequences.

The Republican Devolutionary War

FRANK F ISLAM

I am a firm believer in the people. If given the truth they can be depended upon to meet any national crisis. The great point is to bring them the facts. — Abraham Lincoln

“A foundation of our American way of life is our national respect for law.” —Dwight D. Eisenhower

Democracy is worth dying for, because it’s the most deeply honorable form of government ever devised by man. — Ronald Reagan

In 2024, there is a Republican Party in name only. The party of Abraham Lincoln, Dwight D. Eisenhower, and Ronald Reagan has disappeared. And those responsible citizens who believed in facts, the law, and our American democracy have disappeared from it.

The Party of Trump

The Republican Party has become the Party of Trump. The MAGA members of that party embrace and elevate lies, idolatry, and authoritarianism in order to wage a devolutionary war on their party and the governmental policies and practices of this nation.

We first referred to the Republican party as the Party of Trump in October 2017, when various opinion polls showed “that Donald Trump’s support among Republicans as a group in general is much higher than that of the Republican leadership.”

We continued to say:

Only time will tell what this means for the mid-term elections and the future of the Republican Party. What we can tell at this point in time is that to a greater rather than a lesser extent, the Republican Party today is the party of Trump

What we can tell today is that the Republican Party, as it was once known, no longer exists. It has devolved. That assessment may seem a bit harsh or over the top. But it is not just ours.

On March 6, in its editorial titled “Trump’s Conquest of the Republican Party,” the editorial board of the New York Times stated that the Republican Party:

…has become an organization whose goal is the election of one person at the expense of anything else, including integrity, principle, policy, and patriotism. As an individual, Mr. Trump has demonstrated a contempt for the Constitution and the rule of law that makes him unfit to hold office. But when an entire political party, particularly one of the two main parties in a country as powerful as the United States, turns into an instrument of that person and his most dangerous ideas, the damage affects everyone.

Trump achieved this conquest by merging what he had in mind with what was on the minds of what became his ardent MAGA supporters. We took an in-depth look at this in our three-part blog series on The Cancer Cult. As we explained in that series,

A cult is a group of people with extreme dedication to a certain leader and set of beliefs. The important elements of that definition are a “certain leader” and “a set of beliefs.”

In this instance, Trump is that certain leader embodying, magnifying, and legitimating a set of beliefs. Some of those beliefs are the beliefs of the members. The others are those of Trump himself. There is a reciprocity in this relationship that’s mutually beneficial to the cult specifically and harmful to society in general. In a phrase, this is a cult of personality and aligned personalities.

Over time, that mind control has spread from Trump and his MAGA supporters to many of the elected officials at the federal level.

David Brooks, in his piece for the New York Times titled “Trump came for their Party but Took Over Their Souls,” written in February after the House of Representatives defeated the immigration-Ukraine-Israel package, opined:

This wasn’t just about Republicans cynically bending their knee to Trump. Rather, I’m convinced that Trumpism now pervades the deepest recesses of their minds and governs their unconscious assumptions. Their fundamental mental instincts are no longer conservative, but Trumpian.

In addition to capturing the mind and the soul of the party, in 2024 Trump also took over its body. He did this by securing operational control of the Republican National Committee (RNC).

In early March his endorsed nominees, Michael Whatley of North Carolina and daughter-in-law Lara Trump, were elected chair and co-chair of the RNC. In mid-February, before she was elected as co-chair, Lara Trump told Rob Schmitt of Newsmax, “Every single penny will go to the №1 and the only job of the RNC. That is electing Donald J. Trump as president of the United States and saving this country.”

Whatley and Trump brought in Chris LaCivita, a senior campaign advisor to Trump, to be the new RNC chief of staff, and shortly thereafter 60 RNC staff were dismissed with some being asked to reapply for jobs. And Christina Bobb who, as Jesse Wegman of the New York Times reports, “…worked closely with top Trump advisers on the harebrained ‘fake electors’ scheme…” was named as the RNC’s senior counsel for election integrity.

Then, a few weeks after his team was running the RNC, Trump cut a fund-raising agreement with them. According to Shane Goldmacher and Maggie Haberman of the New York Times, that agreement ‘…directs a portion of donations to the political account he has used to pay his legal bills before any money goes to the party itself.”

Causes one to wonder whether “the number 1 and only job of the RNC is to get Donald J. Trump elected as President” or to pay “Donald J. Trump’s legal bills.”

The Country of Trump

Some people might not care if Donald Trump has captured, the mind, body, and soul of the Republican Party. Unfortunately, that is only the starting point for attempting to take over the mind, body, and soul of the United States of America and to convert it to the Country of Trump.

The plan for doing this at the federal level — and from the top down — is laid out in detail in the Project 2025/Presidential Transition Project. The goal of Project 2025, as stated on its website, is as follows:

It is not enough for conservatives to win elections. If we are going to rescue the country from the grip of the radical Left, we need both a governing agenda and the right people in place, ready to carry this agenda out on Day One of the next conservative Administration.

This is the goal of the 2025 Presidential Transition Project. The project will build on four pillars that will, collectively, pave the way for an effective conservative Administration

Those four pillars are:

  • A Policy Agenda — proposals for every major issue facing the country
  • A Personnel Database — a network across the country for conservatives
  • Training — by experts, in workshops, seminars, online videos, mentorship
  • A 180 Day Playbook — actions to bring relief from the Left’s devastating policies

Project 2025’s Policy Agenda pillar is built on the legacy of the Mandate for Leadership (The Mandate), a lengthy book published by the Heritage Foundation. Information on The Mandate states “This book is the product of more than 400 scholars and policy experts from across the conservative movement and around the country.”

In his New York Times article on The Mandate, Carlos Lozada notes that even though the book has not been endorsed by Trump, “It is an off-the-shelf governing plan for a leader who took office last time with no clear plan and no real ability to govern. This book attempts to supply him with both.”

Lozada goes on to observe:

“Mandate for Leadership,” which was edited by Paul Dans and Steven Groves of the Heritage Foundation, is not about anything as simplistic as being dictator for a day but about consolidating authority and eroding accountability for the long haul. It calls for a relentless politicizing of the federal government, with presidential appointees overpowering career officials at every turn and agencies and offices abolished on overtly ideological grounds. Though it assures readers that the president and his or her subordinates “must be committed to the Constitution and the rule of law,” it portrays the president as the personal embodiment of popular will and treats the law as an impediment to conservative governance. It elevates the role of religious beliefs in government affairs and regards the powers of Congress and the judiciary with dismissiveness.

Georgetown history professor Thomas Zimmer is much harsher and more critical in his Substack review of The Mandate. He concludes part one of his two-part commentary on it by declaring:

Unfortunately, this is not just a campaign speech, not just the abstract manifesto of a feverish mind. It comes with over 900 pages of concrete plans and a detailed strategy of how to take over and transform American government into a machine that serves only two purposes: autocratic revenge against the “woke” enemy — and the imposition of a reactionary vision for society against the will of the majority. From the perspective of multiracial, pluralistic democracy, “Project 2025” is not a promise, it is a threat.

The Will of Trump

Lozada refers to “popular will” in his piece and Zimmer refers to the “will of the majority” in his.

In Trump country, those wills don’t matter. That’s the case because for Donald J. Trump, there is only one will that matters. It is his personal will. If his will does not get Trump his way, he is willing to go to war in an attempt to get it.

Trump demonstrated this when he refused to accept his loss to Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election. Instead, he had his professional advisors and political allies mount a campaign to change the election results and develop slates of alternative electors in the states which he lost.

When this didn’t work, Trump asked Vice President Mike Pence not to certify the election results, and summoned the members of his MAGA army to a rally on the Capitol mall in Washington on January 6 to try to prevent that certification.

In closing his remarks at that rally, then-President Trump incited his supporters to march to the U.S. Capitol, by stating:

I think one of our great achievements will be election security. Because nobody until I came along had any idea how corrupt our elections were.

And again, most people would stand there at 9 o’clock in the evening and say I want to thank you very much, and they go off to some other life. But I said something’s wrong here, something is really wrong, can’t have happened.

And we fight. We fight like hell. And if you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore.

Our exciting adventures and boldest endeavors have not yet begun. My fellow Americans, for our movement, for our children, and for our beloved country.

And I say this despite all that’s happened. The best is yet to come.

So we’re going to, we’re going to walk down Pennsylvania Avenue. I love Pennsylvania Avenue. And we’re going to the Capitol, and we’re going to try and give.

The Democrats are hopeless — they never vote for anything. Not even one vote. But we’re going to try and give our Republicans, the weak ones because the strong ones don’t need any of our help. We’re going to try and give them the kind of pride and boldness that they need to take back our country.

The rest is history. The rally attendees went to the U.S. Capitol and, as a mob of rioters, stormed the Capitol building, launching a full-out assault and attack on everything and everyone there.

They did that because they wanted Donald Trump’s will to reign supreme. The price that hundreds of those rioters/insurrectionists/traitors have paid for exercising Trump’s will is some time behind bars. To date, Trump has paid no price at all, and he is exercising his will now in an attempt to reverse the tables for his mutinous acolytes.

At the opening of a Trump rally in Vandalia/Dayton Ohio on March 16, the announcer says “Please rise for the horribly and unfairly treated January 6 hostages.”

A recorded version of the national anthem is sung by some jailbirds who participated in the attempt to overthrow our federal government. Trump in his MAGA hat stands and salutes them as they sing.

When their unpatriotic version of the anthem is concluded, Trump refers to those January 6 traitors as “unbelievable patriots” and “hostages” and promises he will pardon all of them on day 1 when he is back in office as president of the United States.

In their piece for The Bulwark, conservatives Bill Kristol and Andrew Egger comment, “The promise to pardon is noteworthy.” Kristol and Egger say this because those who serve in Trump’s administration and “follow Trump’s wishes,” rather than the law, and the “paramilitary types,” who would ‘intimidate opponents and enforce his wishes and his will,” need not be afraid either. This is so because they will all receive presidential pardons.

Kristol and Egger are accurate in their assessment of the nature of Trump’s wishes and will. He articulates his will through the three R’s. That’s not reading, ‘riting, and ‘rithmetic. It is revenge, retaliation, and retribution.

Trump enunciated his commitment to retribution at the Conservative Political Action Conference held in Miami on March 4, 2023. At CPAC, Trump asserted: “In 2016, I declared, “I am your voice.” Today, I add: I am your warrior. I am your justice. And for those who have been wronged and betrayed, I am your retribution. I am your retribution.”

Trump also said, “This is the final battle. They know it, I know it, you know it, everybody knows it. This is it. Either they win or we win. And if they win, we no longer have a country.”

That was Trump the provocateur speaking to mobilize his army to go to war. In his Atlantic article written shortly after Trump’s CPAC battle call, Peter Wehner advised:

To understand the modern Republican Party, you must understand the intense sense of fear and grievance that drives so many of its voters, which has in turn given rise to a desire for retribution and revenge, for inflicting harm on Democrats, progressives, and other perceived enemies. Those negative emotions existed before Donald Trump ran for the presidency, but he tapped into them with astonishing skill.

In terms of retaliation, Trump has created “hit lists” to go after those who have opposed him during his presidency and since. Among those on those lists are well-known names such as Senator Mitch Romney (R-UT), who voted to impeach Trump, and former representatives Liz Cheney (R-MT) and Adam Kinzinger (R-IL), who served on the House Select Committee to investigate the January 6 Attack on the United States Capitol.

The Opposition to Trump

We don’t know whether they are on a Trump hit list, but there are numerous senior level people who served in the Trump administration who have spoken out against him.

At the top of that list is Trump’s Vice President Mike Pence, who told Martha MacCallum of Fox News on March 15, “Donald Trump is pursuing and articulating an agenda that is at odds with the conservative agenda that we governed on during our four years and that is why I cannot in good conscience endorse Donald Trump in this campaign.”

In October 2023, Zachary Wolf of CNN published a list of two dozen “former aides and top officials” who have turned away from Trump over the past few years. Pence was first on that list. Three others and the quotes Wolf provides from them in his piece follow:

  • Former Secretary of Defense, Mark Esper: “I think he’s unfit for office…He puts himself before country. His actions are all about him and not about country. And then, of course, I believe he has integrity and character issues as well.”
  • Former Chief of Staff, John Kelly: “A person that has nothing but contempt for our democratic institutions, our constitution, and the rule of law. There is nothing more that can be said. God help us.
  • Former Communications Director, Anthony Scaramucci: “He is the domestic terrorist of the 21st century.”

On March 12, Rep. Ken Buck (R-CO), a member of the Freedom Caucus, stated that he would be vacating his seat in Congress on March 22. In November, Buck had announced that he would not be seeking re-election.

Amy Wang and Patrick Svitek, in their Washington Post article on Buck’s departure, reported that in November one of the reasons Buck cited for leaving was “disappointment that many fellow Republicans continue to push the lie that the 2020 presidential election was stolen.” They quote Buck as saying:

“Our nation is on a collision course with reality, and a steadfast commitment to truth, even uncomfortable truths is the only way forward. Too many Republican leaders are lying to America.”

Wang and Svitek write that Buck was also disturbed by Republicans downplaying the nature of the January 6, 2021 insurrection and the need for prosecuting the insurrectionists, quoting him as saying:

“These insidious narratives breed widespread cynicism and erode Americans’ confidence in the rule of law. It is impossible for the Republican Party to confront our problems and offer a course for the future while being obsessively fixated on retribution and vengeance for contrived injustices of the past.”

Former Representative Buck’s words are powerful. They describe the devolutionary path the party has taken in Congress and across the nation.

As we noted at the outset of this post, the Republican Party exists now in name only. It is now the Party of Trump, which now includes, among others: MAGA loyalists, conservative right-wing extremists, those who feel they are outsiders or victims, evangelical Christians, traditional Republicans who have not left the Republican Party because of Trump, and would hold their nose and vote for him rather than for Joe Biden or any Democratic candidate for president.

Sady, this alliance is no small group. As we noted in an earlier blog posted before this year’s Super Tuesday elections on March 5:

Trump has entwined his personal interests with the personal interests of tens of millions of other Americans. Those are his MAGA supporters. Add to them the tens of millions of Republicans who have stayed in the party and now accept the truth of the Big Lie and endorse Trump.

The United States of America has been successful for nearly 250 years by pursuing an evolutionary path that moves this country upward, forward, and outward. The illiberal Trump populist alliance is charting a devolutionary path that would move this great nation downward, backward, and inward. The devolutionary path would turn our constitutional democracy upside down and inside out.

This could be avoided if Trump is not re-elected President on November 5, 2024. We say could be because there is no guarantee that Trump and his minions will accept a defeat in this year’s presidential election.

If they do not, and there is a repeat — but more radical — performance of what transpired after Trump’s defeat on November 3, 2020, the devolutionary path and war to transform the Republican party and the policies and practices of this country might become an actual war fought in the streets of cities and states across this nation.

There is still time to avoid this nightmare scenario. But it is running out.

Time is not on our side. But, as concerned citizens, we should be at each other’s sides working to ensure that this worst-case possibility does not become the reality.

Donald Trump’s Mantra: No Truths. No Consequences.

Democrats in Wonderland

FRANK F ISLAM

Is Joe Biden too old to run for President? Why didn’t any true contender run against him in the primaries? Why is he doing so badly in the polls, in spite of his presidential accomplishments? Can he beat Donald Trump? If he does, will he be competent to serve out his full term?

Those are just a few of the questions that many — possibly the majority of — traditional Democratic supporters are asking themselves in the run-up to the presidential election to be held on November 5.

Polls Apart

Poll after poll has suggested that they are not excited or enthusiastic about turning out to vote for President Biden and are wondering what to do. It’s not just the Democrats in this bemused state. It cuts across political parties and those who profess their independence, and adds to the wonderment of Democrats.

In late March and early April, William Galston senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, Ronald Brownstein senior editor at The Atlantic, and Fareed Zakaria, columnist for the Washington Post, examined the results from various polls and research. Their analyses revealed the following insights.

Galston focused on the economy in his analysis. Drawing upon surveys and polls by the Economist/YouGov; the New York Times; the Wall Street Journal; and CBS News, the primary findings include:

  • Twenty-two percent of voters identify inflation/prices as their most important issue, compared to only seven percent who cite jobs and the economy.
  • Only 22% of Black Americans, 13% of Hispanics, and 18% of young adults believe that they are better off financially today than they were a year ago.
  • Sixty-five percent of voters rate the economy as good during Trump’s presidency, compared to 38% under Biden.

Based upon the data he reviewed, Galston concludes “When it comes to the economy, Donald Trump enjoys a clear edge over Biden.”

Brownstein looked at Trump’s impact on minority voters. His analysis reveals that:

…A wide array of national polls, as well as surveys in the swing states, have consistently shown Trump now attracting about 20 percent support among Black voters, and as much as 45 percent among Latinos. That’s well above his 2020 showing with both groups…

At the end of his article, Brownstein concludes: “…small changes in the electorate’s composition should marginally boost Biden. But they are not enough to overcome the level of defection polls show him now facing among nonwhite voters.”

Fareed Zakaria concentrates on Trump’s appeal to the members of the white Christian evangelical community. Using participation in the 2020 election, his analysis discloses:

White evangelicals, who make up about 14 percent of the population, made up about one-quarter of voters in the 2020 election. And about three quarters of them voted for Donald Trump. Even more striking, of those White voters who attend religious services once a month or more, 71 percent voted for Trump in the 2020 election.

Based upon this level of participation, Zakaria concludes, “The key to understanding Trump’s coalition is the intensity of his support among White people who are and who claim to be devout Christians”

Finally, there is the polling in seven “swing states” where the 2024 presidential elections will most likely be decided. Those states are: Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.

On April 3, The Hill released its Decision Desk/HB average of the polls conducted in each state, which showed Trump leading in six of those states, with Biden tied with Trump in Wisconsin.

That was the bad news for Democrats. The good news, reported by Jared Gans at the end of his Hill piece,

Trump was leading in The Hill/Decision Desk HQ polling average by a sizable margin for the first few months of 2024, reaching 10 points at one time, but Biden has been closing the margin recently. Trump’s lead currently stands at about 5 points.

The important thing for Democrats is not what the average across the seven states is but what the polls show close to the election in each state, and then whether they are predictive of the final results. It should be remembered that most national polls in 2016 showed Hillary Clinton easily beating Donald Trump in their contest for the presidency.

Policy Invisible

One of the major things that flummoxes Democrats is how poorly Biden is doing in the polls in spite of his significant policy accomplishments. A survey of social scientists in 2023 ranked him 14th out of our 45 presidents in terms of performance — and put Trump dead last.

Given this, it would seem that Biden should be prevailing in this presidential race. But he is not. Why is that?

Rogé Karma addresses this perplexing condition in his April 4 Atlantic article, in which he highlights Biden’s success in passing the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) of 2022. The IRA contains important provisions to reduce prescription drug prices for seniors. After discussing this, one would expect the IRA to move the needle positively for Biden but it hasn’t, Karma observes:

…drug pricing is a microcosm of Biden’s predicament — and a challenge to conventional theories of politics, in which voters reward politicians for successful legislation. Practically nothing is more popular than lowering drug prices, and yet the popularity hasn’t materialized. Which raises an uncomfortable question: Politically speaking, does policy matter at all?

Policy can matter if it is visible and providing benefits to citizens today. But, as Karma points out:

A KFF poll from December found that less than a third of voters knows that the IRA allows Medicare to negotiate drug prices, and even fewer are aware of the bill’s other drug-related provisions. Perhaps that’s because these changes mostly haven’t happened yet. The $2,000 cap on out-of-pocket costs doesn’t come into effect until 2025, and the first batch of new negotiated prices won’t kick in until 2026.

It’s not just the invisibility and lack of immediacy for President Biden’s policies that are problematic, however. It’s also the feelings and attitudes of many of Americans today.

We discussed these factors in our February blog, “Bidenomics vs Vibecession and Vabpression.” Vibecession is a term created by Kyla Scanlon. Vabpression is a term we created.

  • Vibecession is a period of temporary vibe decline, during which economic data such as trade and industrial activity are relatively okay but people are feeling bad.
  • Vabpression is a condition in which citizens, because of their political allegiance and personal “values, attitudes and beliefs,” refuse to see facts that are contrary to their mindset.

As we noted,

Vibecession and vabpression are twins. They originate in citizens’ minds.

Together, they will not kill Bidenomics. But they have, and will continue to, reduce its positive effect on the sentiment and behavior of the citizenry in general.

Recent public opinion polls by Gallup and The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research (AP-NORC) indicate that these entangled twins continue to have a negative impact on the perspective of Americans.

The AP-NORC poll on April 3 found that:

About 7 in 10 adults believe that democracy is a good system of government …Only 3 in 10 think democracy in the United States is functioning well, while about half believe it is a poorly functioning democracy.

A Gallup Poll, conducted monthly, asks “In general, are you satisfied or dissatisfied with the way things are going in the United States at this time.” For March, 75% of the respondents were dissatisfied. Dissatisfaction in the past year has ranged from a high of 83% down to the current 75% figure.

Democratic Dilemma

This is the context that creates the dilemma for those in the Democratic party as we approach the 2024 presidential election. The parameters of that dilemma, approximately six months before the November election, include: an unenthusiastic base group of Democrats, uncommitted independent voters, uncommitted citizens of color, uncommitted younger voters, uncommitted anti-Trump Republicans.

The turnout of Democratic voters — especially in the swing states — will make a difference in the 2024 presidential election. The most recent Gallup polls suggest that there are a large % of Democratic voters who are not enthusiastic about participating in this election.

Gallup polling showed that approximately the same percent of Democratic/Democratic lean voters were “more enthusiastic” to vote in the 2024 election (55%) and the 2020 election (54%). By contrast, the “less enthusiastic” percent for 2024 is 42% compared to 32% in 2020.

When Hillary Clinton lost in 2016, her unenthusiastic number was 50%. When Barack Obama won in 2008, his more enthusiastic number was 79% and his “less enthusiastic” number was “15%”.

An excellent detailed analysis by staff of the Pew Research Center showed that independent voters, African-American voters, suburban voters, and younger voters made a major contribution to Joe Biden’s election victory in 2020. Pew found that:

  • “Biden substantially increased Democratic support from independents over 2016.” Clinton received 42% of the vote from that group in her race. Biden received 52%.
  • African American voters were consistent in their voting for both Clinton (91%) and Biden (92%).
  • “Biden improved upon Clinton’s vote share with suburban voters: 45% supported Clinton in 2016 vs. 54% for Biden in 2020.”
  • Gen Z and Millennial voters favored Biden over Trump by margins of about 20 points, while Gen Xers and Boomers were more evenly split in their preferences.

This brings us to the Republican anti-Trumpers whose votes could be decisive in the swing states.

Pew found that Hillary Clinton got 4% of the Republican vote and Joe Biden got 5% in 2020. The big shift in that 1% increase for Biden was from voters who classified themselves as moderate/liberal Republicans, from whom Clinton received 8% of the vote and Biden received 16% of the vote.

The dilemma is that many of those voters who helped push Biden across the finish line to become the President of the United States in 2020 are uncommitted this time around. A Gallup poll conducted in March found that 29% of those surveyed said that neither Trump nor Biden would be a “good president.” The breakout of this 29% who said neither was: 18% Republicans; 21% Democrats; and 42% Independents.

In her write up of the results of this Gallup poll, Megan Brenan notes:

Gallup asks those who say neither candidate would be a good president about their voting intentions in November, and nearly half, 46%, say they are most likely to vote for a third-party candidate, while 17% expect they will not vote for president. Another 33% say they will probably vote for Biden or Trump based on other factors.

Third-Party Conundrum

Brenan ends her piece by writing:

There are currently several third-party candidates in the race, including Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Cornel West and Jill Stein. While third-party candidates’ viability can depend on how many state ballots they get on, they can act as spoilers by pulling support from major party candidates — a concern for both the Trump and Biden campaigns this year.

This is definitely a concern for the Biden campaign and Democrats looking forward, because of the impact that third party candidates have had in the past. The Pew Research Center points out:

One somewhat unusual aspect of the 2016 election was the relatively high share of voters (nearly 6%) who voted for one of the third-party candidates (mostly the Libertarian and Green Party nominees) … By comparison, just 2% of voters chose a third-party candidate in 2020.

Some analysts attribute Clinton’s loss in 2016 to the third-party candidates. And many political experts and politicians, including Joe Biden, attribute Al Gore’s loss in the 2000 election to the fact that Ralph Nader, as a third-party candidate, got over 90,000 votes in the State of Florida — a state which Gore lost by 537 votes.

That is the third-party bad news for the Democrats. The good news for the Democrats is that Ross Perot’s third-party candidacy in 1992 is believed by many to have contributed to Bill Clinton’s win over the incumbent George H. W. Bush.

The good news for Democrats in 2024 is that No Labels failed in its attempt to put together a “unity” or centrist ticket with a well-recognized Republican and Democrat to compete against President Biden and former president Trump.

Each of the candidates remaining could “steal” some votes from Biden, but as Jim Geraghty of the Washington Post points out in his April 3 article, it is Robert F. Kennedy Jr. who could create the most trouble for Biden in the swing states. Geraghty ends his piece stating;

No wonder Democrats are having flashbacks to Ralph Nader winning a small but pivotal number of votes from left leaning Americans and Jill Stein doing the same in 2016. Can’t blame Democrats for worrying that Kennedy could play a similar role this year.

Democratic Bed-wetting

Are the Democrats concerns just another case of Democratic bed-wetting?

As Newsweek explains,

Democratic bedwetting, a term first coined by President Barack Obama’s campaign manager David Plouffe in 2008, describes Democrats’ ability to irrationally overreact to political events and poll numbers to assume immediate electoral doom and gloom.

The democratic bed-wetting term has been used with some frequency since then, and been hurled around a bit as we move into the 2024 presidential cycle.

We don’t know if the Democrats’ beds are wet. We do know that it is definitely time to change the sheets. The concerns that Democrats have regarding the presidential contest between Biden and Trump are legitimate.

David Axelrod, senior strategist for Barack Obama’s political campaign and a senior advisor to President Obama, has spoken out critically for some time on his perspective on the deficiencies of the Biden campaign. Recently, as Newsweek reports, in a podcast interview with Bill Kristol on April, Axelrod said that Biden needed not to emphasize the strength of the national economy but to connect to the needs of the working class.

He told Kristol,

“The right strategy is to say, ‘Look, we’ve made a lot of progress from the day I walked in the door as a country and I’m proud of our country for fighting through this pandemic and getting her back to where we’ve got this much employment. But the fact is, the way people experience this economy is the way I did when I was growing up in Scranton, Pennsylvania. How much did you pay for the groceries? How do you afford the gas, [and] the rent? And these continue to be a problem and I’m fighting that fight.’”

It’s not just Axelrod who has expressed concerns. In January, according to the Washington Post, former president Obama, in a luncheon meeting, advised President Biden that he needed to strengthen the organization and management of, and get his key senior advisers more directly involved in, the presidential campaign.

Finally, there is new data from a Pew Research Center report on political party identification released on April 9 that should increase the concerns of Democrats. That study, of hundreds of thousands of voters, found:

The combined effects of change and continuity have left the country’s two major parties at virtual parity: About half of registered voters (49%) identify as Democrats or lean toward the Democratic Party, while 48% identify as Republicans or lean Republican.

In recent decades, neither party has had a sizable advantage, but the Democratic Party has lost the edge it maintained from 2017 to 2021.

Stop Wondering

In summary, the evidence abounds that there is a need for Democrats to worry and wonder. But with less than six months to go before the November 5 election day, that wondering must stop and be replaced with the plans and people for winning.

Fortunately, the Biden campaign and its senior advisors have initiated their process for doing this. There are a number of resources and experts who they can and will draw upon to implement a winning game plan.

As stated in our “vibecession/vabpression” blog, in our opinion, that game plan should:

De-emphasize Bidenomics and emphasize citizenomics.

Citizenomics elevates Individual Economic Well-being (IEW). It makes the expectations and the experiences of citizens the centerpiece for changes and communications.

There are three essential ingredients required to put a citizenomics approach in place: Shift from a macroeconomic to a microeconomic focus. Address kitchen table issues. Tailor responses to market segment and geographic needs.

The Biden campaign’s focus on the abortion issue in swing states demonstrates sensitivity to market segment and geographic needs. The decision to dispatch Vice President Kamala Harris to Arizona immediately after the Supreme Court’s egregious decision to basically ban abortion based upon an 1864 law demonstrates its alacrity. President Biden’s decision to blame and hold Donald Trump responsible for the abortion ban in Arizona demonstrates his personal tenacity and willingness to step into the fray.

As the campaign moves forward, it will not be just the Biden campaign’s playbook and what its staff does that matters. The results will be also be determined by whether Democrats with concerns take to the playing field as concerned citizens.

As we wrote in an earlier blog this year,

To protect our democracy in 2024, we need to do more than vote. We also need to get engaged with the states that will make a difference in terms of the presidential election.

We identify actions that can be taken and provide a format for developing a Political Civic Engagement Plan in that blog which concerned citizens can use to make a meaningful difference in those states.

As noted in the opening of this blog, those seven swing states are Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin.

In his April 16 guest essay for the New York Times, Doug Sosnik explains that because of the electoral college President Biden “has a narrower and more challenging path to winning the election than Donald Trump.” This makes Biden’s performance in the swing states critically important.

Sosnik points out that currently Trump has an edge in the Sunbelt states (Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and North Carolina” because of Biden’s “declining popularity” there — especially with the young and nonwhite voters. If this condition stays true, wins in the industrial states of Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin would be pivotal and essential for a Biden victory this year.

In closing, we leave you with this thought. There is a saying, attributed to British Prime Minister Harold Wilson (1964–1970), that “a week is a long time in politics.” This is the case because the fortunes of a political leader or political party can change dramatically in that period of time.

Recognizing this, let us elaborate on Prime Minister Wilson’s observation. In politics in this 21st century, a day is a week, a month is a year, and a year is a century.

A Democratic loss in this presidential election would move this great nation and its people backward to the 20th century. Democrats who understand this are not in wonderland. They are and will be engaged in helping in order to keep the American democracy and its people moving forward and making progress in this 21st century.

AI Genius: Mustafa Suleyman – A Beacon For Muslim Youth

AI Genius: Mustafa Suleyman – A Beacon For Muslim Youth

Asad Mirza

Most people may ask, who is Mustafa Suleyman? Well, Mustafa is a Syrian-born British citizen, about whom Microsoft’s former chief Bill Gates said: “Watch his work, he can become a big name in the world of technology”. If Bill gates said it, then we should also give Mustafa, a second to review what he has achieved.

Mustafa Suleyman’s Syrian father worked as a taxi driver and his English mother as a nurse. He grew up off Caledonian Road in the London Borough of Islington, where he lived with his parents and his two younger brothers.

Suleyman went to Thornhill Primary School, a state school in Islington, followed by Queen Elizabeth’s School, a boys’ grammar school in Barnet. Around that time, he met his DeepMind co-founder, Demis Hassabis, through his best friend, Demis’s younger brother. Suleyman initially attended Mansfield College, Oxford, before dropping out at 19.

Mustafa’s practical life began when he started the ‘Muslim Youth Helpline’ with his friends at the age of nineteen. In fact, the situation of the Muslim youth in Britain was very similar to the dictum; “Faith has stopped me, which has drawn me to disbelief”. That is, on the one hand, it was their (Muslim youth’s) compulsion to blend into the British society; on the other hand, they had to avoid the drug culture and immorality. This phone helpline service was for their guidance. Coincidentally, this service started around when 9/11 happened, as a result the incidents of Islamophobia started to increase and the Muslim youth came under more pressure. So in that era this service helped Muslim youth to get out of social isolation. It has become the largest mental health service for Muslims in the UK today.

Suleyman subsequently worked as a policy officer on human rights for Ken Livingstone, the Mayor of London, before going on to start Reos Partners, a ‘systemic change’ consultancy that uses methods from conflict resolution to navigate social problems. As a negotiator and facilitator, Mustafa worked for a wide range of clients such as the United Nations, the Dutch government, and the World Wide Fund for Nature.

But for Mustafa Suleyman, essentially a philosopher and brilliant manager, this was just the beginning. The turning point in his life came in 2009. An environmental conference was being held in Copenhagen. Mustafa was also among the organisers. His effort was to get the delegates to the conference to agree on a common strategy against deforestation. He was very disappointed when he saw that they could not agree on a common strategy. But there was a new way out of that despair.

This was the year 2009. Facebook was emerging as a huge company. In those days, Mustafa read somewhere that the number of active Facebook users has reached one hundred million. This thing stuck in his mind.

He realised that not even a few people could be brought together on a common goal at the Copenhagen Conference; on the other hand, it takes only a few days for millions of like-minded people to connect on social media. 

That day Mustafa realised that in the future it would be technology that would bring people together. Thus he entered the computer field from the world of philosophy and ideas. The very next year he started a company called DeepMind along with his friends. It was an artificial intelligence research firm.

What was the goal of DeepMind? Making decisions that humans might have to think about for an infinite amount of time, better prepare computers to make them in a much shorter amount of time!

Just think, in 2023, most of us were being introduced to the world of artificial intelligence for the first time, but Mustafa Suleyman and his friends were creating AI algorithms 13-14 years ago, when even in the West very few people were aware of this field. In one of his interviews Mustafa said that at times he had to hide his work from people because people started laughing when they used to hear about artificial intelligence/AI; as it seemed to them like a silly dream of children reading science fiction, which is impossible to interpret.

“Deep Mind” must have been hidden from the eyes of the general public, but the people of the tech world were watching its rise very carefully. Several big names including Tesla’s Elon Musk and PayPal’s Peter Thiel started investing in it. Then in 2014, Google bought DeepMind for sixty five million dollars. It was Google’s largest and most expensive acquisition outside the US at the time.

The achievements of DeepMind could be the topic of a separate discussion. For now a simple anecdote would suffice. Google has data centres around the world that require a lot of electricity to keep cool. Mustafa was given the task of finding a solution. He applied DeepMind’s algorithm to find the optimal solution. Now such solutions are actually a large combination of many decisions. Finding the perfect combination that gives the best results is a very time-consuming task. Take an example of biryani. Everyone is aware of the 12 to 15 different spices in it, but still there are only a few shops where there is huge rush. This is because they have found the perfect combination of spices and the perfect time to add them to the pot, to bring out the flavour.

So, if this project of saving electricity at the Google data centres was given to a person, he might not have been able to find the best and ideal situation even in ten years. However, after ‘considering’ not hundreds of thousands or millions, but billions of combinations, DeepMind proposed the best solution that reduced the power consumption of Google’s data centres by forty percent. Mustafa wanted to use the same solution in buildings around the world to reduce global electricity consumption and environmental pollution.

This same Mustafa Suleyman has become a part of Microsoft last month. In March 2024, Microsoft appointed Suleyman as EVP and CEO of its newly created consumer AI unit, Microsoft AI. Now, as the chief executive of Microsoft AI; he has a wide world to conquer and limitless skies to soar. Let’s see to what heights he takes the field of AI.

The number of Muslims in the tech world is very small. In such a situation, if a genius, a layman basically, comes forward and reaches for the sky, we should also be happy about it and it should motivate our youth to become like him. Today we need such heroes to inspire and motivate our youth to emulate him.

Electoral Bonds Scam: Petition filed in Supreme Court demanding court-monitored SIT

Electoral Bonds Scam: Petition filed in Supreme Court demanding court-monitored SIT

By Pervez Bari

BHOPAL – A petition has been filed in the Supreme Court by Common Cause and the Centre for Public Interest Litigation (CPIL) for a court monitored SIT into the Electoral Bonds Scam.

Petitioner Anjali Bhadwaj, who is also a member of Common Cause, and her advocate, Prashant Bhushan, a renowned lawyer of the Supreme Court, informed during a joint press conference here in Bhopal.

Both of them claimed that the electoral bond is the biggest scam in the nation and requires a thorough investigation by an independent body. They alleged that companies that gave money to political parties through electoral bonds either received huge projects or the investigation against them (in any case) went into the back-burner.

The data shows that Rs. 12,155.1 crore worth of electoral bonds were purchased by corporate groups, companies, and individuals, and Rs 12,769.08 crore worth of electoral bonds were cashed by political parties since April 12, 2019. The BJP was the biggest beneficiary of electoral bonds.

Apprehending that investigative agencies were used as a mask to extort the money, they said the analysis of the data indicates possible corruption and illegality that needs further investigation by a court-monitored SIT.

Meanwhile, details of electoral bonds that were put in the public domain subsequent to the historic judgement of the Supreme Court reveal trends that suggest large scale quid pro quo. Data shows that companies which received huge projects donated large sums of money through bonds to ruling parties in close proximity of getting the projects. In addition to potential kickbacks, the data suggests regulatory inaction on companies that donated through electoral bonds and reveals potential money laundering, with loss making and shell companies donating funds to political parties.

Further, the data exposes cases of possible extortion, involving agencies like the Enforcement Directorate (ED), CBI and the IT department. The Electoral Bonds Scam is potentially the biggest corruption scam in the country, which requires a thorough probe by an independent body, they said.

It may be pointed out here that in a landmark verdict on February 15, 2024, the Supreme Court struck down the Electoral Bonds Scheme as unconstitutional and stopped further sale of electoral bonds. The SC held that anonymous electoral bonds (EBs) violate voter’s fundamental right to information guaranteed under Article 19(1) (a) of the Constitution.

The five-judge Bench headed by CJI D.Y. Chandrachud also struck down the amendments made to various laws to bring in the instrument of electoral bonds. Changes were made to Representation of the Peoples Act, the Companies Act, and the Income Tax Act, to allow for complete anonymity to the donor by exempting donations received by parties through electoral bonds from reporting requirements. The amendments to the Companies Act also did away with the clause which allowed companies to donate only 7.5% of the average net profits in the preceding three financial years. Various authorities, including the RBI and the ECI, flagged the dangers of the electoral bond scheme highlighting that it would adversely impact transparency, increase money laundering and black money in the system, and lead to funding through shell companies.

Documents accessed under the RTI Act showed that the government ignored these concerns and went ahead with the scheme, claiming that donor anonymity and purchase of bonds through banking channels would lead to curbing of black money in political party funding. The court rejected these arguments noting that electoral bonds could be traded for a consideration without any trail of the transactions, and the original buyer may not be the ultimate contributor as the scheme failed to provide any regulatory check to prevent such trading.

In its historic verdict, the SC directed the disclosure of details of all bonds sold and redeemed. The SBI’s attempt to delay disclosure of crucial information, which would allow tracking of donations through bonds, was rejected by the Supreme Court. Finally, details of all electoral bonds purchased and encashed since April 12, 2019 were made public, including the unique bond number, enabling the tracking and matching of donors to the parties which encashed the bonds.

Meanwhile, it may be mentioned here that the BJP intends to bring back electoral bonds in some form after consultation with all stakeholders if the party comes back to power in the 2024 general elections, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman reportedly said.

“What electoral bonds brought in was transparency. What prevailed earlier was just free-for-all. We still have a lot of consultation to do with stakeholders. We have to see what we have to do to make or bring in a framework that will be acceptable to all, primarily retain the level of transparency and remove black money from the equation”, Sitharaman said in an interview with a newspaper.

Aligarh gave all of us a “purpose driven education”: Frank F Islam

Aligarh gave all of us a “purpose driven education”: Frank F Islam

Remarks By Frank F. Islam To Washington DC Aligarh Alumni Association On the Occasion of Aligarh Scholarships Fundraiser

Thank you for that kind introduction.

Let me begin by thanking the members of the Washington, DC Aligarh Alumni Scholarship Committee for inviting me to speak at your annual fundraiser.  It is a privilege to be invited back to be with you in this Zoom Room – although I must admit I would rather be with all of you in person.

I also have to admit that when I first got the invitation to speak to you on April 1 – which is referred to as April Fool’s Day – for a brief moment I thought it might be a joke.  Then, I realized quickly that it was neither a joke nor a day to celebrate fools.

Instead, because of who you are and what you are doing this in this season of Ramadan, a month of deeply spiritual time of reflection and recommitment and a special time for giving. It will be a day to celebrate adding new branches to our Aligarh family tree through the Association’s scholarships.

Adding those branches is always important.  But, for two primary reasons, it is more important now than ever. Those reasons are:

  • the need for higher education for Muslims in India has never been greater
  • higher education is becoming increasingly pivotal for ensuring both the success of the individual and society.

A report from the All-India Survey on Higher Education reveals that the enrollment of Muslim students enrolled in higher education decreased by 4.6% compared to the prior year.

Those numbers tell the statistical story on why our being here today for this fundraiser is so important but they do not tell the human story of so many of our Muslim brothers and sisters in India. The human story of those in need there is even more compelling.

The human story is one of those living in adverse conditions and poverty.  Poverty limits opportunity. Poverty fuels frustration.  Poverty crushes hope.

That is difficult for anyone in any place. It is even more difficult because, as we know and have witnessed from afar. Indian Muslims continue to experience persistent inequality, hostility, and prejudice.  This significantly inhibits their access to education and employment.

Add to this condition, the fact that these times world-wide have become more trying and autocratic.  They have become more confrontational and contentious.  They have become more divisive and difficult.

All of these factors make the need for a quality higher education more essential and relevant than ever.  Higher education is a powerful equalizer opening doors for those in poverty.  It empowers the mind and uplifts the soul.  It is the best investment that can be made to build the next generation of leaders, entrepreneurs and problem-solvers.

A quality higher education provides the avenues for participation in the 21st century workforce and careers, the competencies to compete in a global economy, and the capacity to contribute to lifting fellow Muslims and those in the weaker sections out of poverty.

An Aligarh education does this and more.  I can say that without hesitation because the evidence supports it.

Each of you in this zoom room fundraiser today are difference makers.  And, you are here to help make more of a difference back in India, by contributing to the support of scholarships for students at Aligarh.

The Aligarh Alumni Association of Washington, DC has given out more than several hundred AMU scholarships since 1976 when it began making awards.  Among others, those awards have helped educate the future generations of: doctors, dentists, nurses, computer scientists, IT specialists, lawyers, and teachers.  The list could go on and on.  You have also supported feeder programs and applications for thousands of students to go college at other institutions of higher education in India.

You have done all of this because like me, you have experienced and benefited from the Aligarh difference.  That difference was not only learning but developing the core values that would carry you through your life.

In a phrase, Aligarh gave all of us a “purpose driven education.”  Our paths have been different but the common and transcendent bond that unites us has been a belief in and a commitment to equal justice and a shared humanity.

This combination of technical expertise and moral rectitude has empowered us to make our marks in the world and to serve as positive role models for others.  We have come together at this fundraising event to provide the dollars for scholarships to help future students gain the advantage that we had in order to make their own marks.

I look at this, and I ask you to do the same, not as an act of charity or generosity but as an investment. The return on that investment will be exponential.

In closing, let me leave you with this thought.  In my opening remarks, I said we are here to “add new branches to the Aligarh family tree”.

At the founding of Aligarh in 1875, Sir Syed said “

…from the seed which we sow today may spring up a mighty tree whose branches, like those of banyan of the soil shall in their turn strike firm roots into the earth, and themselves send forth new and vigorous saplings…

Years ago, those of us here today were those saplings.  We are now branches of the mighty Aligarh family tree.

The scholarships we supported in the past have added to spread of that tree.  This year’s scholarships will do the same.

Sir Syed would be pleased – as should we be.  We should be pleased but not completely satisfied.

We should remember that near the end of life, Sir Syed said “I built this institution for you and I am sure you will carry the light of this institution far and wide, darkness will disappear from all around.”

There is still much darkness all around and that is why we are gathered at this fundraiser to keep Aligarh’s light shining brightly against the darkness for generations and generations of students to come.

t has been my pleasure and privilege to share my thoughts with you.  Thanks for listening to me and for your generous contributions to keep the Aligarh light shining and the family tree growing.

May God bless each and everyone of you.