Presidential candidate Nikki Haley, like most of us, doesn’t like chaos. She’d prefer that America be an orderly, law-abiding, harmonious nation. Unfortunately, that is no longer the America in which we live. But in her condemnation of “chaos,” Haley confuses correlation with causation, and is using our current turmoil to attack Donald Trump. At a campaign stop in Bluffton, South Carolina, she said:

I agree with a lot of his policies, but the truth is, rightly or wrongly, chaos follows him (Trump). We have too much division in this country, and too many threats around the world to be sitting in chaos once again.

I don’t disagree that there’s a Trump/chaos correlation. A quick review of events since 2016 reveals a mountain of evidence to support that position.

Peter Strzok and Lisa Page used their positions in the FBI to create an “insurance policy” against our electoral choice. Their plan certainly introduced a bit of chaos into the 2016 election.

Leftist groups filed lawsuits against virtually every action President Trump attempted in office. Those suits caused a great deal of uncertainty and confusion about America’s path forward.

The longest shutdown in U.S. history was brought about by Democrats to avoid funding a border wall. It caused weeks of political disorder and years of unrestricted national invasion.

When the Mueller investigation spent three years investigating a crime that never happened -- based on fabricated evidence provided by Hillary Clinton -- we experienced years of political upheaval.

When General Mark Milley informed his Chinese counterpart that he would inform them of any surprise attack Trump planned, it introduced chaos into our military chain of command.

Anthony Fauci was responsible for a healthy dose of chaos when he illegally funded “gain of function” research at the Wuhan lab, creating a virus, which the Chinese “leaked,” leading to a global pandemic. It was a stark demonstration of the chaos men are capable of who have more ego than wisdom.

We also experienced a bit of chaos when San Fran Nan conducted two impeachments, based on hearsay and disagreements. Speaker Pelosi and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer even increased the political turmoil by disallowing exculpatory evidence and conducting the second trial without Supreme Court oversight. They did it simply out of hatred, and because they could.

For those like Haley, concerned about the Trump/chaos correlation: Have they noticed that those chaos-inducing acts were all committed by leftists? Isn’t blaming Trump for the attacks on him, victim blaming? Would Nikki Haley have used her UN vote to eliminate Israel -- to prevent the future chaos of Hamas gang rapes? Or is “victim blaming” a tactic reserved for her political opponents?

Is it possible that those suddenly concerned about chaos are confusing it with disruption? Chaos is disorder without purpose. It can be nature’s inexorable march towards maximum entropy, or it can be a fire started by anarchists who simply want to see the world burn.

However, disruption is the interruption of activity for a purpose. It can be either good or evil, depending on the intent. Disruption could be the interruption of a police response to facilitate a crime, or it could be the interruption of termites before they nibble away the support beams of our home.

When Haley talks about “chaos,” is she really complaining about the messiness of a Trump administration, because he doesn’t do things the “Washington way”? Perhaps she should be less concerned about the messy house, and more concerned about the termite infestation.

The termites of leftism have eaten away the supports of our republic to near collapse:

The institutions which are intended to provide order have morphed into Skynet, determined to terminate the American experiment with extreme prejudice.

An Associated Press-NORC Research Center poll found that 78 percent of Americans think the country is headed in the wrong direction. The remainder either think becoming Northern Cuba is the right direction or they think Julia Louis-Dreyfus is the real President (i.e., they’re communists, idiots, or both). Three quarters of Americans are demanding disruption. That’s why they sent a brash, politically incorrect, no-nonsense businessman to Washington in 2016. They’ve figured out that the “Washington way” is the wrong way.

Most Americans want a disrupter to throw a monkey wrench into the machinery before the gears grind us to dust. They couldn’t be clearer about what they want. And yet the “Washington way” politicians refuse to hear them, pretending that Trump is the problem. The establishment politicians keep promising to oil rather than stop the gears. Have they not been paying attention?

It's time for some major disruption. The engine needs to be dismantled and the corrosion scraped away before the broken parts can be repaired. The guts of the engine are going to be smelly, dirty, and disgusting; but someone needs to roll their sleeves up and get it done or we’ll never return to the orderly world which Haley envisions. The project requires someone to:

We want a leader who will not govern the “Washington way,” yet is able to withstand the inevitable withering attacks. He must have the wisdom to trust nobody in his new city of residence. We need a President who understands that the government that he leads has become the enemy of those he serves. Who might that be, Ms. Haley?

John Green is a political refugee from Minnesota, now residing in Idaho. He is a staff writer for the American Free News Network and can be reached at greenjeg@gmail.com.

Image: Vicente Rodes

QOSHE - We Want Disruption, Not Chaos - John Green
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We Want Disruption, Not Chaos

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03.01.2024

Presidential candidate Nikki Haley, like most of us, doesn’t like chaos. She’d prefer that America be an orderly, law-abiding, harmonious nation. Unfortunately, that is no longer the America in which we live. But in her condemnation of “chaos,” Haley confuses correlation with causation, and is using our current turmoil to attack Donald Trump. At a campaign stop in Bluffton, South Carolina, she said:

I agree with a lot of his policies, but the truth is, rightly or wrongly, chaos follows him (Trump). We have too much division in this country, and too many threats around the world to be sitting in chaos once again.

I don’t disagree that there’s a Trump/chaos correlation. A quick review of events since 2016 reveals a mountain of evidence to support that position.

Peter Strzok and Lisa Page used their positions in the FBI to create an “insurance policy” against our electoral choice. Their plan certainly introduced a bit of chaos into the 2016 election.

Leftist groups filed lawsuits against virtually every action President Trump attempted in office. Those suits caused a great deal of uncertainty and confusion about America’s path forward.

The longest shutdown in U.S. history was brought about by Democrats to avoid funding a border wall. It caused weeks of political disorder and years of unrestricted national invasion.

When the Mueller investigation spent three years investigating a crime that........

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