New York woman who duped investors, funneled money to 2017 Trump fundraiser pleads guilty

Source: Seattle Times

“A New York businesswoman has pleaded guilty in connection with a financial scheme that ripped off more than $30 million from foreign investors and funneled some of the stolen money into U.S. political campaigns, including a 2017 fundraiser for President Donald Trump during his first term. Sherry Xue Li, 48, of Oyster Bay, pleaded guilty Wednesday in federal court on Long Island to money laundering conspiracy and conspiracy to defraud the U.S. by obstructing the Federal Election Commission’s administration of campaign finance laws. She faces up to 20 years in prison and is set to be sentenced on Dec. 5.” (07/31/15)

https://archive.is/JwXvf

Macau: “National security police” arrest former lawmaker for supposed unapproved attitude

Source: South China Morning Post [Hong Kong]

“Macau national security police have arrested a man – reportedly a prominent opposition figure and former lawmaker – for alleged collusion with foreign forces, in what is believed to be the first case of its kind in the gambling hub. The Macau Judiciary Police on Thursday said it had arrested a 68-year-old resident, surnamed Au, the day before for acts that allegedly helped foreign organisations to disseminate false information about the city and arouse hatred among residents towards the government. Local media have reported that the resident is Au Kam-san, a prominent opposition figure and former lawmaker, who for decades advocated for democratic reforms in Macau. … The statement added that the suspect had also allegedly engaged in acts that incited hatred towards the central government, encouraged ‘anti-China forces’ to take hostile actions against China and Macau, and disrupted last year’s chief executive elections.” (07/31/25)

https://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/politics/article/3320279/macau-national-security-police-arrest-former-lawmaker-alleged-foreign-collusion

Not Everything Is an Emergency

Source: The Dispatch
by Ilya Somin

“The Trump administration has attempted to make sweeping use of emergency powers in the areas of immigration, trade, and domestic use of the military. In each case, President Donald Trump has tried to use powers legally reserved for extreme exigencies — invasion, war, grave threats to national security — to address essentially normal political challenges. … In litigation over all three of its major invocations of emergency powers — immigration, tariffs, and domestic use of the military — the administration has also invoked the ‘political questions’ doctrine, which holds that some issues are off limits to the judiciary, because they have been left to the political process. The Supreme Court’s precedent here is an often incoherent mess. But there is no general principle holding that invocations of emergency powers are exempt from judicial scrutiny.” (07/31/25)

https://thedispatch.com/article/not-everything-is-an-emergency/

Transgender Citizens: The Non-existent Existential Threat to America

Source: CounterPunch
by Miles Whitney

“Trump’s executive order regarding sex and gender identifies ‘gender ideology’ as an existential threat to America …. Notably, the executive order did not directly identify transgender people, or others who do not fit into Trump’s tidy definition of two immutable sexes determined at conception, themselves as threats. Most likely because the regime denies that such people exist. At best, as reflected in the language of another charming executive order, such a person is simply deluded, a liar, a believer in a demonstrably false idea or group of ideas, someone who lacks honor. What the regime says it is trying to erase is an idea.” (07/31/25)

https://www.counterpunch.org/2025/07/31/transgender-citizens-the-non-existent-existential-threat-to-america/

Eminent Domain and the Problem of Government

Source: EconLog
by Jon Murphy

Let’s … say we want to create a new city: Murphopolis. Murphopolis will be somewhere in the vast Arizona desert. Some 46,000 people journey to the middle of that desert and, among the spiders, scorpions, and blazing heat, start building a town. In 2025, the benefits of a sewer system are well-known. In the construction of this city, eminent domain is not necessary: property contracts can be written to incorporate the necessary easements and connections. … Moving to the more general problem of government, many advocates for government actions simply point to the action being used in the past to solve some problem and then conclude that the same action is appropriate. But the time and conditions of the current problem are not the same as in the past.” (07/31/25)

https://www.econlib.org/eminent-domain-and-the-problem-of-government