SETH BARRETT TILLMAN: How Soon They Forget: Arresting State Judges. With the left, history always began three weeks ago. “What is described above happened under President Obama and under President Lincoln. Judges are not above the law; judges cannot interpose their courthouse and personal rules and policies against federal officers. And when state judges violate the law, they must be arrested . . . like you and me and anyone else. We all know that—or, at least, we should.”

No one is above the law, as everyone was saying until, well, yesterday.

SELF-MARGINALIZATION: The Ivy League Is Being Hoist on Its Own Petard. “Trump’s ‘trump card’ against these institutions is not their use of federal dollars to preach and teach hatred against America, and especially conservatives, but rather their open violation of federal law in promoting ‘social justice.'”

DID THE LEFT’S CLOWARD-PIVEN STRATEGY FAIL? Depends on the numbers and the strategic assumptions you make, as I demonstrate on PJ Media this morning. If success is defined as eliminating poverty, the answer clearly is no. But even more clear is that Cloward-Piven has been a roaring success if it’s real purpose was moving America toward a substantially socialist model.

VIRGINIA GIUFFRE, PRINCE ANDREW ACCUSER, DIES BY SUICIDE AGED 41:

Virginia Giuffre, one of Jeffrey Epstein’s most high-profile victims who accused Prince Andrew of sexually assaulting her as a teenager, has died by suicide, NBC has reported.

Ms Giuffre, 41, died in Neergabby, Australia, where she lived.

In a statement, her family told NBC News: “It is with utterly broken hearts that we announce that Virginia passed away last night at her farm in Western Australia,

“She lost her life to suicide, after being a lifelong victim of sexual abuse and sex trafficking.

“Virginia was a fierce warrior in the fight against sexual abuse and sex trafficking. She was the light that lifted so many survivors.

“In the end, the toll of abuse is so heavy that it became unbearable for Virginia to handle its weight.”

Ms Giuffre spent decades speaking out about the abuse she suffered from Epstein.

In 2021, she filed a lawsuit accusing the Duke of York of raping her when she was 17 after Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, his accomplice, trafficked her to London.

Maxwell was sentenced to 20 years in prison for sex trafficking in 2021.

A year later, Ms Giuffre agreed to an out-of-court settlement with Prince Andrew, understood to be worth millions of pounds. The joint statement contained no admission of liability.

Prince Andrew denies any wrongdoing.

* * * * * * * *

Earlier this month she posted pictures of herself on Instagram with bruises on her face claiming she had days to live.

“I’ve gone into kidney renal failure, they’ve given me four days to live,” she wrote.

Her spokesperson said she was in a “serious condition” after her car was hit by a school bus.

Ms Giuffre was accused of breaching a family violence restraining order 10 days before the alleged crash.

Say, whatever did happen to that Epstein client list?

UPDATE: How a picture came to symbolize the Prince Andrew sexual abuse case. “It was a simple photograph, taken late in the evening on 10 March 2001, that came to symbolize Virginia Giuffre’s case against Prince Andrew. The one with the duke’s arm around the 17-year-old’s waist, with Ghislaine Maxwell beaming to one side, and the man behind the camera clicking the shutter but hidden by the flash’s reflection in the window being Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced late financier and sex trafficker.”

Prince Andrew, Virginia Roberts and Ghislaine Maxwell, London, 2001. SDNY image, via AP.

OPEN THREAD: Because I love you and want you to be happy.

FASTER, PLEASE:

CIVIL RIGHTS UPDATE: ‘Gone Off The Rails’: Colorado Dems Stir Up Hornet’s Nest After Passing One Of America’s Most Extreme Anti-Gun Laws.

The law, SB25-003, bans the sale, transfer and manufacture of most semiautomatic firearms unless prospective gun owners obey a range of new requirements, including training mandates, tests and sheriff-issued eligibility cards. Republicans, like state Rep. Ty Winter, say it’s a deliberate effort to choke off lawful gun ownership through bureaucracy and paperwork — a view increasingly shared by Second Amendment organizations now mobilizing to fight the law in court. (RELATED: Two Blue States Launch ‘Tip Lines’ To Snitch On Gun Owners)

“This bill is putting a paywall in front of a God-given, unalienable right — and that’s the right to self-defense and the right to keep a free nation,” Winter, assistant minority leader in the Colorado House, told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “Gun rights aren’t a red or blue issue. Gun rights are an American issue. We forget what the Constitution is for — it’s not to go hunting. It’s not to go target shooting. It’s to keep a nation free. It’s to keep a government in check. And I think that’s the first thing our colleagues across the aisle don’t realize.”

Oh, they realize it.

I’VE GOT A BAD FEELING ABOUT THIS: Andor Creator Explains That Shocking Assault Scene: “We’re All the Product of Rape.”

Disney+’s acclaimed Andor has stretched the creative boundaries of Star Wars in countless ways, bringing a grown-up sensibility to a galaxy far, far away.

Yet even by Andor standards, a scene from the second season is leaving fans shocked: An Imperial officer tries to violently rape a Rebel fugitive, Bix Caleen (Adria Arjona), who is hiding out in a farming settlement while Imperial troops are rounding up “undocumented” citizens (read some sample reactions below).

The sequence plays out over the course of the show’s third episode (the first three episodes were released all at once on Tuesday) with the officer’s flirtation with Bix turning growing increasingly persistent and eventually cumulating with a brutal life-and-death struggle. Bix eventually gets the upper hand and the officer is killed. But Andorboldly leaves zero ambiguity as to what viewers just witnessed as Bix screams, “He tried to rape me!”

Star Wars is a franchise that has never — in film form — shown even consensual sex. During its first season, Andor pushed the envelope with scenes that suggested sex was about to take place, or just had (much like old Hollywood films during the Hays Code censorship era).

When asked about the Bix scene, Andor creator Tony Gilroy explained to The Hollywood Reporter that when telling a story about a war, shying away from sexual assault didn’t feel truthful.

“I get one shot to tell everything I know — or can discover, or that I’ve learned — about revolution, about battles, with as many incidents and as many colors as I can get in there, without having [the story] tip over,” says Gilroy. “I mean, let’s be honest, man: The history of civilization, there’s a huge arterial component of it that’s rape. All of us who are here — we are all the product of rape. I mean armies and power throughout history [have committed rape]. So to not touch on it, in some way … It just was organic and it felt right, coming about as a power trip for this guy. I was really trying to make a path for Bix that would ultimately lead to clarity — but a difficult path to get back to clarity.”

We’ve come a long way (baby) from 1977, when George Lucas was promoting his then-new film called Star Wars and telling interviewers:

“When I did [American] Graffiti, I discovered that making a positive film is exhilarating,” he said. “I thought, Maybe I should make a film like this for even younger kids. Graffiti was for sixteen-year-olds; this [Star Wars] is for ten- and twelve-year-olds, who have lost something even more significant than the teenager. I saw that kids today don’t have any fantasy life the way we had—they don’t have Westerns, they don’t have pirate movies…. the real Errol Flynn, John Wayne kind of adventures. Disney had abdicated its reign over the children’s market, and nothing had replaced it.”

If Lucas had thought that “Disney had abdicated its reign over the children’s market,” he had no idea what they would do to his franchise after acquiring the rights to it:

UPDATE: The Critical Drinker on Andor Season 2: A Rough Start.

KAROL MARKOWICZ: Quit gaslighting us — elite groupthink drove the COVID disaster.

Toward the end of President Trump’s first term, groupthink on the left had become overwhelming, as virtue-signalers policed one another to make sure no one stepped out of line.

The COVID era collided with cancel culture and created a uniquely poisonous herd mentality.

In his new book “Abundance of Caution,” David Zweig lays out how one narrative developed to enforce the liberal line on COVID policies.

On June 29, 2020, the American Academy of Pediatrics released a statement to support reopening schools in the fall. The group “strongly advocate[d] that all policy considerations for the coming school year should start with a goal of having students physically present in school.”

But when conservatives cheered, the AAP realized that opening schools was becoming a Republican-coded ideal — and, to its horror, Trump started citing the AAP statement to push local political officials into following its recommendation.

Just two weeks later, on July 10, the AAP issued a coded about-face: “Public health agencies must make recommendations based on evidence, not politics.”

That statement was joined by three powerful special-interest groups that don’t normally act in concert with the AAP — Weingarten’s AFT, the National Education Association, and the School Superintendents Association.

Which is why earlier this week, Weingarten tried to deflect from her central role in keeping schools closed with a massive case of smug condescension: ‘Don’t Call Me Sweetheart:’ Martha MacCallum Blasts Teachers’ Boss Randi Weingarten Over Sexist Comment.

Fox News host Martha MacCallum blasted teachers’ union boss Randi Weingarten for the sexist comment she made to the anchor, calling her “sweetheart” several times.

During Tuesday’s “The Story with Martha MacCallum,” the host was talking to Weingarten about the major parental rights case being heard in the United States Supreme Court against the Maryland public school system that forces students to participate in “instruction” that includes LGBTQ readings and other LGBTQ-themed “education.”

“Martha, Martha, Martha, sweetheart, sweetheart, listen to me,” the teachers’ union boss said when MacCallum was winning the argument against the LGBTQ push by teachers in schools.

“Please, don’t call me sweetheart,” MacCallum interjected, as she shook her head and looked down furiously.

Flashback: The Smug Liars’ “Screw-You” Party.