Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday February 18, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
Feb 18, 2020
Good morning from Washington, where we celebrate the freedom to question China’s role in the spread of the deadly coronavirus. Not so in the communist nation itself, Jarrett Stepman writes. State lawmakers are beginning to challenge the radical LGBT agenda, Nicole Russell notes. On the podcast, author-journalist Sophia Nelson talks about what unites us. Plus: the U.N.’s anti-Semitic streak, and Cal Thomas on whether America will last.Ten years ago today, the little-known website WikiLeaks publishes the first of a trove of sensitive documents stolen by Army intelligence officer Bradley (now Chelsea) Manning.
The disturbing outbreak of the coronavirus (2019-nCoV) in China and the communist government’s response to it should be a reminder of the consequence of a system based on state control.
Today’s guest is best-selling author, journalist, and political commentator Sophia Nelson, who dives into the topic of unity in America and exhorts us to remember that the Founding Fathers “never said we had to agree all the time.”
“While many like to comfort themselves that America is different, or even uniquely blessed by God, there’s no proof that we will escape the fate of other nations that one time believed the same about themselves,” says Cal Thomas.
It’s a tragedy that those who work for the United Nations would rather Palestinians remain victims in perpetuity than see a single Jewish person in the West Bank.
The United States faces a stealth war in which a fascist regime turns the openness of the West’s institutions against it. This was the diagnosis of the threat posed by China… Read more
A regulatory framework that seeks to preserve free speech online needs to be adopted for social media before repressive countries like China begin influencing the rules about the free flow of information, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg told global leaders and security officials in Europe over the weekend. Read more
The deepening fallout from the deadly coronavirus outbreak has raised questions as to whether China will be able to fulfill its commitments to make vast purchases of U.S. goods in the newly inked “phase one” trade deal. Read more
A controversial bill that would have banned Virginians from selling so-called assault weapons and owning high-capacity magazines was defeated by lawmakers after a handful of Democrats rejected the proposal. Read more
A bipartisan group of senators met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv, just over a week after the Senate acquitted President Donald Trump on charges that he abused his power by asking Ukraine to investigate a political rival. Read more
Chinese leader Xi Jinping said in a recent speech that lab biosafety should be treated as a national security issue, leading China’s Science and Technology Ministry to announce new safety regulations within laboratories that study viruses, according to reports by a state-run media outlet. Read more
Shen Yun takes you on an extraordinary journey through China’s 5,000 years of divinely inspired civilization. Exquisite beauty from the heavens, profound wisdom from dynasties past, timeless legends and ethnic traditions all spring to life through classical Chinese dance, enchanting live orchestral music, authentic costumes, and patented interactive backdrops. It is an immersive experience that will uplift your spirit and transport you to a magical world. It’s 5,000 years of civilization reborn!
Social Conservatives and Tradition
By Harley PriceIt seems that the oxymoronic “Progressive” is about to be put back in “Conservative,” as so-cons are being politely but firmly invited to become ex-cons. In the current protracted debate about the direction of Canada’s federal Conservative Party… Read more
Foreign Reliance for Medicines and Supplies a National Emergency?
By James GorrieWith the coronavirus outbreak, we may be in the early stages of what some scientists and epidemiologists say could be a potential global pandemic. That sounds ominous, to say the least. Read more
The Trouble With Tablets
By Valentin Schmid
(October 17, 2014)As Samsung and Apple release their new gadgets for the fall, a new trend is starting to take shape. First of all, tablet sales are slowing. According to research firm IDC, global tablet growth dropped… Read more
How has the Chinese Communist Party used unconventional tactics to wage war on the US for the past several decades? And why did almost nobody notice? What is asymmetric hybrid warfare, and how is it central to the Chinese Communist Party’s strategy of attack on the West?
Bernie Sanders Leads All Democrats in Two-Man Race
People tend to opine Bernie would fade if the so-called moderates didn’t split the vote. But, it turns out, he beats them all one-on-one (Twitter). From Frank Luntz: Three months ago, @JoeBiden had 50% of the nationwide Democratic black vote: nbcnews.to/39GL8yL Now, he appears to have split it with @MikeBloomberg – putting them both within the margin of error to @BernieSanders (Twitter). FiveThirtyEight has Sanders as the overall favorite (FiveThirtyEight).
2.
Biden Now Admits They Locked Kids in Cages, Qualifies “We Kept Them Safe”
Univision anchor Jorge Ramos cornered Biden Friday, telling him “At the debate in Houston, you said that during the Obama administration and I quote, ‘We didn’t lock people in cages,’ but you actually did — not in the same numbers as the Trump administration, but you did. We found a picture of an 8-year-old boy from Honduras. … I spoke with the photographer.”
Bloomberg from 2011: We Should Deny Old People Cancer Treatment
Another past statement shows a troubling side of the former mayor of New York (Forbes). Meanwhile, Bloomberg is getting heckled by 2A folks in Virginia (Washington Examiner). Larry Elder looks at a 2016 Bloomberg quote where he explains how easy farming is (Twitter). And yet another video will kill his hopes for the black vote (Twitter).
4.
ADF: Girls Deserve Same Opportunity to Pursue Their Dreams
Dreams that have been dashed as political correctness allow boys to compete against them. A look at what the boys have done in one example: CIAC may pretend that it’s progressive; instead, CIAC is violating Title IX, federal legislation implemented over 50 years ago to eliminate discrimination against women in education and athletics while creating equal opportunities for them. Because of CIAC’s regressive policy adjustments, two transgender athletes have dominated the field, winning championships in 15 events that were previously held by nine different Connecticut girls. In all, two transgender athletes have taken over 50 chances to advance to next-level races, winning 13 titles previously held by 12 different girls.
Andrew McCarthy: San Francisco DA Sets Up Department to Defend Illegal Aliens
From the story: He wants to assign a staff of prosecutors to protect undocumented aliens—those who are either illegal and thus deportable to begin with, or for whom a criminal conviction could result in loss of lawful status and thus eventual deportation. The unit’s enforcement target would be not the law violators but the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents who enforce federal laws, along with any local police and corrections officials who have the temerity to assist ICE in that endeavor. The prosecutors’ mission, in the words of their new boss, would be to “stand up to Trump on immigration”—the president having made signature issues of border security and the stepped-up deportation of aliens who flout the laws.
California Law Decriminalizing Theft Leads to More Theft
The story notes “The law raised the value of the amount of merchandise someone could steal while still only being charged with a misdemeanor to nearly one thousand dollars.” So how’d that turn out? “They have now recorded multiple years of steadily increasing, organized robbery.”
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As Ballard maintained the No. 1 position, so too did The Southern Group hold on as the No. 2 firm in overall receipts.
The firm reports $8.4 million in legislative pay and another $7 million from the executive for a total haul of $15.4 million.
Coming in a strong third was Capital City Consulting, which closed out 2019 year with $12.5 million in pay. Their split also favored their legislative lobbying operation, which accounted for $7.5 million of the total. Executive lobbying earned Nick Iarossi, Ron LaFace and the rest of the CCC team another $5 million.
Brian Ballard and Ballard Partners remain the king of the hill.
Ron Book, PA, took No. 4 in overall pay, collecting just over $10 million. The ledger leaned heavily toward the Legislature, which provided $8.5 million of the annual score — good enough for second place among all firms if only legislative reports are considered.
There was a tight competition for fifth place, with Greenberg Traurig narrowly edging out GrayRobinson. Greenberg Traurig’s $7.85 million rake includes $4.75 million in pay for legislative lobbying and another $3.1 million for executive lobbying.
GrayRobinson rounds out the list with $7.68 million in earnings, a $500,000 increase over what Dean Cannon and the team snagged in 2018.
Today’s Sunrise
It’s “Gator Day” at The Capitol, and University of Florida President Kent Fuchs will discuss taking over Florida Polytechnic, the backlash against higher education in the Legislature and his favorite FSU jokes.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— After passing new restrictions on abortion under the guise of parental rights, the Senate is facing another parental rights bill that’s working its way through committees that could force teachers and guidance counselors to out gay and lesbian students to their parents.
— One of the Governor’s priorities this year is cutting through the red tape for occupational licenses issued by local governments. But a bill doing that has stalled in the Senate.
— Despite a racy memoir and a history of sexually suggestive comments, Dr. Scott Rivkees is one step closer to being confirmed as the state Surgeon General.
— More than 3.5 million Floridians cannot vote in next month’s presidential primary, because they’re not in either the Republican or Democratic Party. But these NPAs — no party affiliation — can still vote if they change their registration by the end of the day.
— The latest from Florida man: A guy with a life-size Donald Trump cutout and a woman who took a bite out of a crime-fighter.
—@RealDonaldTrump: Did you hear the latest con job? President [Barack] Obama is now trying to take credit for the Economic Boom taking place under the Trump Administration. He had the WEAKEST recovery since the Great Depression, despite Zero Fed Rate & MASSIVE quantitative easing. NOW, best jobs numbers … ever. Had to rebuild our military, which was totally depleted. Fed Rate UP, taxes and regulations WAY DOWN. If Dems won in 2016, the USA would be in big economic (Depression?) & military trouble right now. THE BEST IS YET TO COME. KEEP AMERICA GREAT!
Tweet, tweet:
—@BrianStelter: Scoop: NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist will release a new poll at 5 am ET Tuesday. This *could* be the poll that catapults Michael Bloomberg onto the stage of Wednesday’s#DemDebate.
—@JoePClements: Why would any Dem endorse anyone but the billionaire? You win if he wins office and you win if he loses office but becomes a useful friend.
—@SkylerSwisher: Florida Department of Health skips meeting on coronavirus.
—@BKirby816: For whatever reasons, the coronavirus is scaring the hell out of me, more than other threats of this nature have in the past. I feel we may not be prepared for it.
—@EducationFL: Great inspiration from American historical leader Frederick Douglass on the impact of education in the life of every person. We will continue working to ensure that every student, no matter their age or demographic, has the opportunity to CHOOSE their education.
—@Anitere_Flores: On this Presidents Day, a special thank you to the Presidents who entrusted me to lead on important issues and mentored me along the way. … @MikeHaridopolos, who gave me a seat at the table, [Andy] Gardiner who sought my advice on all policy ideas and goals, @BillGalvano for your friendship over the years, and @joenegronfl who truly made me his right hand. Thank you for your trust and unwavering loyalty.
—@AdamBonin: On this Presidents Day, my annual reminder that President John Tyler — during whose term Florida became a state and Texas was annexed (1841-45) — still has two living grandchildren.
Tweet, tweet:
—@LMower3: Friends don’t let friends share WalletHub studies.
Days until
South Beach Wine and Food Festival — 1; Ninth Democratic presidential debate in Las Vegas — 1; Roger Stone’s sentencing — 2; Nevada caucuses — 4; “Better Call Saul” Season 5 premiers — 5; Suits for Session — 7; 10th Democratic presidential debate in Charleston — 7; South Carolina Primaries — 11; Super Tuesday — 14; Last day of 2020 Session (maybe) — 24; Florida’s presidential primary — 28; “No Time to Die” premiers — 48; Florida TaxWatch Spring Board Meeting begins — 57; TaxWatch Principal Leadership Awards — 58; Florida Chamber Summit on Prosperity and Economic Opportunity — 87; “Top Gun: Maverick” premiers — 129; Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee begins — 146; Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” premiers — 150; 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo start — 157; Florida primaries for 2020 state legislative/congressional races — 182; Republican National Convention begins in Charlotte — 188; First Presidential Debate in Indiana — 224; First Vice Presidential debate at the University of Utah — 232; Second Presidential Debate scheduled at the University of Michigan — 240; Third presidential debate at Belmont — 247; 2020 General Election — 259.
Top story
“On Presidents Day, Jeb Bush urges return to civility in politics” via David Lyons of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Former Gov. Bush told a Presidents Day audience of investors and money managers that it’s time for a return to civility in the nation’s politics. And the man who was ousted early from the Republican primaries of 2016 gave a decidedly mixed review of the first term of Trump, who bruised him often on the campaign trail. During a speech and onstage interview with author Brant Pinvidic, Bush likened the role of the president to part prime minister, part king. He gave Trump good grades on the ministerial side, applauding his appointments to the U.S. Supreme Court, as well as the strong economy. As for such “kingly’ duties as setting an example to which younger people can aspire, Bush found the president deficient.
Dateline: Tally
“Senate won’t confirm Ron DeSantis’ nominee to be chief administrative judge” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — Citing unspecified concerns, Sen. Ed Hooper said his committee won’t take up the confirmation of John MacIver, a seven-year attorney with virtually no experience in the courtroom. “I’ve talked to a lot of folks in the process, and there are a couple of areas where there was some concern,” Hooper said. “I just didn’t have a level of comfort bringing that confirmation forward, because that has my name on it.” … “I think it’s now between he and the governor’s office how best they want to go forward,” Hooper said. If DeSantis doesn’t reappoint him, MacIver will be out of the job. DeSantis’ spokeswoman Helen Aguirre Ferré declined to say what the governor will do. “The governor will review the situation,” she said in a statement.
“Senate set to confirm controversial Surgeon General Scott Rivkees” via AG Gancarski of Florida Politics — Rivkees’ long-delayed nomination continued, with the Senate Ethics and Elections committee unanimously approving of the Governor’s selection. This was the final committee of reference, setting up the confirmation for the Senate Floor. If confirmed, Rivkees will also serve as the Florida Department of Health Secretary. Rivkees faced scrutiny and tough questions in previous committee hearings, where concerns about a history of sexually suggestive comments and his intention to continue working at the University of Florida pushed some Democrats into opposition. Rivkees focused on the office’s accomplishments, combating opioids, Alzheimer’s disease, and hepatitis A, and vowing to carry the fight against the most recent coronavirus with “rigor and zeal.”
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
“E-Verify plan could include agriculture industry” via the News Service of Florida — Sen. Tom Lee, a Thonotosassa Republican sponsoring an E-Verify bill (SB 664), filed an amendment that would expand a proposed requirement for private businesses to use E-Verify, a federal electronic system that verifies the legal eligibility of new workers. The amendment would change part of the bill to undo an exemption that would be provided to the agriculture industry. The Senate Judiciary Committee approved the carve-out for the agriculture industry last week at the request of Chairman David Simmons. Simmons said the exemption was an effort to “create something between the two extremes.” Ron DeSantis has made clear he wants to require all public and private employers to use E-Verify and does not support exemptions.
“Mike Hill: 2020 legislative record 0-7” via Rick Outzen of Rick’s Blog — Of the seven bills proposed by State Rep. Hill, only one made it out of a subcommittee. HB 21-to name the new Pensacola Bay bridge after “Chappie James”- did not get approved by the House State Affairs Committee. However, State Rep. Alex Andrade was able to get it amended to a committee bill. No committee has considered Hill’s other six House bills. No staff analysis has been done on any of them. The last event for each was for them to be read on Tuesday, Jan. 14. All six bills appear to be going nowhere.
“Johnston & Stewart donate expertise, dig in for ‘Markel’ grandparent visitation push” via Florida Politics — The act of moving nimbly is an art — one that the new Johnston & Stewart Government Strategies are showing themselves unusually adept. The most recent example: Halfway through Session Jeff Johnston and Amanda Stewart signed a new, pro-bono client — Justice for Dan, a group of friends of murdered FSU law professor Dan Markel, whose children and parents were cut off by his ex-wife, Wendi Adelson, after authorities revealed she and/or her family were under investigation for orchestrating his murder, leaving his parents with zero options for recourse. Florida law provides no access to courts for grandparents in these situations. To complicate it more, there’s no easy statutory solution for providing grandparents with any rights even in terrible circumstances.
Random acts of kindness
In honor of National Random Acts of Kindness Day, Attorney General Ashley Moody surprised a group of Tallahassee police officers, thanking them for their service. Moody brought doughnuts to the Tallahassee Police Department for a group of officers gathered for check-in.
“As the wife of a law enforcement officer, I know all too well the challenges and dangers Florida law enforcement officers face every day to protect their communities,” Moody said. “We should thank them for their service daily, not just on special occasions.”
Last year, Moody’s office created the “Back the Blue” award to support “the brave men and women of Florida law enforcement.” She encourages Floridians to consider “doing something nice for those who dedicate their lives protecting and serving others.”
The Back the Blue Campaign was established to highlight officers, citizens and organizations taking extraordinary steps to forging positive relationships between law enforcement and the communities they serve.
Gator Nation will descend on The Capitol beginning at 9 a.m. for Gator Day in celebration of all things University of Florida. While the nation’s No. 7-ranked public university has much to tout, including a recent announcement of another record-breaking year in research spending, UF President Fuchs and the board of trustees are not content to rest on their laurels. UF continues its quest to achieve sustained recognition as one of America’s top-five public universities, as Gator Advocates will make that known to lawmakers.
It’s that time of year again.
Gators and supporters of the university can join the celebration at 11 a.m. in the Capitol Courtyard for a 4Rivers luncheon provided by the University of Florida Alumni Association (UFAA) and remarks from President Fuchs, Head Football Coach Dan Mullen and UFAA President Katrina Rolle beginning 11:30 a.m.
Interactive booths will also be set up all along the Plaza Level, including something Gator Caucus Chair Rob Bradley might appreciate: an orange juice tasting.
Legislation
“Senate moves to require citizens initiative signatures from all congressional districts” via AG Gancarski of Florida Politics — A committee bill from the Senate Judiciary Committee (SPB 7062) proposes a citizens’ initiative to amend the Constitution to require petition circulators to reach signature thresholds of 8% of all votes cast in the prior presidential election in all 27 congressional districts. They currently must meet the 8% threshold statewide in and least half of Florida’s congressional districts. The current rules allow petition gathers to focus petition drives in the state’s most populous areas such as Tampa Bay, Miami and Orlando, which could mean the petitions gathered wouldn’t be representative of the whole state. The proposed change adds an additional burden to petition drives by mandating groups to reach the 8% threshold in all Congressional districts, not just half.
“Senate bill to lessen sentences for nonviolent offenders draws sheriffs’ ire” via Gabrielle Arzola of Spectrum News — Florida’s current Truth in Sentencing Law requires inmates to serve at least 85% of their sentences. Senate Bill 572 would reduce that serving requirement to 65% for nonviolent felons. Manatee County Sheriff Rick Wells opposes the change, pointing to a 67% drop in crime rates since the current law went into effect. “It really comes down to being held accountable,” says Wells. “You’re talking about several years being taken off that sentence.”
Manatee Sheriff Rick Wells vehemently opposes a bill to lessen sentences for nonviolent offenders.
“College athlete pay plan won’t include revenue sharing” via Jim Turner of the News Service of Florida — Before voting to back a controversial compensation bill (SB 646), members of the Senate Innovation, Industry and Technology Committee made clear they would reject a proposed amendment by Sen. Randolph Bracy that would have required colleges and universities to provide each college athlete a share of all ticket sales from the time when the athlete was in school. “If you look at the billions of dollars generated by these student-athletes, we should have a revenue-sharing model,” said Bracy. The proposal called for athletes to receive pro rata shares of 10% of ticket sales. When spread to all athletes, regardless of sport, it wouldn’t be “a grand scale of money” for each person, Bracy said before withdrawing his proposal.
“House to take up bill on domestic violence agency” via the News Service of Florida — Amid probes into spending by the Florida Coalition Against Domestic Violence, the House is poised to take up a bill that would give flexibility to the Department of Children and Families to contract for services to help victims of domestic violence. The bill (HB 1087), sponsored by Rep. Juan Alfonso Fernandez-Barquin, would eliminate a legal requirement that the Department of Children and Families contract with the Florida Coalition Against Domestic Violence to manage domestic-violence programs. The House is scheduled to take up the bill during a floor session Wednesday afternoon.
“Senate committee advances strict turnaround school bill, calls for changes” via Jeffrey Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — State Sen. Dennis Baxley pressed his Senate Education Committee colleagues to advance his bill that would accelerate the time frame in which the lowest-performing schools on state tests can adapt and implement improvement plans. The bill (SB 1498) would require any school with one D or F state grade to create a turnaround model. Currently, a school would not enter that system unless it receives two consecutive D’s or one F. The bill then would give schools the remainder of their current year plus one more year to improve to a C or face either closure, conversion to a charter or turnover of its operations to an outside firm.
“Senate panel advances bill requiring more transparency from commercial airports” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — The Senate Community Affairs Committee unanimously advanced a bill that would subject commercial airports to increased regulation despite protests from some airports’ representatives. Sen. Manny Diaz is proposing the measure (SB 1258), which earned bipartisan support in a 5-0 vote from the committee. A separate governing body typically oversees airports. The legislation would require more oversight from those bodies, with even more heightened requirements for large-hub commercial service airports. At issue was a condition that a board must vote and allow public comment on any contract more than $325,000. That number was previously set at $65,000. But a strike-all amendment approved bumped it up fivefold.
“Puppy mill preemption bill postponed — again — by Senate panel” via Florida Politics — Legislation for state-level regulation of pet stores (SB 1698) did not receive a hearing from the Senate Innovation, Industry and Technology Committee. The agenda for the committee was jam-packed, a tight period precluded discussion of the legislation. Whether that was a deliberate mechanism to kill the bill or not is likely a matter of conjecture, but the lack of hearing certainly didn’t make it stronger. This was just the first of three committees of reference for the bill from Hialeah Gardens Republican Sen.Diaz, a bad sign this late in the Session with committees already beginning to wrap up for 2020. The goal of the bill: to kill so-called “puppy mills.”
“Peer-to-peer car-sharing bill would level the playing field” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Peer to peer car-sharing platforms such as Turo and Getaround are kind of like an Airbnb for autos — app users can browse for something that fits their needs. That’s nearly identical to the process of renting a car. One difference is who owns the vehicle. Most rental car companies own fleets while peer-to-peer car-sharing companies profit by paying Florida car owners to allow their cars to be rented from their site. Peer-to-peer car-sharing platforms collect neither the sales tax nor the surcharge. The platforms argue those rules shouldn’t apply to them. A Florida law allows rental car companies to buy fleets of vehicles without paying the tax, saving them tens of thousands of dollars a year in upfront costs.
Today in Capitol
Assignment editors — Sen. Jason Pizzo, Reps. Amy Mercado and Shevrin Jones will join Dignity Florida for a news conference in support of the Tammy Jackson Act (HB 1259/ SB 852), a bill named after a woman forced to give birth in solitary confinement last year, 12:30 p.m., 4th-floor Rotunda.
Assignment editors — Florida Sheriffs Association (FSA), Florida Sheriffs Research Institute and the Florida Police Chiefs Association will hold a news conference to share data and analysis on violent drug crime offenders as part of the Truth in Sentencing initiative, 9:30 a.m., 4th-floor Rotunda.
The House Select Committee on Research Institutions will hear presentations on potential foreign interference in research in Florida. House Speaker José Oliva ordered the committee after resignations at Moffitt Cancer Center due to connections with China, 9 a.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The Senate Commerce and Tourism Committee meets to consider SB 664 from Sen. Tom Lee, which seeks to require employers to perform immigration checks through E-Verify, a federal database run by the Department of Homeland Security, 10 a.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Criminal Justice Committee meets to consider SB 698 from Sen. Lauren Book, which seeks to change rules regarding sperm banks and fertility clinics, 10 a.m., Room 37, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Health Policy Committee meets to consider SB 714 from Sen. Travis Hutson, which seeks to allow pharmacists to test and treat patients for influenza and streptococcus, 10 a.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The Senate Agriculture Committee will meet to hear an update from the Florida Forest Service on timber and forestry recovery from Hurricane Michael, 10:30 a.m., Room 301, Senate Office Building.
The House Appropriations Committee meets to consider HB 6507 from Rep. Kimberly Daniels, which seeks $2.15 million in compensation for Clifford Williams, wrongfully incarcerated for 43 years in a Duval County murder and attempted-murder case, 11:30 a.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The Senate Agriculture, Environment and General Government Appropriations Subcommittee meets to consider SB 1092 from Sen. Aaron Bean, which seeks to set up a grant program to help fire departments pay for equipment that will prevent exposure to cancer-causing chemicals, 1:30 p.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Criminal and Civil Justice Appropriations Subcommittee meets to consider SB 170 from Sen. Linda Stewart, which seeks to end the statute of limitations for prosecuting sexual battery cases involving children, 1:30 p.m., Room 37, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Education Appropriations Subcommittee meets to consider SB 70 from Book, which seeks to mandate panic-alarm systems installed in all public schools, 1:30 p.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The House Education Committee meets to consider HB 737 from Daniels, which seeks to mandate a daily moment of silence in public schools, 3 p.m., Reed Hall, House Office Building.
The House Health & Human Services Committee and the Senate Health and Human Services Appropriations Subcommittee meet to consider HB 763 and SB 1370 from Rep. Michael Grant and Sen. Gayle Harrell, respectively, which will require hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers to survey staff members about patient safety. House Committee meets at 3 p.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building. Senate Subcommittee meets at 4 p.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The House Judiciary Committee meets to consider HB 7037 from Rep. James Grant, which seeks to put additional requirements on political committees to place proposed constitutional amendments on the ballot, 3 p.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The Senate Transportation, Tourism and Economic Development Appropriations Subcommittee meets to consider SB 1000 from Sen. Keith Perry, which seeks to improve safety at pedestrian crosswalks, 4 p.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Finance and Tax Committee meets to consider SB 1066 from Sen. Joe Gruters, which seeks additional requirements on local governments collecting impact fees, 4 p.m., Room 401, Senate Office Building.
Gov. Club buffet
Italian minestrone; mixed garden salad with dressings; artichoke and hearts of palm salad; pasta salad; deli board, tomato, lettuce, cheeses and breads; Ronnie’s fried chicken; grilled teres major of beef with hunter’s sauce; walnut breadcrumb crusted cod with lemon dill cream; buttermilk mashed potatoes; green beans amandine; medley of vegetables; chocolate Oreo mousse.
Sunshine state primary
“She’s Florida’s top Democrat. Who will she endorse?” via Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida — Nikki Fried is Florida’s only statewide elected Democrat, a post that puts her in a powerful position as the presidential primary nears. The 42-year-old Agriculture Commissioner was the first Florida Democrat to win a statewide election since 2006. Fried’s win quickly drew her a political following and awarded her rising-star status among legions of Florida Democrats. Now she’s in demand from presidential campaigns. “I have spent some time with most presidential candidates, whether in person or on the phone and hearing their message of our country and listening to what is important to them,” Fried told POLITICO. “We have had four years of a very divisive administration, and I want to find the right candidate.”
The big question: Who will Nikki Fried endorse for President?
First on #FlaPol — “Janet Long latest Florida backer of Mike Bloomberg” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — “Mike is someone who has for years practiced what he preached by initiating real, concrete change during his time as Mayor of New York City. Having executive experience running a city like New York cannot be minimized,” said Pinellas County Commissioner Long, a former member of the Florida House. “His focus, determination and true care for the City of New York proves that he is not only a qualified candidate for President but someone who can also take on the challenges our country faces and unite us in November.” “I’m excited to join a campaign focusing on issues that deeply matter to me and Floridians across the Sunshine State,” Long added.
Florida Dems’ PPP Fact of the Day via Juan Peñalosa — Today’s fact: While the Florida Democratic Party’s goal is 200,000 voter registrations by the launch of the General election — they are focusing on strategic registration, with the bulk of registrations occurring in swing legislative districts. The FDP has already registered enough voters to offset our 2018 margin of defeat in 4 state House seats.
New ads
Bloomberg — “Greenwood”:
Bloomberg — “Justice”:
More 2020
“Latino support for Donald Trump’s real” via Kristian Ramos of The Atlantic — Trump has done almost everything he can to anger Latino voters. And yet, his support among this crucial portion of the electorate remains surprisingly consistent. After the 2016 election, exit polls analyzed by the Pew Research Center showed that 28% of Latino voters supported Trump; today, 30% support him. This percentage may not seem high. But consider what the number means for the Democrats: Displeasure with the president over the past three years has not led to an increase in support for the opposing party. Democrats lost the 2016 election, with about 66% of the Latino vote. Today 65% of registered Latino voters who are Democrats have a favorable view of the party’s presidential candidates.
Donald Trump’s support among Hispanics, while low, has remained steady.
“Bernie Sanders breaks out of the pack” via David Siders of POLITICO — While few expect that Sanders can carry more than a third of the vote in Nevada, nearly everyone believes that will be enough to win in a field where the moderate vote remains splintered. It is becoming an urgent problem for those who want to prevent him from claiming the nomination. “He’s going to win with 28% of the vote. We’re not talking about him getting 50% of the vote,” said Andres Ramirez, a Nevada-based Democratic strategist and former vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee’s Hispanic Caucus. “But the rest of the field is so fragmented, and he has his base locked, that he can continue winning just by holding onto his base.”
“Joe Biden, seeking revival, is counting on at least second place in Nevada” via Thomas Kaplan and Katie Glueck of The New York Times — Biden’s campaign manager, Greg Schultz, convened a conference call with supporters. The campaign, Schultz made clear, was banking on finishing in at least second place in the upcoming Nevada caucuses, a contest that will offer the first major test of Biden’s assertion that he can uniquely assemble a diverse coalition. Left unsaid: Nevada will also show whether Biden, the former vice president, can revive his campaign after his first two finishes sent his national poll numbers plummeting, put his donors on edge, and jeopardized his standing even in his perceived firewall state, South Carolina.
“The cost of going after Bloomberg” via Jim VandeHei and Margaret Talev of Axios — Biden, Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar and Elizabeth Warren all must weigh the costs of punching Bloomberg where he looks most vulnerable: stop-and-frisk, charges of sexism, billionaire entitlement. The more zealous the attacks, the greater the risk he turns his campaign ATM against them. They’re already struggling to catch up with Sanders in national support and campaign dollars. Turning their focus toward Bloomberg only complicates that task. There’s another risk, at least for the moderates: Weakening the one who may be best poised to stop Sanders, a democratic socialist, if they fail themselves.
“Bloomberg adds Capricia Marshall, top Hillary Clinton ally, to 2020 campaign” via Emily Smith of PageSix.com — Bloomberg has tapped DC-based Marshall, who was President Bill Clinton’s White House social secretary from 1997 to 2001. Under the Obama administration, she served as chief of protocol of the United States — a sensitive diplomatic position bearing the rank of ambassador — from 2009 to 2013. Before that, Marshall was a special assistant to Hillary when she was the first lady in 1993. In 2006, Marshall worked on then-Sen. Hillary Clinton’s reelection and then joined her presidential campaign in 2008. In her role as a senior adviser, she led surrogate speakers and helped coordinate women’s outreach. She also appears throughout the new Hulu docuseries about Hillary.
“Bloomberg News’ dilemma: How to cover a boss seeking the presidency” via Michael Grynbaum of The New York Times — Bloomberg’s presence looms large for the 2,700 journalists at his financial data company. New employees receive a copy of his autobiography, “Bloomberg by Bloomberg,” and company guidelines prohibit coverage of his “wealth or personal life.” In 2018, Bloomberg told an interviewer: “I don’t want the reporters I’m paying to write a bad story about me.” That policy proved awkward during Bloomberg’s three terms as Mayor of New York City and in his subsequent life as a billionaire philanthropist and political donor. Now it is bordering on untenable, according to interviews with half a dozen Bloomberg journalists who requested anonymity, citing fear of retribution from bosses who emphasize discretion.
“Pete Buttigieg’s next test: Winning over minority voters” via Thomas Beaumont of The Associated Press — The promise of his candidacy is colliding with the reality of the central question about his viability: Can he win among minority voters who form the critical foundation of the party’s base? That will be tested in Nevada, with a diverse blend of Latinos and African Americans, but especially in South Carolina, where two-thirds of the primary electorate could be black voters, the base that Buttigieg has struggled to attract. Buttigieg’s strategy is to earn a fresh look from black and brown voters by flashing his support in the first two contests, drawing on the validation of minority leaders who have endorsed him and leveraging the personal networks of his supporters. He faces a steep climb.
Statewide
“The Republican Party asked Florida tax collectors for millions of email addresses. Why?” via Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — If the tax collectors had complied, the Republican Party would soon have a valuable trove of personal information for millions of Floridians as it gears up for the 2020 election: A detailed database of many taxpayers’ emails plus the name, address and phone number tied to that email. The unusual nature of the request ultimately persuaded the state association representing all Florida tax collectors to get involved. An attorney for the association, Timothy Qualls, advised members not to comply, citing an exemption in state law specifically for email addresses used to send notices to taxpayers. After speaking with the association, the GOP operative planned to withdraw the request, Qualls told the tax collectors in an email.
“Florida pre-K graduates: 63 percent ready for kindergarten, state says” via Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — Sixty-three percent of Florida youngsters who took part in a state-backed pre-K program tested ready for kindergarten when the school year began, according to data the state released. That percentage is a slight improvement from last year when 62% tested ready. And as in years past, 4-year-olds who took part in the state pre-K program were more likely to be ready for kindergarten than youngsters who did not. Overall, 53% of the children who started kindergarten in August in Florida’s public schools tested ready for classes, based on Florida’s early-literacy exam given in the first month of the school year.
“Hepatitis A cases climbed to 239 this year” via the News Service of Florida — Florida had 34 reported cases of hepatitis A last week, bringing the total number of newly reported cases this year to 239 as of Saturday. County health departments are playing a bigger role in the fight against hepatitis A, as they are now responsible for administering 57% of first-dose vaccinations in the state. Hepatitis A cases have increased in recent years, with a massive spike in 2019. The state had 3,397 reported cases last year, compared to 548 in 2018. State Surgeon General Rivkees, who doubles as secretary of the Department of Health, issued a public health emergency Aug. 1 that warned about the spread of the virus and encouraged citizens to get vaccinated and wash their hands.
Scott Rivkees recommends Floridians get a hepatitis A vaccination and wash their hands.
“Rising reinsurance costs presage ‘extraordinarily high’ property insurance rate hikes for Florida homeowners” via John Haughey of The Center Square — It took the Florida Legislature seven years to adopt a 2019 property insurance reform bill eliminating the “one-way” attorney fee provision in the state’s assignment-of-benefits (AOB) law. “AOB abuse” imposed a “hidden tax” on Florida’s 6.2 million property insurance policyholders, who had seen rates increase by an average of 36% between 2013-18, according to the Insurance Information Institute. Last spring, the state’s Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR) adopted a wait-and-see posture in delaying annual June rate renewals, giving insurers until early 2020 to gauge the “impact of the bill.” But that expectation was muted by trepidation. “Loss creep” from 2017’s Hurricane Irma and 2018’s Hurricane Michael loomed. Despite AOB reform, Florida homeowners likely face insurance rate hikes in 2020.
What Brian Bautista is reading — “Airbnb reports tax collections exceeded $100 million in 2019” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — That total included $97.1 million in state sales taxes paid by Airbnb’s property clients, then collected by the internet marketing platform and remitted to the State Department of Revenue. The other $39.7 million was in local tourism taxes paid by the clients, collected by Airbnb, and paid to local counties. The combined total of $136.7 million in state sales and local tourism taxes paid through Airbnb compares with the $89.5 million that was paid by vacation rental homeowners through Airbnb to state or county coffers in 2018. And the 2018 totals marked a dramatic increase over 2017. Airbnb has been authorized since 2015 to collect state sales tax on behalf of its now 60,000 vacation rental home clients statewide.
D.C. matters
“John Bolton issues plea that his upcoming book isn’t ‘suppressed’ by White House” via Vivian Salama of CNN — “I hope it’s not suppressed,” Bolton said, referring to the White House’s review of his book. He hoped what Trump has spoken to him in private will “become public someday.” When Bolton was asked about Trump’s tweets, he replied, “the tweets out there — I say things in the manuscript about what he said to me. I hope they become public someday,” referring to his book, which is the subject of a fight with the White House. The administration has argued much of the book can’t be published due to the sensitivity of the content. “He (Trump) tweets, but I can’t talk about it. How fair is that?” he said, adding, “for now, I’m going to let it go.”
John Bolton is urging the White House not to quash his book.
“Marco Rubio has concerns about proposed cuts to Virginia Class submarine program” via Florida Daily — Rubio joined U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal and Senate colleagues in raising concerns with Acting U.S. Navy Sec. Thomas Modly over proposed acquisition shortfalls in fiscal year (FY) 2021 for the Virginia Class submarine program, which could negatively impact both the United States’ undersea superiority and the submarine industrial base. The Navy’s FY 2021 budget request does not include funding for a tenth Block V submarine, which, as the Senators note in their letter, “directly contradicts the National Defense Strategy and inexplicably delays the Navy’s goal of reaching 66 fast-attack submarines by 2048.”
For your radar — Rubio’s office floated draft legislation on college athlete pay during a Capitol Hill meeting with higher education officials from nine Florida schools and the Sunshine State’s university system, POLITICO reports. That Thursday meeting, which included high-profile schools such as the University of Florida and Florida State University, signals movement in the nation’s slow crawl toward compensating college athletes, a track accelerated last year by California’s landmark law that lets NCAA players sign endorsement deals.
Assignment editors — Sen. Rick Scott will hold a media availability to talk about what is being done on the federal level to combat counterfeit goods from Communist China, 10:30 a.m., International Mail Facility, 11698 NW 25th Street, Suite 100, Miami.
“John Rutherford backs proposal helping law enforcement work closer with mental health providers” via Kevin Derby of Florida Daily — Rutherford announced his support for U.S. Rep. David Trone’s, “Crisis Stabilization and Community Re-entry Act,” which “would help law enforcement partner with mental health providers to provide incarcerated individuals community care as they transition back into society. This care includes medication-assisted treatment, community-level crisis response programs, and technical assistance to develop innovative training and treatment for incarcerated and formerly incarcerated individuals who have a mental illness. Recidivism rates decline when we address the mental health challenges that place formerly incarcerated individuals at risk of reoffending,” Rutherford’s office noted. The bill was sent to the U.S. House Judiciary Committee. U.S. Sens. John Cornyn and Richard Blumenthal are championing the bill in the U.S. Senate.
Tweet, tweet:
Assignment editors — Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz; Broward County Mayor Dale V.C. Holness; Glenn Wiltshire, Port Everglades Acting Chief Executive & Port Director; city and state elected officials will hold a news conference to celebrate the Port Everglades Navigation Improvements Project beginning with $29.1 million in funding under the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers FY 2020 Work Plan, 9:45 a.m., Port Everglades Cruise Terminal 25 rooftop patio overlooking U.S. Coast Guard Station Fort Lauderdale.
Happening today — U.S. Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell will honor black community leaders as part of Black History Month, 5 p.m., Gould’s Community Center, 11350 S.W. 216th St., Miami.
Coronavirus
“Sen. Tom Cotton repeats fringe theory of coronavirus origins” via Alexandra Stevenson of The New York Times — The rumor appeared shortly after the new coronavirus struck China and spread almost as quickly: that the outbreak now afflicting people around the world had been manufactured by the Chinese government. Speaking on Fox News, Sen. Cotton, Republican of Arkansas, raised the possibility that the virus had originated in a high-security biochemical lab in Wuhan, the Chinese city at the center of the outbreak. “We don’t have evidence that this disease originated there,” the Senator said, “but because of China’s duplicity and dishonesty from the beginning, we need to at least ask the question to see what the evidence says, and China right now is not giving evidence on that question at all.”
“Coronavirus: Don’t worry, but be vigilant” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — No, the flu vaccine won’t protect from the new coronavirus rapidly spreading in China and showing up in isolated cases in the United States and elsewhere. But right now, the flu outbreak is real in the United States, and deadly, while the coronavirus still is nothing more than a possibility. So, people should get a flu shot, public officials told Rep. Stephanie Murphy. Murphy assembled a panel of to assess whether the coronavirus pandemic prospects, and the disease it causes now identified as COVID-19, are yet hitting Florida, whether Florida is vulnerable, local officials are ready, officials know what to expect, what the public should be thinking and doing and what Congress should be doing.
Stephanie Murphy is concerned not enough is being done to prepare for coronavirus.
“South Florida employers should brace for the potential impact of COVID-19” via Andrew Gordon and Megan Coughlin of the Miami Herald — COVID-19 poses unique concerns for employers faced with the responsibility of maintaining a safe workplace for its employees per the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA). With the threat of coronavirus, South Florida employers can take proactive steps to prevent an outbreak of COVID-19 in the workplace while at the same time having a strategic response plan ready in the event an outbreak does occur. South Florida employers should brace for the potential impact of COVID-19. Employers should continue to monitor information and guidance from the CDC, WHO, OSHA and other federal, state, and local agencies. Employment counsel can assist employers in navigating the rapidly changing situation and implementing a strategic response plan.
“Apple will miss quarterly earnings estimates due to coronavirus” via Ina Fried of Axios — Apple issued a rare earnings warning, saying it would not meet quarterly revenue expectations due to the impact of the coronavirus, which will limit iPhone production and limit product demand in China. Lots of companies rely on China for production, but unlike most U.S. tech companies, Apple also gets a significant chunk of its revenue from sales in China. The company said in a statement that it expects slower revenue due to a combination of slower iPhone production in China and lower demand for Apple products within China. Apple stressed it sees the impact as temporary: “Outside of China, customer demand across our product and service categories has been strong to date and in line with our expectations.”
Mother nature
“Nursing home appeal rejected in Irma case” via the News Service of Florida — A South Florida appeals court has turned down arguments that the state improperly revoked the license of a Broward County nursing home where residents died after Hurricane Irma in 2017. A panel of the 4th District Court of Appeal rejected arguments by The Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills. Attorneys for the nursing home asked the court to find that an administrative law judge made a series of errors in recommending that the facility lose its license. But attorneys for the Agency for Health Care Administration contended in a brief that the nursing home’s “abject failure to meet its obligations as a licensed facility and the tragic consequences justify AHCA’ s decision to revoke its license.”
“Massive bird migration over Key West captured by weather radar” via Daniel Figueroa of the Tampa Bay Times — The field of birds was first detected around midnight and stretched over the island city, according to the National Weather Service. Meteorologists said the radius of the flock measured at least 90 miles out from the center — but the actual size of the migration could have been much bigger. The migration is typical this time of year as more than 118 species of birds start returning to North America after wintering in Central and South America or the Caribbean. The birds often migrate at night — in flocks that range from hundreds of thousands to more than a million — because the night sky helps them find their way.
A massive bird migration can be seen by weather radar.
“Don’t look away. Look for the monster who killed this dolphin and make him pay” via Carl Hiaasen of the Miami Herald — The latest case happened near Naples, where the corpse of a male dolphin was discovered Jan. 30 with a deep wound on its snout. Biologists are trying to determine whether the fatal injury was caused by a bullet or a spear-like object. Photographs of the dead mammal are as infuriating as they are sickening. The lowlife who killed it obviously was poised at close range, probably on a boat. No arrests have been made in any of the cases, and the federal government is now offering up to $20,000 for information leading to criminal convictions or civil penalties. Anyone who does it shouldn’t be able to buy their way out. They belong behind bars.
The trail
“Conservative women’s group rolls out new GOP endorsements for 2020” via Julia Manchester of The Hill — Republican political action committee Maggie’s List endorsed 12 women running in House races across the country, marking the latest batch of endorsements for the group dedicated to electing Republican women. “The conservative female candidates got shellacked in the 2018 election. The MeToo movement really stepped in with EMILY’s List, and the full backing of the Democrat and liberal side supporting women to really make a mark in increasing their numbers in the current Congress to 106,” Jennifer Carroll, spokeswoman for Maggie’s List and a former Florida Lieutenant Governor, told The Hill. The group also threw their support behind Florida state House Rep. Heather Fitzenhagen.
“Andrew Learned gains momentum in January fundraising” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Learned nearly tripled the amount of money spent In January over his two potential opponents in the November general election for Florida House District 59. Learned, a Democrat raised $11,055. Neither Republican in the race — Michael Owen and Danny Kushmer — raised more than $4,500. Owen raised just $4,070 in the month, including a $2,500 self-loan, while Kushmer raised $4,310. Even with the strong month, Learned trails Owen in total contributions. Owen has raised $82,498 while Learned has brought in just over $69,000. Kushmer trails with $40,190 raised as of the end of January. But the month might suggest a surge for Learned’s campaign.
Happening today — Republican Jason Miller will hold a fundraiser in his bid for Sarasota County’s House District 72, which opened after Rep. Margaret Good announced she was running for Congress, 6 p.m., Broadway Promenade Condominiums, 1064 North Tamiami Trail, Sarasota.
Happening Wednesday:
Local
“Deborah Clark stepping down as Pinellas Supervisor of Elections” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Clark has worked for the office for 42 years, nearly 20 as its elected supervisor. Clark’s last day on the job is March 31. What a tremendous honor it has been to serve the citizens of Pinellas County for 42 years, representing them as their Supervisor of Elections for almost 20 years,” Clark wrote in a letter to DeSantis. “Florida has been at the forefront of election administration during this period, and it has been a privilege to be part of such exceptional reform.” Clark said she’s looking forward to the next chapter of her life, which includes spending plenty of time with her husband and family.
“Broward may close schools to deal with low enrollment” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — About 30 Broward schools could close, combine with other schools or convert into a new type of facility as the school district looks for ways to deal with nearly half-empty campuses. Many of these schools are in the southern part of the county, from Hollywood to Pembroke Pines, where thousands of students have left for charter schools. Others are in the Fort Lauderdale area and have struggled with factors such as low student performance, outdated facilities, and aging neighborhoods. Most changes would likely take place in the fall of 2021, and district officials said affected communities would have opportunities to share their views in community forums and surveys before making any decisions.
“Telehealth kiosks a success in Bay County schools” via Florida Politics — The rise in counseling sessions comes after telehealth company Let’s Talk Interactive (LTI) installed dozens of kiosks and iPad portals in schools across the region, including those Bay Calhoun, Gulf, Franklin, Jackson and Liberty counties. The portals were deployed last year, in conjunction with First Lady Casey DeSantis’ Hope for Healing initiative, the Florida Department of Children & Families (DCF) and Big Bend Community Based Care (BBCBC). They were funded through insurance, Medicaid and Medicare and grants available through BBCBC. The mental health teleportals were deployed quickly and with constant on-the-ground training, LTI is reporting a fourfold increase in child-focused therapy sessions since November.
Casey DeSantis touts the success of mental health kiosks in Bay County public schools.
Top Opinion
“Dear Joe Biden: It’s time to drop out of the presidential race” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — Mr. Vice President, you have served our nation with distinction for a very long time. It’s time to bow out with grace and dignity. Look at the facts. You didn’t just lose Iowa, you were shellacked. You were supposed to give U.S. Sen. Sanders a run for his money in New Hampshire, but you not only were forced to cede defeat days out, you ended up in a distant fifth place. Fifth! You received less than half the votes of the little-known Senator from Minnesota who came in third. And now your numbers in Nevada are beginning to cave which surprises exactly no one. And so now you are putting your hope in the South Carolina comeback?
Opinions
“Hey lawmakers: Let’s make 2020 the year when you stop looting Florida’s housing fund” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — We have no beef with more money for teachers and state employees. We’re glad House leaders are doing that. If they were dolphins, we’d toss them fishes. But our state — particularly Central Florida — is in a housing crisis. Not a hyperbolic crisis, either. It’s real. Our region is one of the worst in the nation when it comes to available, affordable housing. Entire families live clustered in hotel rooms, so vividly illustrated in the film “The Florida Project.” This is the year for the Senate and the governor to stand firm in their negotiations with the House. The Sadowski housing fund needs to be off the table. Find something else to barter with. Something that doesn’t deprive this state’s working poor of a place to live. The Governor, in particular, needs to put his foot down. If he lets a House sweep stand again, we can be pretty sure he was never serious about this.
“We’re eating Georgia’s dust when it comes to the film industry” via the Florida Times-Union Editorial Board — A movie set in St. Petersburg was shot in Savannah. A film about Tampa’s Ybor City was shot in Georgia, which had to recreate the look of Ybor City. A movie set in part in coastal Florida was shot in Georgia. Why are Florida movies being shot in Georgia? Georgia has shot to the pinnacle of the movie and TV production industry with a brilliantly simple set of incentives. There is no cap, which makes sense. If an incentive produces results, why artificially turn down revenue for the state? And there is no sunset to the incentives, which reassures filmmakers that Georgia is serious.
“Attracting film, TV production to Florida is good business for Sunshine State” via Paul Sirmons for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Florida wouldn’t be giving “millionaire moguls” money as Americans for Prosperity claimed. The “moguls” would be giving Florida their millions, investing their capital in Florida and spending on our workers, at our businesses — some of which are film-related and many that are not, like grocery stores, hotels, hardware stores, restaurants, clothiers, and more. AFP claims the program gives tax breaks. It does not. It‘s a modest rebate of actual expenses paid to Florida residents and businesses, and not a dime is paid until after the production has made all of its expenditures in Florida and proven it in an audit. Joe Gruters’ bill offers just enough to bring a steady stream of production back to Florida.
“This conservative New College alum urges the Legislature to dig deeper on ‘cost per student’ metrics before deciding school’s fate” via Karen Cyphers for Florida Politics — New College’s independence is being challenged — this time, by other state leaders who I have also worked with and admire, including state Rep. Randy Fine. Fine’s motivations for proposing to consolidate New College into Florida State University are well-intentioned and grounded in his desire to best serve the taxpayers of this state. His argument relates to the fact that small schools such as New College cost more to operate for their size. This is true — but it’s the WHY they cost more that matters. It will take a comprehensive analysis to determine whether consolidation would actually produce the economies that legislative champions are seeking.
Earnings
“RSA Consulting Group nears $1.8M in 2019 pay” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — With the firm’s fourth-quarter reports in, the annual earnings estimate stands at $890,000 for legislative lobbying and $880,000 for executive branch lobbying. Firms also mark down a range for their overall pay in each quarterly report. RSA’s reports show they earned no less than $800,000 last year, with a top end of nearly $2 million. Firm founder Ron Pierce and the team of Kaitlyn Bailey, Edward Briggs, Natalie King represented more than 60 clients in 2019, and many of their customers are tied to the Tampa Bay region. Their most lucrative contracts included the Tampa Bay Area Regional Transit Authority (TBARTA) and the Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority, both of which paid $120,000 in fees last year.
Ron Pierce and RSA Consulting brought in $1.8 million in 2019.
“The Legis Group notches $1.2M in 2019” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Fourth-quarter reports from the firm show the team of Doug Holder, Rob Schenck, Patrick Bell, Mike Fischer, Susan Goldstein, and Dennis Green reeled in $345,000 to close out the year. The firm received most of that money lobbying the Legislature, with just $25,000 coming in for their efforts lobbying the Governor and Cabinet. Florida lobbyists report their pay in ranges covering $10,000 increments. Firms also list a range for their overall pay. The Legis Group’s executive branch reports fell in the bottom range throughout 2019. Of their legislative lobbying reports, three were in the $250,000 to $500,000 range while the fourth was in the $100,000 to $250,000 range.
“Strategos Public Affairs earns $2.1M in 2019” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Strategos Public Affairs collected an estimated $2.1 million in pay last year, according to newly filed compensation reports. The team of Adam Giery, Jim Horne, Nicholas Mortellaro, Orlando Pryor, Tara Reid and Trey Traviesa represented more than 30 clients, netting more than $1 million in legislative lobbying fees and another $1 million in executive branch lobbying fees. Florida lobbyists report their pay in ranges covering $10,000 increments. Florida Politics uses the middle number of each range to estimate overall pay. Firms also list a range for their overall pay. Half of Strategos’ legislative reports fell between $100,000 and $250,000 and the others fell between $250,000 and $500,000. It was the same split for the firm’s executive branch reports.
Aloe
“Mars 2020 rover arrives in Florida for final preps before summer launch” via Chelsea Tatham of WTSP — The newest rover landed last week in Cape Canaveral aboard a U.S. Air Force cargo plane. Assembly and tests of the rover began in 2018 at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California. As soon as the rover landed in the Sunshine State, it was taken to the same spacecraft facility that handled NASA’s Curiosity rover in 2011. Curiosity is currently on Mars, exploring the Gale Crater. Over the next five months or so, crews will conduct a final assembly and more testing before the Mars 2020 rover can be enclosed in its aeroshell for the last time. The current plan has the rover launching to Mars in early July aboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket.
The Mars 2020 Rover arrives in Florida for its final preparations leading up to a July launch. Image via Getty.
“At Magic Kingdom, Cinderella Castle is getting a makeover” via Gabrielle Russon of the Orlando Sentinel — Disney’s iconic Cinderella Castle is getting a renovation and going gold this year, the company announced Monday. The improvements are scheduled to start in the next few weeks. They will run into summer as Disney plans to add golden trim and darken the turrets navy blue, according to Magic Kingdom Vice President Jason Kirk, who wrote a Disney blog post that showed a rendering. Disney does not plan to cover the castle or close it during the renovation process. The castle update comes as Disney prepares for the Magic Kingdom’s 50th anniversary in 2021.
“London to get world’s first Batman-themed restaurant” via Christian Sylt of Forbes — Called Park Row, after the area of Gotham City which is home to the caped crusader’s arch enemies, the 18,000 square feet venue will sit inside the basement of an Art Deco building right in the heart of London. It is set to offer an experience which is more like a dinner show than a trip to a typical restaurant. Guests will enter by descending into an area designed to look like Batman’s lair, the Batcave. From there, three bars and five very different dining environments await with prices starting at an average of $58 per person. Expect traditional British dishes in a library-like atmosphere at Pennyworth’s, which is named after Batman’s butler, Alfred.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to the First Lady of Education, Anne Corcoran, our new friend, Lynn Hatter, and WPLG’s Glenna Milberg.
SCOOP … MIKE BLOOMBERG is airing another national TV ad tying himself to closely BARACK OBAMA. This one is a 30-second spot entitled “Difference,” and it’s chock-full of imagery of BLOOMBERG and OBAMA. The timing of this ad is quite interesting, as it comes in the middle of a massive intraparty squabble between BLOOMBERG and Sen. BERNIE SANDERS (more about that in a second). BLOOMBERG has found plenty of ways to tie himself to OBAMA, the most popular Democrat in America. The 30-second ad
— SCRIPT: “[NARRATOR]: A great president and an effective mayor. Leadership that makes a difference. [OBAMA SPEAKING]: He’s been a leader throughout the country for the past 12 years, Mr. Michael Bloomberg is here. [NARRATOR]: Together they worked to combat gun violence, and again to improve education for every child. [OBAMA]: And I want to thank the mayor of this great city, Mayor Bloomberg, for his extraordinary leadership. And I share your determination to bring this country together to finally make progress for the American people.”
BLOOMBERG also has a new 30-second spot with Judge Judy. …
— LAT WITH THE NUMBERS: “Democratic presidential candidate Michael R. Bloomberg has spent more than $124 million on advertising in the 14 Super Tuesday states, well over 10 times what his top rivals have put into the contests that yield the biggest trove of delegates in a single day. The only other candidate to advertise across most of those states so far is Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has spent just under $10 million on ads for the March 3 primaries.”
NEWS: BLOOMBERG has qualified for the NBC/MSNBC/Nevada Independent debate Wednesday night in Las Vegas. He’s indicated that he’ll do it, and a brand-new poll suggests that his advertising and publicity blitz has vaulted him into second place nationally.
THE POLL: SANDERS, 31 … BLOOMBERG, 19 … JOE BIDEN, 15 … ELIZABETH WARREN, 12 … AMYKLOBUCHAR, 9 … PETE BUTTIGIEG, 8. NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist Poll
— BLOOMBERG’S DEBATE PREP, via Chris Cadelago and Sally Goldenberg: “Howard Wolfson, the veteran Democratic strategist who joined Bloomberg’s orbit in 2009 after working on Hillary Clinton’s 2008 presidential race, is playing the role of Bernie Sanders; Julie Wood, Bloomberg’s national press secretary, is depicting Elizabeth Warren; and senior advisers Marc La Vorgna and Marcia Hale are stand-ins for Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar, respectively. …
“Bloomberg is trying to hone a crisp and energetic appeal to voters that will contrast with Biden — another white, male septuagenarian on stage, according to advisers.”
THE BRAWL right now between BLOOMBERG and SANDERS seems to be the rare internecine fight that benefits everyone involved. It goes something like this: BLOOMBERG whacks BERNIE, delighting the Democratic Party’s large anti-Bernie wing. BERNIE then blasts out a fundraising email to his list of millions. He reminds his supporters that BLOOMBERG is a billionaire who palled around with TRUMP, and the left goes wild, but so do BLOOMBERG supporters, who say only a deep-pocketed billionaire willing to punch can take on the president.
THE TWO JOINTLY benefit from making it seem inevitable that they are the two choices, starving other candidates of attention just as they need it most.
— NYT’S MIKE GRYNBAUM: “Bloomberg News’s Dilemma: How to Cover a Boss Seeking the Presidency”: “John Micklethwait, the editor in chief of Bloomberg News, walked into his Washington bureau on a Friday morning in December with a daunting task: explaining to his political reporters how to cover a presidential campaign when the boss is a candidate.
“Addressing roughly 100 journalists spilling out of a glass-walled conference room, Mr. Micklethwait said Michael R. Bloomberg’s entry into the Democratic race had not changed his commitment to skeptical coverage. ‘We always knew it would be tough,’ he told the group. ‘But we are actually showing what we are: an independent news organization.’
“Not every reporter was reassured. Rival candidates had attacked the journalists’ coverage as biased; some sources had stopped returning calls. One reporter said the bureau’s credibility was at stake, citing Mr. Micklethwait’s public memo that Bloomberg News would refrain from ‘investigating’ Mr. Bloomberg and his Democratic competitors.” NYT
THE EXPECTATIONS GAME — WHAT BIDEN NEEDS, via NYT’s Tom Kaplan and Katie Glueck in Las Vegas: “The campaign, Mr. Schultz made clear on the call, was banking on finishing in at least second place in the upcoming Nevada caucuses, a contest that will offer the first major test of Mr. Biden’s assertion that he can uniquely assemble a diverse coalition.
“Left unsaid: Nevada will also show whether Mr. Biden, the former vice president, can revive his campaign after his first two finishes sent his national poll numbers plummeting, put his donors on edge and jeopardized his standing even in his perceived firewall state, South Carolina.
“‘First would be wonderful, but us getting a second place I think does the work that we need to do to win South Carolina,’ [Greg] Schultz said. ‘We win South Carolina, we’re going to have ended the first four contests likely with a delegate advantage.’ He added, ‘I think the Democratic Party will sigh a collective sigh of relief when we finish second or better in Nevada.’” NYT
— AND/BUT SOUTH CAROLINA IS NO SURE THING … WSJ’S JOSH JAMERSON and VALERIE BAUERLEIN, with a Charleston dateline: “Trav Robertson, the state Democratic Party chairman, has been working in South Carolina politics for 20 years and said the race is the most fluid he has seen. ‘This race is wide open here,’ Mr. Robertson said. ‘Joe Biden has some work to do in order to close the deal and win South Carolina.’” WSJ
WHERE THEY ARE …
— BIDEN has an “early vote event with the Biden for President Nevada AAPI Leadership Council and the AAPI Victory Fund in Las Vegas.”
— BUTTIGIEG has a town hall in Las Vegas.
— KLOBUCHAR has a GOTV event in Las Vegas, and then will appear at a “Conversation with Culinary Union Guestroom Attendants” in Vegas.
— SANDERS has a rally at UNLV.
— WARREN will participate in the National Domestic Workers Alliance Forum in Las Vegas.
Good Tuesday morning.
NBC’S COURTNEY KUBE and CAROL LEE in Munich: “Graham tells Defense Secretary Esper I could ‘make your life hell’ in battle over Trump Africa policy”: “Sen. Lindsey Graham and a bipartisan group of lawmakers, uniting against a Trump administration idea to withdraw U.S. troops from part of Africa, pushed back during a fiery exchange with Defense Secretary Mark Esper here over the weekend, according to four people present at or familiar with the meeting.
“Senators and members of the House met with Esper on the margins of the Munich Security Conference. Graham, R-S.C., and Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., who are members of the Foreign Relations Committee, led the charge, said the four people, telling Esper that Congress would not support a U.S. troop withdrawal from the Sahel region in Africa and laying out the reasons to keep the troop presence there.
“At one point, Graham warned Esper that there would be consequences if the Pentagon withdrew all troops from the region. Graham told Esper that he could ‘make your life hell,’ according to the four people. One member present said Graham, Coons and several other lawmakers laid out their case ‘forcefully.’” NBC
BOLTON BOOK TOUR UPDATE — “Bolton Hints at Further Revelations if He Overcomes White House ‘Censorship,’” by NYT’s Peter Baker in Durham, N.C.: “John R. Bolton, the former national security adviser to President Trump, suggested on Monday that his unpublished book contained far more revelations than just the campaign to pressure Ukraine for help with domestic politics but said he was fighting ‘censorship’ by the White House.
“In his first public appearance since the Senate impeachment trial in which Republicans refused to hear his testimony, Mr. Bolton said that the White House was trying to keep him from publishing important parts of his new memoir by terming them classified. He said he was pushing back but feared that a pre-publication review could stop the book from being published next month.
“‘For all the focus on Ukraine and the impeachment trial and all that, to me, there are portions of the manuscript that deal with Ukraine, I view that like the sprinkles on the ice cream sundae in terms of what’s in the book,’ Mr. Bolton told an audience at Duke University during a forum on foreign policy on Monday evening. ‘This is an effort to write history and I did it the best I can. We’ll have to see what comes out of the censorship.’
“‘I’m hoping ultimately I can get the book published,’ Mr. Bolton said at another point. ‘I hope it’s not suppressed.’ Reminded that the president had assailed him on Twitter, Mr. Bolton said: ‘He tweets, but I can’t talk about it. How fair is that?’” NYT
TRUMP’S TUESDAY — The president will leave the White House at 12:30 p.m. en route to Los Angeles. He will participate in a briefing with the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee and LA 2028 organizers at 4:10 p.m. PST at the Montage Beverly Hills. He will participate in a roundtable with supporters at 5:45 p.m., followed by a joint fundraising committee dinner. Afterward, he will depart for Las Vegas.
PLAYBOOK READS
DEM AD MAN MARK PUTNAM has cut a new ad for Al Gross, an independent looking to knock off Republican Sen. DAN SULLIVAN in Alaska. The ad has Gross skiing the Chugach Mountains. Most observers don’t have the Alaska Senate race on their radar, but Gross’ team believes that Republicans have taken a hit in Alaska and the race is ripe for a challenge to the incumbent. Gross is seeking the Democratic nomination. The spot
ALARM BELLS — “Federal judges’ association calls emergency meeting after DOJ intervenes in case of Trump ally Roger Stone,” by USA Today’s Kevin Johnson: “A national association of federal judges has called an emergency meeting Tuesday to address growing concerns about the intervention of Justice Department officials and President Donald Trump in politically sensitive cases, the group’s president said Monday.
“Philadelphia U.S. District Judge Cynthia Rufe, who heads the independent Federal Judges Association, said the group “could not wait” until its spring conference to weigh in on a deepening crisis that has enveloped the Justice Department and Attorney General William Barr.
“‘There are plenty of issues that we are concerned about,’ Rufe told USA TODAY. ‘We’ll talk all of this through.’” USA Today
ACROSS THE POND — “Brussels pushes back on Zuckerberg pitch,” by Mark Scott, Stephen Brown, Laura Kayali and Melissa Heikkilä: “Mark Zuckerberg came to Brussels looking to make friends. But in a number of high-profile meetings Monday, European officials responded: no thanks.
“Facebook’s chief executive was scolded for the company’s involvement in a series of recent scandals, asked to do more to clamp down on widespread misinformation on its global platform and urged to take greater responsibility for the role that the social networking giant plays in people’s daily lives.” POLITICO Europe
CORONAVIRUS LATEST … SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST: “China postpones year’s biggest political gathering amid coronavirus outbreak”: “China’s annual parliamentary meeting, which was scheduled for early March, will almost certainly be postponed because of the Covid-19 outbreak.
“The state news agency Xinhua reported that the standing committee of the National People’s Congress (NPC) would discuss the delay later this month – effectively indicating that it would be put back.” SCMP
— “Apple Signals Coronavirus’s Threat to Global Businesses,” by NYT’s Daisuke Wakabayashi in San Francisco: “Apple on Monday became one of the first companies to reveal how the coronavirus that has gripped China was affecting its business, saying it was cutting its sales expectations for this quarter, which a month ago it had projected to be robust.
“The iPhone maker, which is highly dependent on Chinese factories and Chinese consumers, said in a statement that its supply of smartphones would be hampered because production was ramping up more slowly than expected as China reopened its factories. Apple also said that demand for its devices in China had been hurt by the outbreak; it closed all 42 of its stores in the country last month and most have yet to reopen.” The statement
FOR YOUR RADAR — “Boy Scouts file for bankruptcy due to sex-abuse lawsuits,” by AP’s David Crary: “Barraged by hundreds of sex-abuse lawsuits, the Boy Scouts of America filed for bankruptcy protection Tuesday in hopes of working out a potentially mammoth victim compensation plan that will allow the hallowed, 110-year-old organization to carry on.
“The Chapter 11 filing in federal bankruptcy court in Wilmington, Delaware, sets in motion what could be one of the biggest, most complex bankruptcies ever seen. Scores of lawyers are seeking settlements on behalf of several thousand men who say they were molested as scouts by scoutmasters or other leaders decades ago but are only now eligible to sue because of recent changes in their states’ statute-of-limitations laws.” AP
SPOTTED: Mick Mulvaney in a trench coat and fedora at the Philadelphia International Airport on Monday evening.
FOGGY BOTTOM ARRIVAL LOUNGE — Mike Abboud is now a senior adviser at the State Department’s public affairs bureau. He previously was a senior adviser at the EPA.
TRANSITIONS — Sue Gordon will be a Rubenstein Fellow at Duke University starting in August. She previously was principal deputy DNI. … Jon Hoganson is joining AMD as corporate VP. He most recently led government affairs at Micron.
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Kiara Pesante Haughton, director of communications at the Civil Rights Corps. What she’s been reading: “‘Usual Cruelty: The Complicity of Lawyers in the Criminal Injustice System’ by Alec Karakatsanis is a stunning read and necessary critique of the American legal system. It’s an important book for anyone interested in what is commonly being referred to as ‘reform.’” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rep. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.) is 73 … Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.) is 56 … Rep. Steve Womack (R-Ark.) is 63 (h/t Tim Griffin) … Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) is 56 … Keith Urbahn, founding partner and president at Javelin, is 36 … WaPo’s James Hohmann … former Sen. John Warner (R-Va.), now senior adviser at Hogan Lovells, is 93 (h/ts Jacob Fischler and Scott Sadler) … Ben Wofford … NPR’s Rachel Martin,co-host of “Up First” and “Morning Edition” … Michael Janofsky … Connor McKay … former Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner is 64 … Elizabeth Kanick … John DiStaso … Denise Dunckel … Moldovan President Igor Dodon is 45 … Lebanese President Michel Aoun is 85 …
… Marc Lampkin, managing partner of Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck’s D.C. office (h/t Tim Burger) … Abby Blunt … Lucien Zeigler, research director at the Saudi-U.S. Trade Group … Parul S. Choksi … POLITICO’s Amy Oh and Meli Duarte … Kadeem Gill … Caleb Cade … Virginia state Del. Mark Sickles … William Bertles, SVP and partner at DDC Advocacy … Matt Burgess … Danielle Borrin Hertz … Stacey Gardner … Meredith Brown Wills … Rebecca Kaplan, Capitol Hill producer at CBS News … DDC’s Angela Chiappetta … Abbey (Blume) Gibson … Adam Prather … Willem Rijksen … Chuck Kleeschulte … Joe Dacca … Jesse Purdon … Al Quinlan
The number of infections across China continues to rise, but a renowned pulmonologist who predicted a peak in cases this month has said it may be followed by a plateau.
Mike Bloomberg’s Democratic rivals, who have been publicly critical of the former New York mayor, are eager for a chance to counter hundreds of millions in television advertising he has already aired.
The long-anticipated Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing Tuesday will allow the Boy Scouts to keep operating as it reorganizes its finances and handles claims from hundreds of potential victims.
In a chaotic, close finish, Denny Hamlin won the Daytona 500 for the third time in the past five years, but teams quickly turned their attention to Newman, who was involved in a terrifying wreck just before the finish.
By Liz Clarke, Desmond Bieler, Cindy Boren and Matt Bonesteel ● Read more »
Asylum-seeker María Reynoso was sent back to Guatemala. Her 9-year-old daughter is in Florida. Theirs is a hidden separation — older, longer, unreported to Congress.
In his first public remarks since the impeachment of President Trump, former national security adviser John Bolton said his ability to speak was restrained because of a “prepublication review” of his forthcoming book.
The Rarely Known History of Russia: Vikings to Mongols to Tsars to Socialism
Beginning in the late 700s, Vikings from Scandinavia, called Danes and Swedes, began raiding the coasts and up the rivers of England and Europe.
Since they were from “the north,” they were referred to as Norse men, or Norman.
Norman Vikings raided up the Seine River into France, eventually claiming an area which took their name, Normandy.
Some even raided as far south as the Muslim- controlled Mediterranean.
Some Vikings raided across the Baltic sea, looting the Finns, Wends and Slavs, on the northern coast of Europe, eventually founding trading settlements.
The Russian Primary Chronicle made the first written mention of a Scandinavian tribe called “Varangians” or “Rus” around 859 AD, which began taxing Slavs and Finns.
“Rus” is possibly derived from the Finnish word for Swedes, “Ruotsi,” which may have come from the Swedish word “rother” for rower.
A trading port founded on the Baltic Sea in 859 AD, was Novgorod, which means “new town.”
It was the first and only Russian Republic until modern times.
It is considered the first city of the Rus people, and was their capital until 882 AD when Oleg moved the capital to Kiev.
During the Middle Ages, Novgorod grew so prosperous that was it was Russia’s second main city after Kiev.
Novgorod controlled an enormous area as large as Sweden.
Novgorod’s economy was based on Baltic sea trade.
Beginning in the 1100s, it was a member of the Hanseatic League of rich Baltic ports in Russia, Sweden, Denmark, and Northern Germany, which traded as far as Holland and England.
Novgorod was situated on one of the main travel routes from Northern Europe to Rome and Constantinople.
During this period of history, Russia was divided into cities and princedoms, which often fought against each other.
Novgorod supported Kiev leader, Vladimir the Great.
In 986 AD, Vladimir decided to throw his pagan gods in the Dnieper River and embrace a monotheistic faith.
He was soon visited by some Bulgar Muslims from Khwarezm, who invited him to adopt Islam.
The Primary Chronicle, the official record of Russia from 850 AD to 1110 AD, compiled in Kiev in 1113, gives the account:
“They replied that they believed in Allah, and that Mohammed instructed them to practice circumcision, to eat no pork, to drink no wine, and after death, promised them complete fulfillment of their carnal desires.
‘Mohammed,’ they asserted, ‘will give each man 70 fair women. He may choose one fair one, and upon that woman will Mohammed confer the charms of them all, and she shall be his wife.
‘Mohammed promises that one may then satisfy every desire. But whoever is poor in this world will be no different in the next.’ They also spoke other false things (which out of modesty may not be written down) …”
The Primary Chronicle continued:
“Vladimir listened to them, for he was fond of women and indulgence, regarding which he heard with pleasure.
But circumcision and abstinence from pork and wine were disagreeable to him. ‘Drinking,’ said he, ‘is the joy of the Russes. We cannot exist without that pleasure.'”
Next, Vladimir was visited by Germans from the Latin Roman Catholic Church, and then visited by Jewish Khazars.
Finally, he was visited by Greeks from the Eastern Orthodox Church, whose beautiful Hagia Sophia Cathedral in Constantinople was the largest and most ornate church in the world for over a thousand years.
Vladimir sent envoys to visit it, and upon their return, they stated:
“We knew not whether we were in Heaven or on Earth … We only know that God dwells there among the people, and their service is fairer than the ceremonies of other nations.”
After hearing an explanation of the Gospel, and learning that the New Testament had been written in the Greek language, and that many cities mentioned in the New Testament were located in the Byzantine Empire, Vladimir was baptized into Eastern Orthodox Christianity.
He also adopted the Eastern Orthodox Saint Nicholas as the Patron Saint of Russia.
There was, perhaps, not a single city in Russia without a church named after Saint Nicholas.
Vladimir proceeded to have all Kievan Russians baptized into the Orthodox Christian Church.
He sent his younger son, Yaroslav the Wise, to rule the area of Novgorod.
Relations between Vladimir and his son, Yaroslav began to be strained.
When Vladimir died in 1015, his older son, Svyatopolk the Accursed, had three other brothers killed and seized power in Kiev.
The citizens of Novgorod supported Yaroslav against Svyatopolk.
Yaroslav finally won in 1019, and proceeded to reward the loyal citizens of Novgorod who supported him with privileges and freedoms.
This effectively laid the foundation for the independent Novgorod Republic.
Novgorod grew in wealth, constructed elaborate stone walls and erected the beautiful Church of Saint Sofia, the main cathedral of the Russian North.
By 1136, merchants had accumulated more power than the nobles, resulting in a government by the people.
The neighboring city of Pskov was founded in 903 and adhered politically to the Novgorod Republic.
Novgorod and Pskov were the only major cities in Russia to escape destruction when the Mongols invaded in 1222, led by Batu Khan, the grandson of Genghis Khan.
In 1240, Novgorod invited Prince Alexander to protect it from the Swedish army.
Alexander defeated the Swedes near the Neva River, resulting in his title — Alexander Nevsky.
The main avenue in St. Petersburg is named for him: Nevski Prospekt.
In 1242, Alexander Nevsky saved Novgorod again from the nearby State of Teutonic Knights.
He recaptured Pskov in a legendary campaign which included the Battle of the Ice on the frozen Lake Peipus, memorialized in Sergei Eisenstein’s 1938 movie, Alexander Nevsky.
When the Mongols became the most powerful foe, Alexander Nevsky met in 1252 with the ruler of the Mongol “Golden Horde,” Sartaq Khan, son of Batu Khan and great-grandson of Genghis Khan.
Sartaq Khan had converted to Christianity.
Other Khan leaders converted or at least were favorable to Christianity, such as Hulagu Khan, another grandson of Genghis Khan.
His brother was Kublai Khan, and their mother was the famous Christian princess — Sorghaghtani Beki.
Hulagu Khan destroyed the Islamic capital of Baghdad (1258), killing over a hundred thousand.
He imprisoned the Caliph, starving him in a room with all his treasures, then rolled him in a carpet and had horses trample him to death.
Hulagu weakened Muslim control of Damascus (1260).
In 1262, Hulagu Khan sent a letter to French King Louis IX — St. Louis — proposing they fight a joint crusade together to recapture Jerusalem and drive the Muslims out of Egypt:
“From the head of the Mongol army, anxious to devastate the perfidious nation of the Saracens (Muslims), with the good-will support of the Christian faith … so that you, who are the rulers of the coasts on the other side of the sea, endeavor to deny a refuge for the Infidels, your enemies and ours, by having your subjects diligently patrol the seas.”
Hulagu’s brother, Kublai Khan became the Emperor of the Mongolian Empire stretching from China, Korea, North India, Persia, Hungary, to Russia.
Kublai Khan had requested the Venetian traveler Marco Polo bring back to China a hundred teachers of the Holy Christian Faith and a flask of oil from Christ’s empty tomb in Jerusalem.
Columbus referred to this in a letter to the King and Queen of Spain in 1492:
“Concerning the lands of India, and a Prince called Gran Khan …
How many times he sent to Rome to seek doctors in our Holy Faith to instruct him and that never had the Holy Father provided them, and thus so many people were lost through lapsing into idolatries…
And Your Highnesses … devoted to the Holy Christian Faith … enemies of the sect of Mahomet … resolved to send me, Christopher Columbus, to the said regions of India, to see the said princes and peoples … and the manner in which may be undertaken their conversion to our Holy Faith.”
In Russia, Sartaq Khan, great-grandson of Genghis Khan, granted Alexander Nevsky vassalage to become Grand Duke of Vladimir.
In 1256, Sartaq Khan died mysteriously in what was suspected to have been poisoning by his uncle Berke Khan, who had converted to Islam.
Berke Khan determined to be a devout Muslim. He took control of the armies of the Mongolian Golden Horde, and spread Islam throughout the Mongolian Empire.
Berke Khan declared war on Hulagu Khan for destroying the Islamic capital of Baghdad.
Muslim “Tartar” armies proceeded to capture most of the land of Rus, with the exception of Novgorod, as it was surrounded by swamps.
The Novgorod Republic continued to flourish, being ruled by its citizens.
Elections were held in the city square. People gathered and shouted for their candidates. The candidate with the loudest supporters became ruler.
Princes were still present in Novgorod, but only to be hired military leaders to protect the city.
Novgorod’s fate began to change when Ivan III of Moscow, known as Ivan the Great, expanded his domain.
In 1478, Ivan the Great took away four-fifths of the land from the Republic of Novgorod and deported its richest and ancient families.
A century later, in 1570, Ivan the IV, know as Ivan the Terrible, became paranoid of conspiracies. He killed anyone he suspected of being disloyal, even his own son.
When the Novgorod Republic was rumored to be seeking an alliance with Poland-Lithuania, Ivan attacked with a vengeance.
Ivan’s first command was to subjugate the church.
He stripped cathedrals and monasteries of their valuables; put priests and deacons in shackles and flogged them til they paid a ransom; and he ordered some 500 clergymen beaten to death.
Ivan laid waste to 90 percent of the farmland surrounding Novgorod.
Ivan’s 6,000 secret police, called Oprichniki, pillaged, burned, arrested and terrorized with cruel violence.
His victims, including men, women and children, were:
roasted over fires;
tied to sleds and dragged through town;
trapped under ice in the Volkhov River and if they managed to surface they were shoved back under.
According to The First Pskov Chronicle, an estimated 60,000 people were senselessly slaughtered by Ivan the Terrible.
Ivan the Terrible’s intentionally used terror to force people into submission. It was a tactic replicated during the French Revolution’s Reign of Terror.
Robespierre, who headed the “Committee of Public Safety,” France’s version of a Department of Homeland Security, gave a speech to the National Assembly, February 5, 1794, titled “The Terror Justified”:
“Lead … the enemies of the people by terror … Terror is nothing else than swift, severe, indomitable justice.”
Robespierre likewise attacked Christianity and turned churches into Temples of Reason.
The secular French French government beheaded 40,000 in Paris then slaughtered 300,000 in the Vendée from 1793-1796.
Novgorod continued to decline economically.
It finally lost its position of being the only Russian port near the Baltic when Peter the Great began building St. Petersburg at the beginning of the 18th century.
Peter the Great developed Russia’s navy and increased the influence of Russia internationally.
As a young man, Peter visited England to study their shipbuilding.
While there, he me William Penn. They conversed in German, a language known to both.
On April 3, 1698, Peter attended a Quaker “Friends” meeting at 144 Deptford High Street in London, where currently stands a Salvation Army shop.
He also visited the Friends’ Meeting Houses on Gracechurch Street. London’s Muscovy Street and Czar Street are named for Peter’s visit.
William Penn wrote to Peter the Great, July 2, 1698:
“It was a profound respect, and not a vain curiosity, Great Czar, which brought me twice to wait upon thee …
If thou wouldst rule well, thou must rule for God; and to do that, thou must be ruled by Him …”
Penn continued:
“Know, great Czar, and take it with thee as one part of the collection of knowledge thou art making in this unexampled travel that ’tis in this kingdom of England that God has visited and touched the hearts of a people, above forty years ago, by the holy light and at grace of his Son and our Saviour Jesus Christ.
By which their minds have been turned from false worship and evil living to worship God, who is a spirit, in and by his own spirit.”
In 1710, Turks invaded Russia, and the new Turkish Grand Vizier, Baltacı Mehmet, defeated Peter the Great’s Russian Army in the Russo-Turkish War.
Another notable Russian leaders was Empress Catherine the Great (1762-1796), who greatly helped America during the Revolutionary War by having Russia be one of the first major countries to recognize the United States.
She refused Britain’s request for Russian troops, and had Russia officially stay neutral, which helped thwart Britain’s naval blockade of American ports.
After the American Revolution, she hired John Paul Jones to assist her navy in fighting the Turks.
In the early 19th century, Tsar Alexander I (1801-1805) defended Russia against Napoleon’s invasion.
Napoleon had invaded Russia in June of 1812 with some 600,000 men.
After six months of blizzards, lack of food, and the bloody Battles of Borodino and Berezina River, Napoleon retreated back to France with only 40,000.
During World War I, over 3 million Russians were killed, mostly by Germany’s Kaiser Wilhelm who used upgraded artillery and machine guns.
This devastating loss of life undermined Tsar Nicholas II and led to his abdication and assassination in 1918.
At the beginning of the 20th century, Vladimir Lenin seized power in Russia through the Bolshevik Revolution. He stated:
“The goal of socialism is communism.”
When socialistic promises of abundance proved false, the people became disillusioned and disruptive.
Lenin’s godless government employed terror tactics to maintain power.
Stalin seized power in Russia in 1922.
To control the masses of people, he notoriously used “fear and food”:
people were kept in constant fear that government agencies would falsely accuse them and cart them away in the night; and
people were kept in a continual food shortage, so they could not have the resources to rebel.
Stalin engineered a famine that killed millions in his war against the kulaks (self-sufficient farmers).
Richard Pipes discussed in his book Communism-A History (Random House, 2001), the terror tactics used by Stalin:
“To break the resistance of the peasants in the Ukraine, the North Caucasus, and the Kazakhstan,
Stalin inflicted on these areas in 1932-33 an artificial famine, shipping out all the food from entire districts and deploying the army to prevent the starving peasants from migrating in search of nourishment.
It is estimated that between 6 and 7 million people perished in this man-made catastrophe.”
Franklin Roosevelt described the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, February 10, 1940:
“The Soviet Union … is run by a dictatorship as absolute as any other dictatorship in the world.”
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics saw millions killed in purges.
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels had explained (Marx and Engels Collected Works, Vol. 10, p. 318):
“Conspirators by no means confine themselves to organizing … Their business consists in … spurring it in to artificial crises … They are the alchemists of the revolution.”
Joseph Stalin said:
“Crisis alone permitted the authorities to demand — and obtain — total submission and all the necessary sacrifices from its citizens.”
Richard Pipes wrote in his book, Communism-A History:
“Stalin’s regime needed another crisis …
as Fidel Castro, the leader of Communist Cuba, would explain … ‘The revolution needs the enemy … The revolution needs for its development its antithesis’ … And if enemies were lacking, they had to be fabricated …”
Pipes added:
“In 1934, a prominent Bolshevik, Sergei Kirov, the party boss of Lenningrad, was assassinated under mysterious conditions … evidence points to Stalin …
Kirov was gaining too much popularity in party ranks for Stalin’s comfort …
… His assassination brought Stalin two advantages: it rid him of a potential rival and provided a rationale for instigating a vast campaign against alleged anti-Soviet conspirators …
Purges of the 1930’s were a terror campaign that in indiscriminate ferocity and number of victims had no parallel in world history … Authorities … beat them until they confess to their crimes they have not committed.”
Socialist thinker Friedrich Engels explained ( Outlines of a Critique of Political Economy, 1844):
“Every new crisis must be more serious … than the last … ruin more small capitalists and … increase the number of the unemployed … In the end commercial crises will lead to a social revolution.”
In 1941, during World War II, Russia was invaded by Germany’s National Socialist Workers Party (Nazi).
Called the Eastern Front, it became the bloodiest theater in World War II, being considered the largest military confrontation ever and deadliest conflict in human history, with an estimated 30 million deaths.
At the Battle of Sevastopol, Russia, 1941-42, over 200,000 were killed, wounded or captured.
Franklin Roosevelt stated March 1, 1945:
“I saw Sevastopol and Yalta! And I know that there is not room enough on earth for both German militarism and Christian decency.”
Terror tactics were used by the National Socialist Workers Party.
Franklin Roosevelt explained, December 15, 1941:
“Government to him is not the servant … of the people but their absolute master and the dictator of their every act.”
Philosophers have questioned how people could commit these atrocities.
To answer that, one must understand that thoughts precede actions, just as software determines the actions of a computerized machine.
An insight into the thoughts motivating the perpetrators of such cruel acts was provided by National Socialist Workers Party General Hans Frank, who mentally justified carrying out orders to plunder Poland and commit the mass murder of millions of Poles and Jews in death camps.
After the war, Hans Frank was arrested, tried and executed.
During his final confinement, Hans Frank was visited by Fr. O’Conner , who led him to repent and believe in the atonement of Christ for his many sins, and become a Roman Catholic.
At the Nuremberg Trials, August 31, 1945, Hans Frank was remorseful, explaining the slippery slope of socialist thought:
“At the beginning of our way we did not suspect that our turning away from God could have such disastrous deadly consequences and that we would necessarily become more and more deeply involved in guilt.
At that time we could not have known that so much loyalty and willingness to sacrifice on the part of the German people could have been so badly directed by us.
Thus, by turning away from God, we were overthrown and had to perish …”
Hans Frank continued:
“Before all, God pronounced and executed judgment on Hitler and the system which we served with minds far from God.
Therefore, may our people, too, be called back from the road on which Hitler — and we with him — have led them.
I beg of our people NOT to continue in this direction, be it even a single step; because Hitler’s road was the way without God, the way of turning from Christ, and, in the last analysis, the way of political foolishness, the way of disaster, and the way of death …
… His path became more and more that of a frightful adventurer without conscience or honesty, as I know today at the end of this Trial.
We call upon the German people … to return from this road which, according to the law and justice of God, had to lead us and our system into disaster and which will lead everyone into disaster who tries to walk on it … everywhere in the whole world.”
To the annoyance of academia in the classroom, the high ideals of a socialist classless society never materialize in reality.
This is primarily due to an intellectual blind spot — the failure to recognize the selfishness inherent in each human being.
St. Augustine called it “libido dominandi,” the lust to dominate.
Theologians call it original sin or fallen human nature.
Without the Biblical teaching of servant-leadership to counter this selfishness, whenever people form themselves into a group, someone is tempted to become the bully on the playground, the diva of the clique, the tribal chief, the political boss, the gang leader, or the dictator.
Socialist and Communist leaders rule as dictators: Stalin, Mao Zedong, Pol Pot, Ho Chi Min, Kim Jong-il, Hitler, Castro, Ceausescu, Tito, etc.;
Socialist and Communist “Party Members” act effectively as “the new royalty,” living in special neighborhoods with special shops, and getting special treatment before the law. They exist to enforce the dictator’s will, otherwise, they quietly disappeared or commit involuntary suicide;
The “Citizens” in Socialist and Communist countries are equivalent to serfs or “subjects,” being subject to the will of the dictator and ruling class.
Naive students are taught Karl Marx’s maxim ( Critique of the Gotha Program, 1875):
“From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs.”
But in practice, this is not realized.
One need only ask: “Who gets to live in the nice house and who lives in the dumpy house?”
The answer is: “Someone in the government dictates those things.”
Well, whoever ultimately dictates those things is the dictator!
Controlled media and rigged elections insure the dictator and his establishment enforcer-class stay in power.
In February 1945, Russian author Alexander Solzhenitsyn was arrested in the Soviet Union for writing politically incorrect comments against Stalin.
Solzhenitsyn was imprisoned for eight years, as he described in his autobiographical lecture, printed in the Nobel Foundation’s publication, Les Prix Nobel, 1971:
“I was arrested on the grounds of what the censorship had found in my correspondence with a school friend, mainly because of certain disrespectful remarks about Stalin, although we referred to him in disguised terms.
A further basis for the ‘charge’ were drafts of stories and reflections which had been found in my map case.”
Solzhenitsyn secretly wrote drafts, being careful to keep them in hiding till they could be smuggled out the Russia, and printed in France with the title The Gulag Archipelago.
It was translated into 35 languages and sold over 30 million copies.
When Solzhenitsyn was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, the Communist government did not allow him to leave the country to accept it.
After international pressure, the Soviet Union finally expelled him on FEBRUARY 13, 1974.
With leaders in the United States introducing socialist programs, Alexander Solzhenitsyn gave a warning the following year in Washington, D.C.:
“I … call upon America to be more careful … because they are trying to weaken you … to disarm your strong and magnificent country in the face of this fearful threat — one that has never been seen before in the history of the world.”
He explained how Russia became a socialist dictatorship:
“Over a half century ago, while I was still a child, I recall hearing a number of old people offer the following explanation for the great disasters that had befallen Russia: ‘Men have forgotten God; that’s why all this has happened …’
… Since then I have spent well-nigh 50 years working on the history of our revolution; in the process I have read hundreds of books, collected hundreds of personal testimonies …
But if I were asked today to formulate as concisely as possible the main cause of the ruinous revolution that swallowed up some 60 million of our people, I could not put it more accurately than to repeat:
‘Men have forgotten God; that’s why all this has happened.'”
This echoed an earlier Russian author, Dostoevsky, wrote in his book, The Brothers Karamazov. In it, there was a character named Ivan Karamazov who contended that if there is no God, “everything is permitted.”
One of America’s founders, Patrick Henry, gave the same warning:
“It is when a people forget God that tyrants forge their chains.”
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Happy Tuesday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the daily co-creators, so find us @asimendinger and @alweaver22 on Twitter and recommend the Morning Report to your friends. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
The tenor of the Democratic primary race is growing increasingly nasty as candidates barnstorm Nevada, along with other upcoming primary states, and try to prevent Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) from taking home Saturday night’s caucuses.
Four days out from the Nevada caucuses, Sanders has emerged as the favorite after two top-two performances in Iowa and New Hampshire as he consolidates progressive support behind his bid. Sanders leads in two polls taken over the past week — one showing him leading the field by 7 points, the other by 19 points — forcing his rivals to target his campaign in a bid to move up in the field.
One opportunity will present itself on Wednesday night as candidates convene in Las Vegas for the eighth Democratic debate, which Niall Stanage writes about in his latest memo. With less than 24 hours until the participants are nailed down, six candidates are slated to be on the stage: Sanders, former Vice President Joe Biden, former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who will be making his first debate appearance of the 2020 cycle.
The billionaire businessman nabbed his final qualifying poll on Tuesday morning — 19 percent in an NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist Poll — with his team confirming that he will be in Las Vegas on Wednesday night (NBC News).
“Since Mike launched his campaign 13 weeks ago, he’s met with voters in 25 states and 62 cities. Our crowds continue to grow, and our coalition continues to broaden. There’s a desire in every corner of this country for a proven leader, for someone who will stand up to bullies and special interests and get things done,” said campaign manager Kevin Sheekey in a statement. “That person is Mike Bloomberg, and we look forward to more Americans seeing that on Wednesday night.”
Bloomberg’s participation will mark a major turning point in the race as his chances and support levels continue to rise (along with the betting odds) ahead of Super Tuesday.
Tomorrow’s debate will also mark his first real involvement in any part of the primary process since he launched his quixotic bid in November, having spent north of $300 million thus far. Additionally, while he’ll be on the debate stage, he is not competing in Nevada or any of the first four nominating contests.
Outside of Sanders, no one else in the field has received more attacks in recent days than Bloomberg, who Sanders has accused of trying to buy the primary and will almost certainly be the focus of derision of many in the Democratic field on Wednesday. Bloomberg decided to return fire on Monday, hitting Sanders in a video showing threatening tweets aimed at the former mayor and others in the 2020 field.
“We need to unite to defeat Trump in November. This type of ‘energy’ is not going to get us there,” Bloomberg tweeted. His team added that Sanders is taking a page from President Trump’s playbook to take down the former mayor.
The Hill: Sanders responds to Bloomberg criticism with photo of former mayor golfing with Trump.
The Associated Press: One thing unites establishment Democrats: Fear of Sanders.
Amie Parnes, The Hill: Candidates in Obama’s orbit fail to capitalize on personal ties.
With Nevada the immediate prize, Democratic candidates have been forced to tailor messages to a more diverse electorate. As of Monday, four candidates had launched Spanish-language ads in Nevada, with Klobuchar the latest to do so.
Meanwhile, the early voting period in the Battle Born State kicked off on Saturday. According to the Nevada Democratic Party, more than 26,000 individuals cast votes during the first two days, with more than half of those who voted on Saturday being first-time caucus-goers (The Associated Press).
The Washington Post: The presidential contest turns to African American and Latino voters. For some candidates, that’s a problem.
The Hill: Tech for Nevada caucuses under scrutiny after Iowa debacle.
The field will also take part in CNN town halls tonight and Thursday. Sanders, Buttigieg and Klobuchar will appear tonight, while Biden and Warren will do so on night two.
On the other side of the aisle, the president is also spending much of his week out West for a number of political events. Along with a fundraising swing in Los Angeles today, he is slated to hold campaign rallies on Wednesday (Phoenix), Thursday (Colorado Springs) and Friday (Las Vegas). Additionally, Vice President Pence will campaign on Friday in Reno and Las Vegas.
The Hill: Democrats worried about Trump’s growing strength.
The New York Times: Elizabeth Warren’s allies claim “erasure” as they seek to reignite campaign.
WHITE HOUSE & ADMINISTRATION: The Trump administration, eager to limit China’s access to chip technology and to thwart Chinese telecom giant Huawei, is considering trade restrictions on China to be issued through the Commerce Department that would limit the use of U.S. chip-making equipment (The Wall Street Journal). American chip-manufacturing tool makers, such as Applied Materials Inc. and Lam Research Corp., both in California, are among the largest equipment suppliers in the industry.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), speaking to NATO in Brussels on Monday, said no U.S. ally should allow Huawei into their next-generation cellular networks (The Associated Press).
> Justice Department: Attorney General William Barr, who has expressed sympathy and irritation with Trump’s ire over federal investigations that touched on his actions and those of many associates, surprised some in Washington with reports of his assignments to U.S. attorneys to investigate the investigators. Barr has ordered prosecutors around the country to quietly retrace threads of the government’s Russia probe, including indictments brought following the investigation of former special counsel Robert Mueller and his team.
Examples: Barr assigned Pittsburgh U.S. Attorney Scott Brady to serve as the intake portal for information funneled to the United States from sources in Ukraine, including information about Biden and his son Hunter Biden gathered by Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani; U.S. Attorney John Durham in Connecticut has been working since last year to review the U.S. Russia probe that began when Trump was a candidate up until the time of his inauguration; U.S. Attorney Jeff Jensen in Missouri is tasked with reviewing the criminal case against Trump’s former national security adviser Michael Flynn, reportedly coordinating with the lead federal prosecutor in the case, Brandon Van Grack. Flynn pleaded guilty to making false statements to the FBI about his communications with a Russian ambassador (Fox News).
Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, now a Republican Senate candidate in Alabama, in 2018 assigned U.S. Attorney John Huber in Utah to fully examine the concerns of GOP lawmakers about the government’s Russia probe (The Associated Press).
Since last week, following Barr’s involvement in his department’s sentencing disagreement with lead prosecutors in the case of Trump ally Roger Stone, who was convicted on seven felony counts, more than 2,000 former Justice Department officials called for the attorney general’s resignation. They argue that Barr has eroded the independence of the department from political pressures, complicating the rendering of justice without fear or favor in America (ABC News).
> U.S. Digital Service: The Trump administration embraces at least one innovation held over from the Obama era: a Peace Corps esque initiative that recruits private-sector tech experts to help the government solve thorny problems and projects. Recruiting is ongoing for two-year stints to find coders, programmers and software engineers who can make the government more user-friendly for a tech-savvy U.S. public. One influential backer behind the Digital Service is White House adviser Jared Kushner (The Associated Press).
> Intelligence community: A CIA employee who was granted formal whistleblower status last year could be subpoenaed to testify by GOP senators who want to question him about his complaint that launched the House impeachment inquiry into Trump’s actions and helped trigger two impeachment charges. The simmering tensions about the anonymous whistleblower, whom the president says he’d like to punish, pose additional challenges for the executive branch and Congress (The Hill).
> Beware the insiders (and authors): Former White House national security adviser John Bolton, speaking Monday night at a public event at Duke University, promoted his pending book, which he said is still undergoing government scrutiny and contains revelations that go beyond Trump and Ukraine. “This is an effort to write history and I did it the best I can. We’ll have to see what comes out of the censorship,” Bolton said. “I hope it’s not suppressed” (The New York Times). The president’s former adviser will deliver a lecture on Wednesday at Vanderbilt University along with his Obama-era counterpart, Susan Rice.
INTERNATIONAL: Confirmed coronavirus cases in the United States nearly doubled to 29 on Monday after the evacuation over the weekend of Americans from a cruise ship docked in viral limbo in Japan.
Fourteen of the 300 passengers flown by the U.S. government to military bases in California and on to Nebraska for two weeks of quarantine were discovered to be asymptomatic but infected with COVID-19. They will remain in isolation for monitoring and any necessary treatment (The New York Times).
On the quarantined ship still stuck near Tokyo, 88 more cases of the virus were reported today, bringing the total cases aboard the Diamond Princess to 542. It’s the largest spread outside of China (The Associated Press).
As of this morning, there are at least 73,336 cases of the virus worldwide and 1,874 deaths, according to the latest data. Researchers, who remain vigilant about the advent of a pandemic involving spread on continents with less sophisticated medical systems, are watchful as Africa reported a confirmed case in Egypt. A new report published Saturday in The Lancet described preparations to combat the virus in Africa as of late January.
In China, Liu Zhiming, 51, the hospital director in Wuhan and a neurologist, is yet another fatality there (The Washington Post).
Due to coronavirus fears, China may postpone its annual congress in March, the largest political gathering of the year (The Associated Press). And with similar caution, Japanese organizers say the March 1 Tokyo marathon will shrink from 38,000 participants to just 176 elite runners (The Associated Press and The Guardian).
Following weeks of official Japanese insistence that the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo beginning July 24 are not threatened by COVID-19, some international sports competitions are being moved and others canceled because of fears tied to the virus (International Business Times).
The Associated Press: Apple Inc. warned investors on Monday that the coronavirus will cut iPhone production and sales. China is Apple’s third largest retail market for iPhones, after the United States and Europe.
> Down Under & autos: General Motors is restructuring to emphasize profit-making over market expansion by shuttering operations in Australia and New Zealand and selling its Thai plant to a Chinese company. GM is now concentrating on markets in the United States, China, Latin America and South Korea (Reuters).
>European Union & AI: Days before the 27-member bloc is expected to release tough new proposals on regulating artificial intelligence, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg met top European Union officials on a visit to Brussels on Monday (The Associated Press).
> Arab world & nuclear power: The United Arab Emirates on Monday issued a license for the first commercial nuclear power plant to be built in an Arab nation (The Hill).
OPINION
Why don’t we know which Democratic candidate can beat Trump? by Adam Jentleson, former deputy chief of staff to former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), opinion contributor, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/37vIhal
It’s Sanders versus Biden in Nevada, by Steve Sebelius, columnist, Las Vegas Review-Journal. https://bit.ly/2Hyw1eE
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 10:30 a.m. in a pro forma session and returns to legislative work on Feb. 25.
The Senate will convene for a pro forma session on Thursday at 2:30 p.m and return from recess on Feb. 24.
The president will fly to Los Angeles to meet with the organizing committee for the 2028 Olympics in Beverly Hills and to participate in a roundtable with political supporters. Trump also will attend a joint fundraising committee dinner there as part of a three-day, four-state swing through Western states. He will fly to Las Vegas and remain overnight (KTLA5).
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo traveled this morning to meet in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, with Foreign Minister Gedu Andargachew, followed by a meeting with Ethiopian President Sahle-Work Zewde. Pompeo will meet with Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and attend a working lunch with Ahmed. This afternoon, the secretary will meet with the Inter-Religious Council and then with U.S. embassy staff along with the U.S. Mission to the African Union. Later, Pompeo will meet with African Union Commission Chairperson Moussa Faki Mahamat and join Prime Minister Andargachew during a joint press conference. Pompeo will continue his travel this week with stops in Saudi Arabia, and Oman, returning to the United States on Saturday.
You’re invited to The Hill’s upcoming newsmaker events:
➤ Building the Dream: Charlotte, N.C., on Thursday, with Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles, Rep. Alma Adams (D-N.C.), state Sen. Paul Newton (R) and others to discuss financial hurdles to homeownership. Join live in Charlotte or join the livestream.
➤ America’s Opioid Epidemic: Lessons Learned & A Way Forward, Feb. 26, in Washington, exploring access to treatment for opioid addiction and recovery issues with Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, Rep. David Joyce (R-Ohio) and Rep. Paul Tonko (D-N.Y.). RSVP today!
Catch The Hill’s Campaign Report newsletter, with the latest from The Hill’s politics team. Sign up to receive evening updates, polling data and insights about the 2020 elections.
➔ State watch: Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (D) on Monday lost his bid to ban the sale of assault weapons because some of his fellow Democrats shelved the idea for a year and opted to seek a study (The Associated Press). Separately, Northam released a plan last week to protect seabirds’ habitat along Virginia’s coast following the federal rollback of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and changes produced along the coast by transportation construction (Audubon.org). … In Florida, Miami’s City Commission voted unanimously last week to “humanely” remove wild peacocks in the Coconut Grove neighborhood to relocate them to a sanctuary. The birds’ shrieking and property destruction became too much for residents, especially during mating season (Miami Herald).
➔ Tech: Redbox, the DVD rental service best known for its kiosks, has officially joined the party and launched a streaming service. The company added a “Free Live TV” tab to its website, including a tab featuring shows such as “Family Feud” and “Forensic Files,” among other items as it is rolled out to various streaming avenues such as Apple TV, Roku and Chromecast. The launch comes after attempts to launch a streaming service in 2013 (The Hill).
➔ Fast laps around the track: NASCAR’s Daytona 500 — postponed from Sunday because of rain but accessorized by the vote-wooing presence of Trump, Air Force One and the president’s gleaming black limousine — was won on Monday by Denny Hamlin. NASCAR boasted a record of $23.6 million for the 40 drivers racing in this year’s Florida event (ESPN). A fiery crash on the last lap injured driver Ryan Newman, who is expected to recover (NBC News).
And finally …lost and found! “Portrait of a Young Woman,” painted in 1632, was bequeathed in 1961 to the Allentown Art Museum in Pennsylvania as a coveted Rembrandt. A decade later, experts downgraded the painting’s provenance to be the skilled work of one of the artist’s assistants. Buried for years under yellowing layers of varnish, the portrait underwent a recent two-year restoration and reexamination using the latest technology and experts reversed course and agreed the 400-year-old painting is the real thing. Rembrandt’s mastery, currently in the museum’s vault, will go on display on June 7 (The Associated Press).
And speaking of Rembrandt … Washington’s National Gallery of Art has been reunited with “Philemon and Baucis,” which was painted in 1658 by the artist and loaned by the museum to the Dulwich Picture Gallery in south London. In November, an unidentified criminal stole the work by Rembrandt as well as another masterpiece that belonged to the Louvre in Paris and tried to make a midnight getaway. Chased by Dulwich security guards, the thief dumped the paintings on the museum grounds and escaped. Until a few weeks ago, no one revealed which two paintings had been snatched (Southwark News).
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By Shane Vander Hart on Feb 17, 2020 05:38 pm
The Iowa Senate Education Committee voted to remove diversity plans as a reason five Iowa school districts can use to deny open enrollment requests. Read in browser »
By Shane Vander Hart on Feb 17, 2020 03:55 pm
An Iowa House panel approved a bill requires women seeking a medical abortion receive information about the potential side effects and risks involved. Read in browser »
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Feb 17, 2020 02:55 pm
Gov. Kim Reynolds announced the appointment of Scott Marler to serve as Director at the Iowa Department of Transportation Read in browser »
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Feb 17, 2020 12:29 pm
U.S. Senator Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, announced her endorsement of State Senator Mariannette Miller-Meeks, R-Ottumwa, for Iowa’s Second Congressional District. Read in browser »
By Shane Vander Hart on Feb 17, 2020 11:59 am
The Iowa Democratic Party’s State Central Committee elected State Rep. Mark Smith, D-Marshalltown, as their new party chairman. Read in browser »
Launched in 2006, Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.
Hunter Biden was on the board of a trade coalition that lobbied the Obama administration in 2014 on foreign assistance to Ukraine, and appears to have set up a State Department meeting for the group’s president. Biden’s links to the U.S. Global Leadership Coalition (USGLC) and its affiliate, the Center …
A former Justice Department official and MSNBC analyst who is discussed throughout the inspector general’s report on FISA abuse added his name Monday to a petition calling on William Barr to resign as attorney general. David Laufman, who served as chief of the Justice Department’s counterintelligence and export control section …
President Donald Trump will participate in a briefing with the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Committee and Los Angeles 2028 organizers then attend a fundraiser. Later, the president will travel to Las Vegas where he will stay overnight. Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for …
The View‘s Meghan McCain recently sought a clearer answer from Mayor Pete Buttigieg about his position on late-term abortion. She asked him where he drew the line and whether his position included a baby actually being born: Buttigieg: We live in a country where it is extremely important that no …
Well, it looks like the fight for the democrat nominee is coming down to two people, socialist Bernie Sanders and Globalist Mike Bloomberg. Both are dangerous for America, particularly Bernie. Bernie has promised to forgive all student loans, which currently stands at over $1.3 trillion. Bernie has promised Medicare For All, …
When you’re a Democrat, life is much simpler than the lives of the majority of American citizens. They have fewer decisions to make that could slow them down on the way to destroying America. Democrat thinking goes something like this: Tornadoes are caused by global warming; hot weather is caused …
🚨 Bulletin: Mike Bloomberg qualified for tomorrow’s Democratic debate in Las Vegas after notching 19% in a new NPR-PBS NewsHour-Marist poll.
Bernie Sanders leads the pack with 31%.
Joe Biden fell back to third with 15%.
🍿 What to watch: This could be the most vicious debate yet. The race entered a new phase yesterday when Bloomberg attacked a fellow Democrat. Rival camps resent Bloomberg’s ad-driven rise, so get ready to watch the oppo fly.
1 big thing … “Billions”: Season 2020
Money alone can’t buy a presidential election, but it surely gets you VIP access.
Why it matters, from Axios CEO Jim VandeHei: Billionaire Michael Bloomberg is duking it out with Billionaire Donald Trump, often on Billionaire Jack Dorsey’s Twitter and in ads on Billionaire Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook, all chronicled in Billionaire Jeff Bezos’ Washington Post.
In this race, billions aren’t just buying admission — they’re buying results:
Bloomberg’s TV blitz ($318 million, per FiveThirtyEight) has pushed him from nowhere to the top tier of national polls, alongside Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden, and helped make him the talk of the post-New Hampshire race.
Billionaire Tom Steyer bought himself relevance ($137 million in TV ads), and a respectable showing in polls — with the chance for a strong showing in the South Carolina primary on Feb. 29.
And the whole ecosystem is a billionaire’s ball:
60% of Republicanssay they rely on Billionaire Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News for political news.
Most people follow the race on iPhones or Androids — both made by companies worth more than $1 trillion.
What to watch: Sanders is the one candidate who could target every one of these billionaires.
Longtime Sanders adviser Jeff Weaver, when asked by CNN’s Brooke Baldwin yesterday if the Vermont senator — as nominee — would accept the money Bloomberg has promised to help defeat Trump, replied: “No.”
So the 2020 race could easily be Bernie vs. The Billionaires.
Or, if Bloomberg wins: Battle of the Billionaires.
Banks have been quietly rolling out biometrics to identify customers — verifying them by their fingerprint, voice or eye scan — and retailers like Amazon are getting into the game, Axios managing editor Jennifer Kingson writes.
A handfulof quick-serve restaurants like Caliburger and Malibu Poke are letting customers order via facial recognition at self-serve kiosks.
Mastercard helped pioneer “selfie pay,” which lets customers authenticate themselves for online shopping by snapping a photo.
Why it matters: These companies are amassing giant databases of our most personal information — including our gait, how we hold our cellphones and our typing patterns.
Some banks have dropped the creepier biometrics: Republic Bank of Kentucky said in 2016 that it would let customers log into a mobile banking app by fingerprint or eye vein scan. Now it only offers the finger option.
Amazon wants you to be able to pay for items in physical stores by waving your palm in front of a payment terminal, the Wall Street Journal reports.
The system would link your palm image to a payment card.
Amazon “plans to pitch the terminals to coffee shops, fast-food restaurants and other merchants that do lots of repeat business,” the Journal reports.
Barraged by hundreds of sex-abuse lawsuits, the Boy Scouts of America filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in Wilmington, Del., early today, AP writes.
The 110-year-old BSA hopes to work out a potentially mammoth victim compensation plan that will allow the hallowed organization to carry on.
BSA could be forced to sell off some of its vast holdings, including campgrounds and trails, to raise a compensation trust fund that could surpass a billion dollars.
The Boy Scouts listed assets of $1 billion to $10 billion, and liabilities of $500 million to $1 billion.
4. Pic du jour: Plymouth Rock vandalized
I’m sharing this photo with you mainly because I read once that Plymouth Rock was more like Plymouth Pebble, but I don’t think I’d ever seen it. I always pictured a boulder like the Prudential logo.
Plymouth Rock, marking the Pilgrims’ traditional landing spot in Massachusetts, was defaced Sunday night, with red spray paint partially covering the “1620” inscription. (Boston Globe)
Former national security adviser John Bolton suggested in an appearance at Duke last evening “that his unpublished book contained far more revelations than just the campaign to pressure Ukraine … but said he was fighting ‘censorship’ by the White House,” the N.Y. Times’ Peter Baker reports.
“For all the focus on Ukraine and the impeachment trial and all that, … I view that like the sprinkles on the ice cream sundae in terms of what’s in the book,” Bolton said. “We’ll have to see what comes out of the censorship.”
The book, “The Room Where It Happened,” is due out March 17.
6. 🗞️ National newspapers thrive as locals wither
While big national newspapers grow stronger, local newspaper chains that have for decades kept the vast majority of the country informed are combusting, Axios media trends expert Sara Fischer writes.
McClatchy, the publisher of local stalwarts from The Sacramento Bee to The Kansas City Star to The Charlotte Observer, announced Thursday that it voluntarily filed for bankruptcy to allow the company to restructure debt and pension obligations.
Warren Buffett, a longtime champion of the newspaper business, sold his 30+ daily and 100+ weekly titles to Lee Enterprises earlier this month, after calling the newspaper industry “toast” due to terminal advertising decline.
But the giants are thriving:
The New York Times said earlier this month that it passed $800 million in annual digital revenue, most of which came from the 5 million+ people that now subscribe to the paper’s digital subscription offering.
The Wall Street Journal said last week that it topped 2 million digital subscriptions for the first time.
The Washington Post has been profitable for the past several years under the ownership of Jeff Bezos, and has added dozens of positions to its newsroom in the past two years.
📱 Sign upfor Sara Fischer’s weekly Axios Media Trends newsletter, out later today.
7. TikTok wants more grown-ups
“TikTok has an unusual problem: The video-sharing app is too popular among kids,” the Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
Why it matters: “TikTok, which is owned by Chinese conglomerate ByteDance Inc., has worked to broaden its appeal to adults, which it believes is critical to its growth and survival.”
“It has also been trying to boot younger children off the app, and is required to take offline all videos made by children under 13 under a settlement it reached last year with the Federal Trade Commission,” the Journal continues.
Striking stat: “Of 10-year-old girls with smartphones in the U.S., about 70% used TikTok in 2019, according to new data from Jiminy, an app for parents that tracks the smartphone habits of their children.”
8. Sneak peek: Dan Pfeiffer on beating Trump
Dan Pfeiffer, co-host of “Pod Save America,” is out today with “Un-Trumping America,” where he argues that “the biggest divide in the Democratic Party is not between left and center”:
It’s between those who believe once Trump is gone things will go back to normal, and those who believe that our democracy is under a threat that goes beyond Trump. … If you believe the latter — as I do — then you have to be willing to contemplate ideas that were off the table even a few years ago. …
The Democratic Party needs an aggressive strategy to fundamentally reshape American democracy. … We have to recognize that Donald Trump is not an aberration or an accident. There will be no Republican epiphany during or after Trump. The media won’t save us. Bob Mueller didn’t save us.
Kenan Thompson, the longest-tenured “Saturday Night Live” cast member, will host the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner on April 25.
Hasan Minhaj — host of Netflix’s “Patriot Act with Hasan Minhaj,” and the entertainer at the 2017 dinner — will return as featured entertainer.
WHCA President Jonathan Karl, chief White House correspondent for ABC News, said the two will “help us celebrate the role of a free press in our democracy.”
WHCA partnered with Bob Bain Productions — which has produced the Critics’ Choice Awards, the Teen Choice Awards, the Creative Arts Emmys, Miss America and Trevor Noah stand-up specials — to help produce up this year’s dinner.
The dinner will feature two new awards: the Katharine Graham Award for Courage and Accountability and the Award for Excellence in Presidential News Coverage by Visual Journalists.
10. 🏁 1 car thing: NASCAR scare
Ryan Newman flipped across the finish line of the Daytona 500, his Ford planted upside down and on fire, a grim reminder for a sport steeped in danger, AP’s Jenna Fryer reports from Daytona Beach, Fla.
Roughly two hours after the crash, NASCAR read a statement from Roush Fenway Racing that said Newman is in “serious condition, but doctors have indicated his injuries are not life threatening.”
President Trump, who had officially started the race Sunday before a rain delay pushed it off 24 hours, tweeted: “Praying for Ryan Newman, a great and brave @NASCAR driver! #PrayingForRyan.”
A Tennessee pro-life advocate has numerous pro-abortion activists on video ganging up and harassing her in front of an abortion clinic — the Bristol Regional Women’s Center — and her assailants go so far as to allegedly touch and grab parts of her body and even lick her. To say nothing of the mountain of verbal harassment she’s received — with … Read more
Here is all the news conservatives need to know to start their day. At 9am ET and then at 4pm ET, you can catch me on radio to bring you up to speed on developments throughout the day. You can listen live here.
This is a weird read from the Washington Post. It is another example of putting the narrative above facts. Media outlets, if you have not noticed, are emotionally invested in the idea of racism, bigotry, and xenophobia directed towards Asians during the coronavirus outbreak. On top of that, the Washington Post has taken an extraordinarily […]
I’m legitimately shocked that he gets away with it. I understand that socialist icons historically have always been capable of getting their followers to look the other way as they flagrantly speak out of both sides of their mouths, but the disparity between the things Bernie Sanders says and the way that he lives is […]
The MSM is too quick to “debunk” Cotton because he’s a Republican and supports President Trump. Even dealing with a dangerous outbreak, it’s always Orange Man Bad.
Four Virginia Democrat state senators joined Republicans in the Senate Judiciary Committee with passing on HB 961, the so-called “assault weapons” ban. Had this bill passed, it would have banned most commonly-owned semi-automatic rifles like the AR-15, handguns boasting magazines exceeding 12 rounds, and suppressors. Here are the four Democrats who voted the right way: […]
Former New York City mayor and current Democratic presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg – you know, the guy who shows up during every commercial break on local television – has become a lightning rod for criticism as his candidacy gains traction. Recently, we’ve seen criticism of Bloomberg’s stop-and-frisk policies, as well as for his comments about […]
Bloomberg Sexism Hurts His Presidential Chances
Michael Bloomberg has had a bit of a problem seeming relatable and avoiding criticisms of being ‘out-of-touch’ or inauthentic. While videos of the billionaire shaking a dog’s face as one would a hand or robotically eating ice cream have harmed his ability to seem relatable or human, Bloomberg’s business background, eight-year stint as a Republican, and seemingly moderatepoliciesmake him seem like a more palatable alternative in a democratic field where the frontrunner is openly socialist and the ‘moderates’ have been steadily shifting left in an effort to appeal to radical primary voters.
However, Bloomberg is haunted by a history of egregious comments which will seriously harm his chances of electability. According to a report from the Washington Post, Bloomberg has faced nearly 40 lawsuits for sexual harassment or discrimination. Bloomberg allegedly criticized female employees who got pregnant, going so far as to tell one salesperson to “kill it” when she told him of her pregnancy. He also made many jokes about the women in the company performing oral sex.
In 2016, the Democrats and the media flew into a rage over some of Trump’s comments regarding women, in particular the vulgar Access Hollywood tape. It will be interesting to see how the left responds to one of their own engaging in far worse behavior towards women.
The Left’s Love Affair with Avenatti Ends
On Friday, sleezy celebrity lawyer Michael Avenatti was convicted of three charges (extortion, wire fraud, and intent to extort) for his attempted extortion of Nike. He will be sentenced on June 17thand could face up to 42 years in prison.
Avenatti rose to fame as the attorney of porn star Stormy Daniels, who accused Donald Trump of paying her off to keep quiet about their alleged affair during his marriage to Melania. Avenatti was hailed as the “savior of the republic” and Donald Trump’s worst nightmare by the left. His unsavory dealings were ignored as he became the media’s favorite son in their hopes that the Stormy Daniels scandal would take down the Trump presidency. It didn’t.
As Avenatti faces a very long prison term, the media is forced to contend with their sycophantic adoration of the charlatan. Yet, rather than admit the error of their ways, many are claiming that Avenatti’s conviction is a sign of troubling ‘Orwellian’ censorship of the President’s enemies.
This supercut, created by The Free Beacon, shows some of the worst-aging praise of Avenatti by the press.
In the Cinematic Upset, Sonic the Hedgehog Makes Money and is… Actually Good
All signs pointed to the upcoming Sonic the Hedgehog movie to be absolutely terrible. The original character design released in the first trailer caused an uproar, due to some disturbing features including frightening teeth and an uncanny valley-inducing face shape. While a redesign, increasingly charming trailers, and an admittedly good cast (including Jim Carrey as the cartoonish villain and James Marsden as the straight man) gave some hope for the project, Sonic appeared to be just another terrible videogame movie, to be briefly hated and then forgotten.
In a shocking turn of events, Sonic was a hit. The film boasts a respectable 68% on Rotten Tomatoes from the critics, and an impressive 94% audience score. Further, the film currently tops the box office, making $70 million on its worldwide four-day opening weekend. The movie also broke the record for highest-grossing opening weekend for a videogame adaptation, from last year’s Detective Pikachu. The next highest-grossing film, DC’s antiheroine action flick Birds of Prey came in a distant second, grossing under $20 million during the same opening.
If You’re Going to Watch One Thing This Week…
Catch one of these films currently in theatres, for an enjoyable time
Paulina Enck is an intern at the Federalist and current student at Georgetown University in the School of Foreign Service. Follow her on Twitter at @itspaulinaenck
Note: By using some of the links above, Bright may be compensated through the Amazon Affiliate program and Magic Links. However, none of this content is sponsored and all opinions are our own.
Feb 18, 2020 01:00 am
He crushes his enemies, sees them driven before him, and hears the lamentations of Hillary, Amy, and Nancy. What’s not to like? Read More…
Feb 18, 2020 01:00 am
Would a President Bloomberg with so many ties to a potentially desperate and belligerent China, and subject to potential extortion, act in the best interest of the United States? Read More…
Feb 18, 2020 01:00 am
What if Trump is right, that a significant fraction of the liberal Gentry’s Clients are ready to become Commoners, to #WalkAway from their ethnic enclaves and become 100 percent Americans? Read More…
Feb 18, 2020 01:00 am
The public is being sold the idea of “free” healthcare where you go to the doctor or the hospital and all you pay out of pocket is what you choose to voluntarily spend on a gift basket to thank the doctors and nurses Read More…
And now it’s Tesla’s turn!
Feb 18, 2020 01:00 am
Germany’s greenie left threw a monkey wrench into Tesla’s plan to expand into one of Germany’s higher unemployment states. Read more…
By David Marcus
Michael Bloomberg has surged into second place among Democratic primary contenders in a new poll and will be on the debate stage this week. Full article
By Christopher Jacobs
While John Oliver articulated many of the shortcomings of the current system, much of his arguments in favor of a single-payer system missed the mark. Full article
By Jason Rantz
This would be another thread in a long string of local moves that give the appearance of helping the vulnerable homeless population while instead exacerbating the problem. Full article
By Chip Roy
How soon my leftist colleagues and media flacks forget they engaged in ‘community organizing’ for left-wing activism at the highest levels of the Department of Justice. Full article
By Casey Chalk
The Houston Astros are world-class cheaters, and more must be done to rectify their sin against America’s most hollowed game. Full article
By Nathanael Blake
My hope for another four years of Trump is that conservatives, particularly Christians, will rebuild what has broken and go forth with confidence. Full article
By Kaeley Triller Haver
Third-party reproductive efforts are increasingly normalizing a build-a-baby culture that encourages people to commission designer babies in much the same way they would commission designer handbags. Full article
By Daniel Lee
We need serious examination of the entire rat’s nest, to tease out whether Donald Trump really is an incipient tyrant, or the target and victim of an entrenched bureaucratic state. Full article
By Katya Sedgwick
Communist-minded pundits see the nuclear family as a cultural anomaly, but living with friends can’t replicate the need for family that is in our DNA. Full article
By Kristin A. Shapiro
Even if the bike shelter had been completed on time, one wonders whether $2 million for a bike shelter is a good use of taxpayer dollars. Full article
By Matthew Kline
The XFL’s goal seems to be to build a complimentary league to the NFL, but focused more on the game and less on the million-dollar paychecks. Full article
By Chrissy Clark
According to the U.S. Sun, ABC’s ‘Bachelor’ contestant Victoria Fuller was arrested on August 25, 2017 for a DUI after a night of drinking. Full article
By David Marcus
Disturbing new videos call into serious question the safety of America’s most famous “drag kid” and the motivations of the adults around him. Full article
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Here’s what Michael Bloomberg joining the debate stage means for Wednesday night
LAS VEGAS – Tomorrow night here will be the NINTH presidential debate for five of the Democratic candidates – Bernie Sanders, Joe Biden, Pete Buttigieg, Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar.
And it will be the first debate for Michael Bloomberg.
A new national NPR/PBS/Marist poll out this morning has Bloomberg hitting 19 percent, giving him his fourth accepted poll at 10 percent or higher, which appears to have qualified him for Wednesday’s Democratic debate.
What’s more, Bloomberg’s campaign has said the former New York City mayor will appear on the stage. “Mike is looking forward to joining the other Democratic candidates on stage and making the case for why he’s the best candidate to defeat Donald Trump and unite the country,” campaign manager Kevin Sheekey said in a statement.
Getty Images/Joe Raedle
And here’s what having Bloomberg at the debate will mean:
It could suck the oxygen from some of the candidates trying to compete with Bernie Sanders – like Pete Buttigieg (who won Iowa) or Amy Klobuchar (who finished a surprising third in New Hampshire). Indeed, our friends over Politico Playbook write: “Bloomberg vs. Bernie: It’s on.”
It gives Sanders and Warren the billionaire foil for their policies and worldview.
And it means that plenty of scrutiny is probably coming Bloomberg’s way. That could hurt him. Or he could survive and thrive – like Donald Trump did in 2015-2016.
Strikingly, Bloomberg isn’t even competing in Nevada’s caucuses; he’s skipping the first four contests.
But he will be on the debate stage tomorrow night.
Sanders and Bloomberg leapfrog Biden in national poll
When you add it all up, the biggest likely beneficiary to having Bloomberg on the debate stage is Bernie Sanders – who also is now leading that national NPR/PBS/Marist poll by double digits.
So the Dem candidate who leads Trump by the largest margin – Biden – is also the candidate who’s lost the most ground in the Democratic race after losing in Iowa and New Hampshire.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Crocodile tears?
2020 VISION: Sanders, Bloomberg lead the Super Tuesday state of Virginia
Speaking of polls this morning, a new Monmouth survey shows Sanders and Bloomberg are tied in Virginia, which is one of the 14 states holding contests on Super Tuesday, March 3.
But one important thing here: Just 25 percent of likely Democratic primary voters in Virginia say they are firmly set on their candidate choice – which means there’s still plenty of uncertainty.
On the campaign trail today: One day before Wednesday’s debate, the action remains in Nevada: Bernie Sanders holds rallies in Las Vegas and Reno before attending a CNN town hall at 8:00 pm ET… Pete Buttigieg stumps in Vegas before attending his CNN town hall at 9:00 pm ET… Amy Klobuchar also makes stops in Las Vegas before attending her CNN town hall at 10:00 pm ET… Elizabeth Warren and Tom Steyer attend a National Domestic Worker Forum in Vegas… And Joe Biden is also in the city… Elsewhere, Tulsi Gabbard campaigns in Virginia.
Dispatches from NBC’s campaign embeds: Even in Nevada, Joe Biden can’t escape Iowa. Per NBC’s Marianna Sotomayor, an event-goer yesterday asked how Biden why he thought he lost, and if he can start winning. Biden responded, “One of the four most difficult states for me to win was going to be in Iowa because–they are good people– it’s all white it’s all Midwesterners and a lot of farming and it was going to be but it– We did it okay if you take a look at what happened there, I mean it was kind of an unusual thing that I hope doesn’t happen here,” Biden said. “My support in the Democratic Party and all the data still shows you will see is I am the candidate who has the broadest support from all sectors of the economy.”
And Tom Steyer is telling potential voters that his performance in Nevada and South Carolina is “do or die” for him, NBC’s Jordan Jackson reports. “Steyer answered questions from reporters after the event in South Carolina and spoke about the importance of Nevada and South Carolina to his strategy: ‘They are do or die. You’re asking me a question. I’m telling you the truth. It’s like, I need to be able to show in states where people have seen me and met me.’”
Data Download: And the number of the day is … 26,000.
26,000.
That’s the number of Nevada Democrats who have ALREADY participated early in Nevada’s caucuses as of yesterday, per the state party.
This is the first time Nevada has enabled caucus-goers to participate early – where participants can rank their choices before caucus day.
Also, 56 percent of those who participated early on Saturday were first-time caucus-goers.
The Boy Scouts of America has filed for bankruptcy after facing mounting legal costs from defending itself against sexual abuse lawsuits. Also, Mike Bloomberg is expected to partake in Wednesday night’s primary debate after a new poll qualified him to appear on the stage. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Watch Video +
Boy Scouts files for bankruptcy
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Catholic school’s alleged sacking of gay teachers sparks protests
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Teen strikes plea deal after arrest raises mental health concerns
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Uber whistleblower details allegations in her first TV interview
Watch Video +
Black supermodels on beauty standards through time
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Key to the massive $1.3 billion taxpayer subsidy for Sterling Bay’s Lincoln Yards megadevelopment was a 36-page report declaring that the project met the requirements to get the money. As Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s administration promoted the record tax increment financing deal at a November 2018 public meeting inside a church, a planning official introduced the author of that report as “the city’s TIF consultant.”
What wasn’t said is that developer Sterling Bay had both picked the consultant and paid the firm. And that consultant also had been retained by a Sterling Bay subsidiary to lobby City Hall on the final terms of the Lincoln Yards agreement.
Experts say such arrangements pose obvious conflicts, given that the consultants who certify such projects are being paid by the very developers who are seeking approval for hundreds of millions of dollars. But it’s also common practice in Chicago and other cities when developers propose a project that they contend needs tax increment financing to make it work.
Saying Foxx’s work is a model for progressive criminal justice reform, the former Democratic presidential candidate announced her endorsement early Tuesday. Harris was the top prosecutor for San Francisco before pivoting to the U.S. Senate seat she now holds.
As opioid-related deaths remain stubbornly high across the Chicago area, one corner of the region is bucking the trend. McHenry County has seen the deaths drop dramatically over the last two years, the only Chicago-area county to mark such a decline.
Officials engaged in battling the opioid crisis in McHenry point to numerous efforts they believe are responsible for the decline, from widespread distribution of the overdose-reversing medication naloxone to police departments that usher drug users into treatment instead of jail.
The Cubs on Monday announced a deal with streaming service Hulu to carry the fledgling regional sports network on the Hulu + Live TV service, allowing Midwest viewers to watch the games through a TV, computer or mobile device — without a cable subscription.
Pay no attention to lingering snow flurries and cold winds: In the world of residential real estate, the forsythias and crocuses are blooming, and the spring selling season has sprung.
In Chicago’s suburbs, the Mainstreet Organization of Realtors reports that sales were up 10% in December over November, and houses sold for more, too.
by Dr. Ron Paul: Listening to the howls from Democrats and the applause from Republicans, one would think President Trump’s proposed fiscal year 2021 budget is a radical assault on the welfare state. The truth is the budget contains some minor spending cuts, most of which are not even real cuts. Instead they are reductions in the “projected rate of growth.” This is equivalent of saying you are sticking to your diet because you ate five chocolate chip cookies when you wanted to eat ten.
President Trump’s plan reduces the Education Department’s budget by nearly eight percent, leaving the department with “only” 66.6 billion dollars. Cuts to other departments are similarly small, while reductions in entitlement spending consist mostly of reforms that will not affect most of those dependent on these programs.
President Trump deserves credit for proposing an 11.6 billion dollars cut in funding for the Department of State and the US Agency for International Development (USAID). Foreign aid does little to help impoverished people overseas. Instead, it benefits foreign government officials willing to do the US government’s bidding. The State Department and USAID are extensively involved in US intervention abroad, including efforts to overthrow governments.
President Trump’s budget proposes a number of increases in spending. For example, his budget spends around 900 million additional dollars on vocational education. It also includes additional spending on items including infrastructure and childcare.
Few in DC have expressed concern over the fact that President Trump’s 4.8 trillion dollars budget proposal is the largest budget in American history. There is also little outcry from supposedly antiwar progressive Democrats over Trump’s proposal to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on militarism. This is not surprising, as many progressives are happy to support increased warfare spending as long as conservatives go along with increased welfare spending. Similarly, many conservatives are happy to support increased welfare spending as long as it means that progressives will vote for increased warfare spending. So, Congress is unlikely to approve any of President Trump’s spending cuts, but Congress will gleefully agree to all of his spending increases.
Even if Congress agrees to all of President Trump’s cuts, federal deficits will still be over one trillion dollars for the next several years. However, President Trump claims the budget will balance in 15 years. In order to show a balanced budget by 2035, the administration assumes three percent economic growth for most of the next decade. This level of growth is unlikely to come to pass. Instead, the current boom will likely end soon, and the economy will experience another major recession. Signs that we are on the verge of a downturn include rising homelessness and the Federal Reserve’s bailout of the repurchasing market.
The current economic boom is built on debt, and the debt-based economy is facilitated by the Federal Reserve’s easy money policies. The massive amount of debt held by consumers, businesses, and especially government is the main reason the Fed feels compelled to maintain historically low interest rates. If rates were to increase to market levels, government interest payments would be unstable. This would cause the government debt bubble to burst, leading to a major crisis. However, continuing on the current path of low interest rates will inevitably lead to a dollar crisis and a collapse of the welfare-warfare Keynesian system.
Continuing to waste billions on wars abroad and failed programs at home while pretending that we can avoid a crisis via phony cuts and Fed-fueled growth will only make the inevitable collapse more painful. The only way to avoid economic disaster is to cut spending and audit, then end, the Federal Reserve.
————————— Dr. Ron Paul (@ronpaul), Chairman of the Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity, is a former U.S.Congressman (R-TX). He twice sought the Republican nomination for President. As a MD, he was an Air Force flight surgeon and has delivered over 4000 babies. Paul writes on numerous topics but focuses on monetary policies, the military-industrial complex,the Federal Reserve, and compliance with the U.S. Constitution.
Tags:Ron Paul, Ron Paul Institute, Trump’s Budget, More Warfare, Slightly Less WelfareTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Tony Perkins: You never happened. Imagine sitting down to that headline if you’re Melissa Ohden, Gianna Jessen, or one of a thousand other victims the media says don’t exist. Vox even put the phrase “abortion survivors” in scare quotes, as if the punctuation would help convince America the documented cases aren’t real. Of course, there’s a reason Democrats are desperate for people to believe this is a “fake issue.” They’re hoping the country will ignore their inhumanity. It isn’t, and we haven’t.
“Senate Republicans want to protect babies ‘born alive’ after an abortion,” Vice scoffed. “That doesn’t happen.” Writing for the site, Carter Sherman goes on to argue that pro-lifers are somehow conflating infanticide with “end-of-life care.” But “end-of-life care” that ends in death isn’t care at all — a fact that isn’t lost on most reasonable people. And if the end of life is at its start, then let’s not fool ourselves. We’re talking about infanticide, not “letting the infant pass naturally,” as Vice so blithely puts it.
At one point, Sherman, realizing the facts are bound to catch up with him, admits there are, “exceedingly rare situations where infants show signs of life after attempted abortions.” So we’ve gone from “that doesn’t happen” to “the casualties are too few to worry about.” He points to the 143 born-alive deaths listed in the CDC’s report with a shrug, never mentioning that these only are the numbers from six U.S. states. The government couldn’t factor in the other 44, like Virginia, where infanticide is common enough that Governor Ralph Northam (D) referred to it as “comfort care.”
But the reality is, it shouldn’t matter how many babies were left to die. Rareness doesn’t equal rightness. Terrorism doesn’t happen every day either. Does that mean we leave the country completely unprotected? Absolutely not. A life is a life. If taking an innocent life is wrong, then it’s wrong every time.
Tell that to the 2020 candidates. With the exception of Donald Trump, not one person vying for the job is willing to admit that walking away from a table, while a baby struggles for life, is wrong. “I respect where you’re coming from,” former Mayor Pete Buttigieg said, “and I hope to earn your vote, but I’m not going to try to earn your vote by tricking you.” Buttigieg said. “I am pro-choice. And I believe that a woman ought to be able to make that decision.” By “that decision,” the Indianapolis Star points out, he means any decision.
As “the moderate,” James Briggs writes to his fellow Hoosiers, “You might expect such a candidate to have staked out some sort of middle ground on abortion, Buttigieg has not — and his position reveals why many people who are otherwise open to voting for Democrats find the party so hostile to their values that they are sticking with President Donald Trump despite many reservations.”
Even Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), who’s only being considered a moderate because she’s not a socialist, couldn’t bring herself to say that an infant who’s born alive deserves the same care as a wanted baby. She’s already voted once to make infanticide the new “choice.” Yet, despite all of her support for late-term abortion, birth day abortion, and taxpayer-funded abortion, she tells pro-lifers they’re welcome to join the party. Welcome to be ignored, maybe.
As for Buttigieg, his closing argument to primary voters in Nevada is the promise of free abortions. His health care plan, he argued, “support, reimburse, and fund” abortion. But the idea, Slate has warned, isn’t as popular as Democrats think. The majority of Americans (54 percent to 39 percent) don’t think taxpayers should be financing the killing of innocent children. Obviously, Briggs warns, the Democratic Party has stopped listening to voters’ sincere concerns, “as evidenced by Buttigieg’s unwillingness to bend even rhetorically toward the right.”
That’s bad news for a party whose November hopes are entirely dependent on the undecided middle. “It’s not hard to find people who both oppose abortion and are dissatisfied with Trump’s performance as president,” Briggs agrees. “But if Buttigieg’s position on abortion is indicative of the choices conservatives will face in November, it might be hard for Democrats to win any of them.”
———————– Tony Perkins (@tperkins) is President of the Family Research Council . This article was on Tony Perkins’ Washington Update and written with the aid of FRC senior writers.
Tags:Tony Perkins, Family Research Center, FRC, Family Research Council, On Infanticide, Dems Use Scarce TacticsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: Anyone knowledgeable about medicine — or history, for that matter — is taking very, very seriously the coronavirus outbreak in China, and its subsequent spread across the globe, including to the U.S.
More than 70,000 Chinese have been diagnosed and over 1,700 have died, along with one death in each of France, Japan, Hong Kong and the Philippines.
Over the weekend, Taiwan — the independent island nation a hundred miles off the coast of a hostile, threatening People’s Republic of China (PRC) — announced its first fatality. The deceased Taiwanese taxi driver, whose health was already compromised by diabetes and hepatitis B, likely caught the virus from customers traveling from China.
Last week, China finally allowed the World Health Organization to allow Taiwanese experts to participate in discussions about containing the virus. Unlike China, Taiwan boasts one of the best medical systems in the world.
Also over the weekend, news broke that Chinese President Xi Jinping had mentioned the coronavirus in a speech given many weeks before officials first alerted the public.
That’s how the totalitarian PRC rolls. At all levels. One victim of the virus is Dr. Li Wenliang, who warned back in December that the disease was spreading. First, he was reprimanded and then “apprehended by Wuhan police for spreading ‘rumours,’” reported Aljazeera.
“As more information leaks out from Wuhan, the epicenter of the outbreak,” a recent Taipei Times editorial argues, “it is clear that Beijing was unable to prevent the virus from spreading out of control precisely because it lacks the accountability, freedom of speech and free flow of information that form the bedrock of democracies.”
Yet another way that freedom affirms life and totalitarian tyranny kills.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
—————— Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
Tags:Paul Jacob, Common Sense, The Most Deadly DiseaseTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
. . . And the beginning of an opportunity to build a better culture.
by Mark Tapson: One week ago, the Dolby Theater in Hollywood hosted the 92nd annual Academy Awards show. If you are like most Americans, you didn’t even know it happened and you don’t care, because Hollywood has renounced its central position in American culture. It has imploded under the weight of its own virtue-signaling, America-loathing self-righteousness.
Many decades ago, the Oscars was a noteworthy pop culture event because the show featured captivating, adult screen idols Americans loved who knew how to exude glamour and keep their politics to themselves. This year, the ceremony’s ratings plunged to an all-time record low, down twenty percent from last year’s already-low viewership. The New York Times couldn’t figure out why; it put forth different theories – too many commercials, a crowded TV season, the lack of a host – and ignored the most obvious explanation: American viewers, sick of forgettable left-coast elites lecturing them about what climate-denying, meat-eating, white nationalist rubes they are, have turned their backs on the entertainment industry in massive numbers.
For the same reason, the Oscars ratings-fail mirrored last month’s epic crash-and-burn at the Grammys. This year’s music industry freak show was the lowest-rated in Grammy history. The Golden Globes ratings fell too, hitting an eight-year low. The audiences of all showbiz awards events (and there are far too many) have been trending downward, largely because the shows are dominated now by foul-mouthed children (of all ages), who think they’re being morally courageous by slamming President Trump, crying about climate extinction, or “shouting their abortions” in acceptance speeches. Sane Americans have had enough of this relentless politicization of the culture and trashing of their values.
The snowballing apathy toward the entertainment industry’s biggest nights of the year should be a wakeup call to celebrities that The End is Near – the end of Hollywood, at least in America – but it won’t be. They will go down with the ship, clinging to their political self-righteousness to the last breath because they would rather die than humble themselves before the “flyover” Americans between the coasts whom they have so openly despised for decades.
I am using the label “Hollywood” here, for better or worse, as shorthand for the major film studios and major internet production companies like the leftist propaganda outlet Netflix. I am including all the woke, conformist celebrities, from A-list to D-list, who contribute to the art-destroying politicization of entertainment. I am also including the mega-corporate music industry, which cynically focuses not on music but on churning out, using up, and then tossing aside younger and younger cookie-cutter stars. I am not including every independent production company or individual who works in entertainment. It is easy to forget that there are thousands of conservatives working at all levels in showbiz, most of them closeted for fear of being socially shunned and unofficially blacklisted by the intolerant “liberal” majority. For that matter, there are untold numbers of people in entertainment who simply don’t care about politics either way; they just go along to get along. Unfortunately, that makes them part of the problem.
Exhibit A of the reason America tuned out this year’s Oscars: Brad Pitt accepted his Best Supporting Actor award with a ghostwritten speech that immediately got political, referring to the Democrats’ recent failed impeachment of President Trump. Exhibit B: Best Actor winner Joaquin Phoenix unloaded a rambling acceptance speech condemning human beings for prioritizing themselves over other species, specifically our ruthless appropriation of milk from cows. Phoenix has been photographed on more than one occasion wearing a hoodie emblazoned with the phrase “Support the Animal Liberation Front.” The Animal Liberation Front is a domestic terror group.
(Speaking of domestic terrorists, Barack Obama’s production company Higher Ground took home an Oscar for Best Documentary for the film American Factory, one of whose filmmakers [Exhibit C] quoted from the Communist Manifesto in her acceptance speech. The film aired on Netflix, with which Obama and wife Michelle have a multi-year production deal that could be worth $50 million or more. Why do you think Obama went straight to Hollywood after his presidency instead of settling into the role of elder statesman? Because he knows the cultural arena is more important than the political arena for fundamentally transforming America. Conservatives, take heed.)
But the Oscar for elitist virtue-signaling has to go to Vietnam-era traitor Jane Fonda, who has made trendy climate-change activism her new cause célèbre. Exhibit D: she postured in a selfie shared on social media that she was at the Oscars wearing “Pomellato jewelry because it only uses responsible, ethically harvested gold and sustainable diamonds.” Got that, Middle America? While you’re driving down to Wal-Mart in your gas-guzzling, planet-ravaging pickups, Hanoi Jane makes the woke, self-sacrificial choice to wear only ethically-harvested and sustainable jewelry. Celebrities are simply worthier human beings than you are.
Earlier this year as the host of the Golden Globes, comedian Ricky Gervais excoriated the smug celebs in the audience over their hypocrisy and politicized acceptance speeches. His brutally acerbic monologue made him a temporary, unlikely hero of countless Americans. After this most recent Oscars telecast bombed in the ratings, Gervais tweeted this: “I have nothing against the most famous people in the world using their privileged, global platform to tell the world what they believe. I even agree with most of it. I just tried to warn them that when they lecture everyday, hard working people, it has the opposite effect.”
But Hollywood doesn’t care about those everyday, hard-working people in America, partly because those deplorables support the hated Trump and partly because its audience is becoming increasingly global anyway (China, for example, is poised to become the biggest theatrical film audience in the world any day now). Leftist celebs care only about the approval of other leftist celebs; they will go on pushing their Progressive messaging and high-fiving each other at failing awards shows for their PC conformity no matter what goes on outside their gated mansions. If American audiences abandon them, stars can always pick up a big paycheck by performing privately for dictators overseas or shooting a lucrative commercial in Japan. The major studios will continue to lazily milk sequels and reboots (there is actually a reboot of Honey I Shrunk the Kids in the works) and CGI-bloated superhero flicks that play well overseas.
The important takeaway from the decline and fall of Hollywood in American culture is that it paves the way for entrepreneurial American creatives to build an alternate, parallel culture that isn’t centered on anti-Americanism, racial antagonism, anti-Christian bigotry, class warfare, and vulgarity – if we dare to seize the opportunity.
————————- Mark Tapson is the Shillman Fellow on Popular Culture for the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
Tags:Mark Tapson, End of HollywoodTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Free Press International: A Democrat state representative in Alabama has introduced a bill which would make it mandatory for all men in Alabama over age 50 and all men in the state with three children to get vasectomies.
State Rep. Rolanda Hollis introduced HB 238 on Thursday.
Hollis said her bill aims to “neutralize” the 2019 passage by Alabama’s legislature of the Human Life Protection Act which bans abortion with very few exceptions.
Hollis tweeted on Feb. 13: “The Vasectomy bill is to help with the reproductive system. This is to neutralize the abortion ban bill. The responsibility is not always on the women. It takes 2 to tangle. This will help prevent pregnancy as well as abortion of unwanted children. This bill is to help men become more accountable as well as women.”
The bill would require every Alabama man to undergo a vasectomy within one month of his 50th birthday or the birth of his third biological child, whichever comes first.
HB238, the two-page bill proposed by Hollis, notes “under existing law, there are no restrictions on the reproductive rights of men.”
The bill also would mandate that each vasectomy occur at the respective man’s “own expense.”
The bill awaits further deliberation in the Alabama House Judiciary Committee.
During debate on the Human Life Protection Act last year, Hollis read the poem “If My Vagina was a Gun”, which critics say was her attempt to inject the gun rights issue into the pro-life discussion.
————————- Free Press International News Service, Alabama, State Rep. Rolanda Hollis, HB 238, : Free Pressers (@FreePressers).
Tags:Free Press International, News Service, Free Pressers, Democrat, State Rep. Rolanda Hollis, HB 238. Requires Vasectomies, For Alabama MenTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Rick Moran: Elite tactical units from the Customs and Border Patrol will be sent to sanctuary cities for several months, the Department of Homeland Security announced yesterday. The elite CBP agents are normally used to deal with smugglers and other violent offenders.
This is the latest in the escalating war against sanctuary cities and states by the Trump administration. And the sanctuary cities can’t do anything to stop them.
“This is transparent retaliation against local governments for refusing to do the administration’s bidding,” said Naureen Shah at the American Civil Liberties Union.The New York Times reported that Customs and Border Protection is sending 100 agents to assist U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. CBP usually handles border and port matters, while ICE is responsible for interior enforcement and deportations.The ACLU is correct — it is retaliation. It’s retaliation for years of sanctuary cities thumbing their noses at the law and generating enormous fear and hostility against Washington among both legal and illegal alien communities alike. They thought this just one big game. They are finding out otherwise.
ICE, though, has increasingly struggled against sanctuaries, which while they vary in their exact policies, generally restrict cooperation between local authorities and federal immigration law enforcement.
The most extreme of jurisdictions refuse all communications, including refusing to tell ICE when illegal immigrant targets with criminal records are being released from jail.ICE says it wants to be on hand to pick them up and deport them, getting criminals out of communities.
Sanctuaries argue that if they cooperate with ICE it will scare immigrants from reporting other crimes.I am tired of that excuse. Illegals are terrified of the police. What little cooperation the cops get comes only after the illegal is threatened by the police to be handed over to ICE.
If the left wants to use the heartbreaking story of illegals to gain sympathy for their cause, two can play at that game.
Mr. Trump, in remarks at the White House Friday afternoon, blasted sanctuaries and gave a platform to Daria Ortiz, whose 92-year-old grandmother was slain earlier this year in New York City in a death the president blamed on sanctuary policies.Reeaz Khan, the Guyanese illegal immigrant accused of killing Maria Fuertes, had been released by New York in November in defiance of an ICE detainer request.
Ms. Ortiz broke down in tears as she recalled her grandmother, a legal immigrant from the Dominican Republic. Mr. Trump put his arm on her back to comfort her as she spoke.
“The tragedy is my grandmother’s not ever going to be here again,” Ms. Ortiz said. “The man that is responsible for this should have never had the opportunity to do this.”The courts may not force sanctuary cities to cooperate with the federal government, but they aren’t going to tell Washington where it can deploy its agents. This war is a long way from being over.
——————- Rick Moran is PJ Media’s Chicago editor and contributor. He is blog editor at The American Thinker. His blog is Right Wing Nut House.
Tags:Rick Moran, PJ Media, Trump Administration, Deploy Elite Tactical Units, to Sanctuary CitiesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
… Too many Americans and especially Millennials are spending beyond their means.
by Thomas Gallatin: There may be a simple reason why a majority of Americans appear unconcerned about the massive debt the federal government accumulates year after year — most folks live with significant debt themselves. With pretty consistent economic growth over the last decade — and especially the last three years — Americans have little excuse for the record amount of personal household debt they hold. But on Thursday, Americans’ average debt numbers were released and the figures should scare everyone.
“Total household debt now stands at a massive $14.15 trillion, which is $1.5 trillion above the prior record from 2008 as the financial crisis was hitting,” the Washington Examiner’s Quin Hillyer reports. “Credit card debt, at $930 billion, is likewise at an all-time high. Worse, in the fourth quarter of 2019, the proportion of credit card debt late by at least 90 days rose to 5.32%, an eight-year peak. For people aged 18-29, that rate of serious delinquency stood at a 10-year high of 9.36%. Of those with credit card debt in this age cohort, a whopping 67% of them report feeling serious stress about it.”
Is it any wonder Millennials in particular have responded positively to Bernie Sanders’s socialist siren song of “free college” and Medicare for All? It’s a shame that with all the bountiful opportunities to get a job and grow one’s wealth, the desire for immediate gratification and keeping up with the Joneses has trapped a growing number of Americans in a hamster’s wheel of debt.
“If someone has seriously delinquent credit card debt but owns the American average of 2.5 televisions (per household), then the $600 for the extra 1.5 TV was a choice, not a necessity,” Hillyer cogently observes. “If someone eats outside the home (or bagged lunch) just one fewer time per week, he saves another $468 per year. If he disposes of a perfectly good smartphone just to get the latest bells, whistles, or nanoseconds of speed, that’s a voluntary decision.”
If we as Americans can’t get our own personal spending under control, why would anyone expect lawmakers in Washington to quit running up the national debt?
———————— Thomas Gallatin is a Features Editor at The Patriot Post.
Tags:Thomas Gallatin, The Patriot Post, Americans’ Record Household Debt, Is a National ProblemTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Tristan Justice: The former Navy SEAL responsible for killing al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden offered some harsh advice for Democrat presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg, who often touts his five months in Afghanistan on the presidential campaign trail.
“My advice for Pete Buttigieg… Stop playing war hero. You’re gonna get called out,” wrote Robert O’Neill on Twitter.
My advice for @PeteButtigieg … Stop playing war hero. You’re gonna get called out.
Former South Bend, Indiana mayor Buttigieg, coming off two strong performances in the Iowa and New Hampshire primaries, often references serving as a naval intelligence officer as a primary qualification for his fitness to serve in the Oval Office.
“When I was deployed, I felt it. I felt that the flag on my shoulder was keeping me safe because it stood for a country that was known to our allies and our adversaries to be one that keeps its word,” Buttigieg told a crowd in Iowa last month. “And when I’m your commander-in-chief, no ally will ever have reason to question whether it’s a good idea to bet your life on the credibility the United States of America.”
As U.S. Marines Greg Kelly and Katie Horgan write in the Wall Street Journal, however, veterans often “roll their eyes” when Buttigieg talks of his time in the Navy. Kelly and Horgan note Buttigieg jumped on the fast-track to becoming a military officer through a direct commission in the reserves, circumventing the years of intense training and preparation that most must go through to achieve such a status.
“Mr. Buttigieg skipped all that—no obstacle courses, no weapons training, no evaluation of his ability or willingness to lead,” the Marines write. “Paperwork, a health exam and a background check were all it took to make him a naval officer.”
The two Marines also reference Buttigieg’s book chronicling his time as a war tourist with time to relax and read.
“Working eight-hour days,” Buttigieg wrote discussing his time stationed at a base in Illinois, featured “a relaxing contrast from my day job, and spending time with sailors from all walks of civilian life, was a healthy antidote to the all absorbing work I had in South Bend.”
When writing about his five months spent in Afghanistan, Kelly and Horgan point out, Buttigieg marveled at having “more time for reflection and reading than I was used to back home,” saying he would take “a laptop and a cigar up to the roof at midnight to pick up a Wi-Fi signal and patch via Skype into a staff meeting at home.” The Marines note:
The closest he came to combat was ferrying other staffers around in an SUV: In his campaign kickoff speech last April he referred to ‘119 trips I took outside the wire, driving or guarding a vehicle.’ That’s a strange thing to count. Combat sorties in an F-18 are carefully logged. Driving a car isn’t.————————– Tristan Justice (@JusticeTristan) is a staff writer at The Federalist focusing on the 2020 presidential campaigns. H/T Insights & Issues.
Tags:Tristan Justice, The Federalist, Robert O’Neill, Navy SEAL, Who Killed, Bin Laden, Tells Buttigieg, Stop Playing War HeroTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:Editorial Cartoon, AF Branco, Separate And Unequal, Andrew McCabe, gets away with lying, while Roger Stone, faces charges, for the same thing, Two-Tiered JusticeTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by NRA-ILA: The campaigns of Democrats seeking to challenge President Donald Trump in November 2020 seem to be on a never-ending quest to see which one can implode in the most spectacular fashion.
All (with the exception of Swalwell) of these candidates, at one point or another, were considered rising stars or poised to be embraced nationally as the new standard-bearer for the Democrats. And while Warren does remain an active candidate, her third-place finish (at least as far as we know) in Iowa was somewhat of a push for her among those making wagers on who will face Trump. Finishing a distant fourth in New Hampshire this week should be enough to tell her that a head-to-head against President Trump is simply not in her future.
Which brings us to the man who had been the frontrunner for the Democrats since he entered the race; former Vice President Joe Biden.
At one point last May, Biden held a commanding lead over his competition, hitting 41% support at the national level, and outpacing his closest rival by slightly more that 25%.
But oh, how the mighty have fallen.
The polling aggregators at Real Clear Politics recently put Biden in second place, his national support having plummeted by more than 20%. Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders is their new frontrunner.
In the Iowa Caucus debacle, where Biden once held a solid lead with 28% support, President Obama’s old running mate finished a dismal fourth (again, as far as we can tell). This week, in New Hampshire, Biden pulled out of the state before voting was even completed so he could focus on the upcoming South Carolina primary in a desperate attempt to salvage his campaign’s viability. As is a recurring theme with Biden, he once held a commanding lead in the Granite State with 34% support, but that support collapsed, and he fell even further back in the field, finishing in fifth place.
So, what do we make of the Biden collapse? To be honest, everyone should have seen it coming.
After all, Joe Biden has a propensity for making bizarre statements, and we’ve covered his gift for gaffes in the past. His curious approach to winning over Democrats continued while campaigning in New Hampshire, when he uttered one of the most odd insults ever offered by a candidate for president, after a young lady asked him about his lackluster performance in Iowa.
With a struggling campaign, what should a former frontrunner do? Looks like one approach Biden has chosen is to follow the lead of so many failed presidential campaigns during this election cycle; ratchet up the anti-gun rhetoric.
Of course, Joe being Joe, he had to add his own incomprehensible take on the subject.
During a campaign event in New Hampshire, before his hopes of a positive showing had completely flamed out, Biden lamented over the notion that “we’re unwilling to have a rational policy that says you cannot have 20, 30, 40, 50 clips in a weapon.”
Are those paper clips, binder clips, or just news clips of a candidate having yet another “senior moment?”
Biden regularly (although inaccurately) interchanges the terms clips and magazines, so does he think the gun industry has developed a new firearm that is capable of having dozens of magazines attached to it? Perhaps this is another one of those mythical guns that Biden has dreamed of before, like the “James Bond-style” of firearm he believes exists outside of a Hollywood movie lot.
But Biden didn’t stop there. While he didn’t go full-Swalwell (never go full-Swalwell) with the threat of nuclear weapons being used against American citizens, the foundering candidate did make reference to the futility of Americans offering any resistance should a tyrannical government ever rise to power.
“The fact is,” Biden proclaimed, “if you’re going to take on the government, you need an F-15 with Hellfire missiles.” In other words, don’t bother trying to resist a tyrannical government, as its military will be too well equipped. Tell that to the rag-tag group of citizens who banded together in 1775, armed with their hunting muskets often pulled down from over the fireplace, to face off against, and defeat, the greatest military power of the time.
——————– NRA-ILA article.
Tags:Joe Biden, Eric Swalwell, Election 2020, Biden Goes, Swalwell-LiteTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Robert Romano: In order to do everything possible to remove President Donald Trump from power, Congressional Democrats have waged an incessant war on the presidency and Article II of the Constitution itself, taking actions clearly authorized under law — on travel restrictions, the wall, targeting terrorists and engaging in diplomacy — and rendering them as offenses, if not against the law, then against their sensibilities.
And it is harming America.
When President Trump imposed travel restrictions on certain terrorist hotspots in 2017, even though presidents have the power to impose such restrictions under 8 U.S.C. 1182(f), it was an instant ticket to federal court before President Trump was vindicated by the Supreme Court in 2018, as the restrictions were upheld as constitutional and legal.
Same story with the President’s decision to reprogram $6.7 billion of military construction monies to build the wall on the southern border. That was another ticket to federal court for something the President clearly has the power to do under 10 U.S. Code § 2808(a). Ultimately, President Trump prevailed in Congress and in the Supreme Court legally on that question too, and about 500 miles of new and repaired wall will be done by the end of 2020.
There was also the President’s inquiry to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky about the state of a corruption probe in Ukraine against corrupt natural gas firm Burisma whose head awarded natural gas rights to himself during the Yanukovych administration that was terminated early when former Vice President Joe Biden had the prosecutor fired in 2016 who says he was looking into the company that Biden’s son served on the Board of Directors of.
Here, Democrats sought to have President Trump removed from office, even though profiting off of Ukrainian oligarchs who served in the Yanukovych administration and stole funds is prohibited under Under 22 U.S.C. Section 8904(a) and might be cause to return any profiteering from the company if it is found to be corrupt: “The Secretary of State, in coordination with the Attorney General and the Secretary of the Treasury, shall assist, on an expedited basis as appropriate, the Government of Ukraine to identify, secure, and recover assets linked to acts of corruption by Viktor Yanukovych, members of his family, or other former or current officials of the Government of Ukraine or their accomplices in any jurisdiction through appropriate programs, including the Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Initiative of the Department of Justice.”
In addition, the U.S. and Ukraine have a mutual legal assistance treaty, signed in 1998, that provides for each country to assist the other in legal matters. Meaning, the President was well within the four corners of the law to ask Zelensky about the state of the investigation into Burisma to ensure that it was not cut short as a political favor to Biden in 2016.
Even the targeting of Iranian general Qasem Soleimani as a legitimate military target in Iraq is being legally challenged, even though Congress authorized the use of military force in Iraq in 2002 that has still not been rescinded. Just because somebody is not native to Iraq does not mean they cannot be targeted in Iraq if they are waging war against U.S. and Iraqi forces there. The President was well within his legal authority to target Soleimani.
Congress is busy passing a resolution that would seek to prevent the President from taking further actions against Iran, unless Congress has acted to authorize such actions, which it has in Iraq, rendering such a resolution moot.
President Trump will veto the measure, but even if he didn’t, the targeting of Soleimani would have still been legal under the resolution because Congress still has not rescinded the authorization to use force in Iraq.
To the extent that Iran continues to engage in hostilities in Iraq — which the Pentagon has for years determined Soleimani and Iran were engaged in — the President is fully within his rights to defend U.S. forces.
The war on the President has also reached diplomacy. When President Trump had high level talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin, something all prior presidents have done in communicating with Russian heads of state, it is not the legitimate exercise of diplomacy, but high treason because Democrats falsely convinced themselves that Trump was a Manchurian candidate recruited by Putin himself to do his bidding.
Never mind that U.S. and Russian presidents need to talk to one another if about nothing else then about the thousands of nuclear weapons pointed at one another and keeping us out of an unintentional war. All that is now undermined because Democrats refuse to dignify and legitimize President Trump by suggesting he has the power to engage in such talks, which he clearly does under Article II of the Constitution.
Now, a lot of this can be talked up to the separation of powers and what to expect to a certain extent when you have mixed government with a president in one party and a chamber of Congress run by the other party. But it appears to have gone far beyond that. Democrats want to ensure that Republican presidents cannot do the things that Democratic presidents can do legally. The government is only allowed to function when they are in charge, otherwise all bets are off — even if that means disenfranchising 63 million people who voted for Trump.
Future presidents, especially Republican ones, could be weakened if Trump does not prevail in this struggle. All of which makes 2020 a crucial election as time will tell if the American people take this opportunity to repudiate this assault on the Presidency itself, or if they will succumb to it.
——————– Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
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by Hans von Spakovsky: On Presidents Day, we celebrate the life and accomplishments of our first president, George Washington, the father of our country, and Abraham Lincoln, our 16th president and one of our most renowned statesmen.
On that day, Feb. 17 this year, we should remember that the Framers of the Constitution wanted to ensure that an American president—such as Washington and Lincoln—would have the power to defend the country when the safety, security, and independence of its people are threatened.
And that power is exactly what they gave the president in the Constitution when they made him the commander in chief of our military forces.
This is particularly important given recent legislation passed by the House of Representatives, a so-called “war powers resolution.” It condemned President Donald Trump for ordering the lawful targeting of an Iranian general, terrorist mastermind Qassim Suleimani, and ordered Trump to stop using all military force against Iran without prior congressional approval.
Iran has been a longtime state sponsor of terrorism, according to our own State Department, and Suleimani made himself a target. He was a mass murderer responsible for thousands of deaths, including hundreds of Americans.
On a recent trip through Pennsylvania, I was reminded of what Americans have suffered at the hands of terrorists and the importance of having a commander in chief with broad constitutional authority to react immediately to threats against the nation.
On a cold, icy day, my wife and I stopped at the Flight 93 National Memorial, which honors the 33 passengers and seven crew members of United Flight 93 who died when their Boeing 757 airliner crashed into a field just outside Shanksville, Pennsylvania, on Sept. 11, 2001.
We all know what happened on 9/11. Al-Qaeda terrorists hijacked four commercial airliners. They flew two into the twin towers of the World Trade Center, and flew the third into the Pentagon, murdering almost 3,000 people.
The fourth flight was United Flight 93. It took off from Newark, New Jersey, headed for San Francisco with four hijackers on board masquerading as passengers. Forty-six minutes into the flight, they attacked the captain and first officer, took over the controls of the airplane, and changed direction to head for Washington, D.C.
Half an hour later, the plane crashed upside down at 563 miles per hour into the field where the memorial is today.
We know what happened in that critical half-hour not only from the cockpit voice recorder recovered by authorities at the horrendous crash site, but from the 37 telephone calls to, and voicemail messages left with, the friends and families of the passengers on the flight.
Through those phone calls, the passengers learned of the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon and quickly realized why the hijackers were headed for Washington.
The passengers made a collective decision, took a vote, and decided to attempt to retake the plane. Among the passengers was Todd Beamer, an Oracle account manager who was the father of two sons, David and Andrew, and whose wife, Lisa, was pregnant with their third child.
A born leader, Beamer decided to take matters into his own hands and fight back. Before leading other passengers in a final fight against the terrorists, he called flight dispatch and spoke with Lisa Jefferson. He asked her to say the Lord’s Prayer with him.
After praying with her, Beamer uttered his famous words, “Let’s roll,” to his fellow passengers. The cockpit recorder captured the shouts, crashes, and sounds of the melee that occurred when the passengers attacked, including one who yelled, “Let’s get them!”
The 9/11 Commission concluded that the hijackers crashed the plane when they realized that the passengers were only seconds away from overcoming them and taking back control of the plane.
The Flight 93 National Memorial, just like the National September 11 Memorial & Museum in New York and the National 9/11 Pentagon Memorial, is deeply affecting. Set in a bucolic, quiet Pennsylvania field, the memorial is a solemn reminder of the ravages of terrorism and the triumph of ordinary heroes over evil incarnate.
It is impossible to view, listen to, and read the personal stories of the individual passengers on that flight without being greatly moved and greatly angered. The stories explain what has happened on the plane and what the passengers plan to do about it even as they say farewell to their loved ones.
These average, ordinary Americans took on four jihadist hijackers at the cost of their own lives. They prevented those terrorists from what would have been a devastating attack on a notable location in Washington, most likely the U.S. Capitol or the White House. The Flight 93 crash site is only 18 minutes flying time from Washington.
There is no need to rehash what happened after 9/11, including the immediate steps that President George W. Bush took to safeguard the country and to go after the terrorists who had sponsored, financed, and planned the attack on America. But Bush’s actions illustrate how important it was then, and is today, that our Constitution provides for a strong commander in chief.
As the Justice Department said in a 2001 legal opinion, no law and no congressional resolution “can place any limits on the President’s determinations as to any terrorist threat, the amount of military force to be used in response or the method, timing, and nature of the response. These decisions, under our Constitution, are for the president alone to make.”
That is a good thing.
So while we are celebrating Washington, who led an eight-year fight for our liberty, and Lincoln, who fought to stop the breakup of the Union, we also should be thankful for other presidents who used the strong power of the executive to protect the nation.
That includes President Franklin Roosevelt, who led us in the largest war in our history against two brutal tyrannies, as well as Bush, who acted decisively after the worst attack on American soil since Pearl Harbor.
Trump also should be applauded for taking out a terrorist thug who had American blood on his hands, and who would have continued to kill Americans.
Americans just like those who died on United Flight 93 when it crashed in what the National Park Service appropriately calls “a field of honor forever” in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.
——————– Hans von Spakovsky is an authority on a wide range of issues—including civil rights, civil justice, the First Amendment, immigration, the rule of law and government reform—as a senior legal fellow in The Heritage Foundation’s Edwin Meese III Center for Legal and Judicial Studies and manager of the think tank’s Election Law Reform Initiative. More ARRA News Service articles by or about Hans von Spakovsky
Tags:On Presidents Day, Remembering Why We Have, Strong Commander in Chief, Hans von Spakovsky, The Heritage Foundation, The Daily SignalTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Daniel Greenfield: In 2016, Donald Trump proved that money won’t buy you the Republican nomination. In 2020, his likely challengers are proving that not only can you buy the Democrat nomination, but it’s the best way.
Michael Bloomberg is making headlines for spending $300 million on advertising to buy third place. That doesn’t include the $10,000 spent on sushi, $250,000 on furniture, and six figure staffer salaries. With a $61 billion net worth, the billionaire just decided to buy the primaries. And his buying spree is working.
The Dems claim to hate billionaires, but two of them successfully bought into the race, Bloomberg and Steyer, while completely lacking the populist appeal that propelled Trump to the top. The Bloomberg-Steyer spending sprees have set off a dieback in the Dem 2020 race where only those candidates with lots of cash can even compete. Warren’s campaign is crumbling along with her financial prospects.
Steyer is cutting off Biden at the knees in South Carolina and Bloomberg will probably finish him on Super Tuesday. That will leave Buttigieg and Sanders as the only non-billionaires with a real shot.
What makes a socialist from Vermont and the failed mayor of a midwestern city competitive?
Money. Lots and lots of money.
Bernie Sanders raised $25 million in January. Buttigieg put together almost $3 million after Iowa.
While Bernie fulminates about the rich, he’s in second place and rising because he has so much more money to spend than his opponents, including Biden, do. That is the real secret of his success.
The socialist outspent his rivals by $15 million. He blew through $50 million in the final months of the year to buy the surge that put him over the top. In January, Bernie spent $8 million on ads, Buttigieg spent $6.5 million, Warren $5.4 million, while Biden was down to $2.4 million. Spending money doesn’t ensure results, but it certainly helps. Buttigieg’s “surprise” was really spending a lot of money.
Bloomberg and Bernie are both elderly New Yorkers with unpleasant personalities and a lot of cash. The distinction between buying an election with your own money or grassroots fundraising is virtue signaling. What does matter is that the 2020 nomination is for sale to those with the money to buy.
Enough money can make otherwise non-viable candidates like Bernie and Bloomy into ‘contendahs’.
Bernie’s fans will argue that his money comes from “small donors”. But what that leaves out is that the small donors are privileged lefties with lots of money to throw at elections. It was enough to buy Iowa, but the caucus results also showed that Bernie has no crossover appeal and isn’t boosting turnout.
Both Bernie and Buttigieg benefit from the same kind of money machine printed by an enthusiastic fan base. And the fan base sees the two men, less as viable presidential candidates, and more as a means of mainstreaming a larger campaign that they care about even more than winning an election. Bernie’s fans would trade losing the 2020 election for a takeover of the Democrats. That’s always the agenda.
And much of Buttigieg’s cash flow has come from gay donors who care less about him winning than about his presence on a national stage. Unlike the donors of the other 2020 candidates, who fold when their candidate stops being viable, the money machines funding Sanders and Buttigieg will never stop.
Much like Bloomberg and Steyer’s cash machines.
Bloomberg’s $61 billion fortune is formidable, but so is the net worth of Bernie and Buttigieg’s bases.
Biden’s donors have always been shaky. They’re investors, looking to buy influence, and aren’t going to sink good money after bad. They’re not going to keep spending money because they want to see Joe kissing little girls on the lips in Florida, groping matrons in Minnesota, or slurring speeches in South Carolina. Biden’s only real shot was sealing the deal out of the gate. And now he’s in trouble.
In the final quarter of the years, Sanders and Buttigieg both outraised Biden. Warren nearly did.
Where Trump had underspent his primary rivals, his prospective opponents are outspending them. And that’s good news for Trump and bad news for the Democrats who are going to be fighting a populist who got to the White House by beating money machines with another money machine candidate.
The Dem spending race is one reason why candidates who might have taken off with minority voters never got much traction. Building primary debates and fundraising around small donors allowed the passionate wealthy fanbases of Sanders and Buttigieg, or even Yang and Warren, to dominate the race. Meanwhile candidates who might have appealed to black voters never even got off the ground.
The two black candidates originally in the race, Harris and Booker, had little support in the black community, and had instead gotten as far as they did by cultivating wealthy white donors, Harris on San Francisco’s Nob Hill, and Silicon Valley and Manhattan for Booker, without ever building a black base.
They never did manage to pick up enduring black support in the race before their cash ran out.
If Biden collapses, the Democrats risk going into the 2020 race with a candidate who doesn’t appeal to black voters. That description covers Sanders, Bloomberg, and Buttigieg to varying degrees. And, without vigorous black turnout, the odds of a Democrat winning the White House are longer than long.
You can buy the nomination, but you can’t buy enthusiasm outside your narrow fanbase.
Bloomberg, at least, understands that and is going about buying the election in the most direct fashion. He’s avoided the debate stage until now, his campaigning is limited, and instead he’s spending a fortune on ads. He’s also paying influencers to tweet positively about him and, probably, buying endorsements.
The billionaire is trying to buy the nomination the same way his rivals are. He’s just not ashamed of it.
Bloomberg blew off the farce of the Iowa caucuses, the trek through New Hampshire diners, the pretense that this is about anything other than the thing he has more of than almost anybody else on the planet. Media bias? Bloomberg, the media outlet, is open about its campaign bias for its boss.
If this goes on, the 2020 primaries could narrow down to a battle between two deeply cynical campaigns headed by two New Yorkers, one a plutocrat and the other a socialist, with piles of money, and deep contempt for the process and the leadership of the party whose nomination they’re contesting.
Bernie Sanders isn’t a Democrat, except when running for the party’s nomination. Michael Bloomberg ran New York City as a Republican because the party was available and he bought it and a few others.
The 2020 Democrat nomination could very well come down to a race between two men who aren’t really Democrats, don’t care about the party, and are bypassing and trashing it at every opportunity.
The Sanders campaign is just the tip of the spear for a radical leftist takeover of the Democrats. Its base is animated by paranoia, malice and rage. Any primary Sanders loses must have been rigged. And every negative mention of Sanders is a neo-liberal conspiracy. They hate the Dems and the hatred is mutual.
At the 2016 convention, I spoke to Democrat delegates who, anonymously, voiced fear and distaste of the “crazy people”, as they often called Sanders supporters. Meanwhile, Sanders backers in Philly spoke of supporting the Green Party. No wonder, President Trump is cheerfully egging on the paranoia of the Sandernistas, convinced that the process is rigged against them, partly because it is, and partly because they’re projecting what they would do on to their opponents as totalitarian movements always do.
Bloomberg doesn’t have a campaign. He bought one by paying everyone working for him more. There’s no movement here. But, if Biden and Buttigieg fall, he becomes the default candidate of other Dems.
And Bloomberg’s political career comes down to spending enough money to be the default candidate.
In a field of terrible candidates, he aspires to be the boring candidate that the battered DNC spouses will settle for, who can buy a general election the way that he’s trying to buy the primaries. It’s cynical.
But so is the whole race.
What does it say about Democrats that they’re being bought? All the billionaire bashing, the attacks on Wall Street and Silicon Valley, the small donor qualifiers for the debate stage and the PAC virtue signaling were meant to establish that they weren’t about money, but about ideas and principles.
But much of the party, in poll after poll, appears to be willing to vote for anyone who will stop Trump.
It doesn’t matter if he’s a socialist or a plutocrat, or a guy with hair plugs deep in his brain. Democrats have shown that they have the same set of standards as any gold digger: a lot of money and a pulse.
In the polls, Democrats have shrugged off any interest in nominating a black person or a woman. They don’t especially care about policies. Their only concern is with electability and retaking the White House. And electability means a big campaign machine, a lot of ads, a lot of publicity, and a lot of money.
Billionaires are trying to buy the nomination because the Democrats prostituted their party. They put themselves up for sale to the highest bidder in a desperate effort to stop President Trump.
They didn’t expect a guy with $61 billion to show up.
But, after all the virtue signaling, just like any gold digger, they’re sending the message that he’ll do.
——————- Daniel Greenfield (@Sultanknish) is Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and an investigative journalist and writer focusing on radical Left and Islamic terrorism.
Tags:Daniel Greenfield, Sultan Knish, 2020, Democrat Nomination, for SaleTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Jared Harris: As COVID-19 brings China to its knees, fear surrounding the virus has permeated the globe. The communist regime has quarantined tens of millions, and neighboring countries have shut their borders.
Although the United States has only 15 confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus, the unknown nature of the bug likely means that it’s only a matter of time before the virus becomes established.
“So far we’ve been able to contain it,” Redfield said in a Thursday CNN interview.
“This virus is probably with us beyond this year, and I think eventually the virus will find a foothold and we will get community-based transmission.”
Only two of the American cases were confirmed to be from transmission outside of China, according to the CDC — the rest are travelers who recently visited the Asian giant.
“You can start to think of it in a sense like seasonal flu,” Redfield continued. “The only difference is we don’t understand this virus.”
By the way things are shaping up in China, it does appear that this virus is too widespread to simply disappear with containment.
The CDC hopes to exploit the comparatively early warning America had to prepare the health system for the possibility of a major outbreak in the states.
“Our whole issue right now is … aggressive containment to give us more time,” Redfield said.
“It’s going to take one to two years to get that probably developed and out, to prepare the health systems to be able to be flexible enough to deal with the potential second major cause of respiratory illness.”
Watch Redfield’s comments below.
China’s mistakes may now land the world with another potentially fatal seasonal virus, as common and easily spread as influenza.
Thankfully, the CDC and other agencies are working hard to ensure this isn’t our future.
—————– Jared Harris is Content Editor The Western Journal. He was an infantryman in the Arkansas and Georgia National Guard and is a husband, dad and aspiring farmer.
Tags:CDC Director, warns outbreak, USA, Coronavirus, coming to USA, Jared Harris, The Western JournalTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Penna Dexter: During the past decade or so, pro-life state legislators have been passing laws placing commonsense, often very modest, restrictions on abortion. It’s sad to see a lot of this progress wiped out when a different party comes into power. This is happening right now in the state of Virginia.
The new democratic majority in Virginia’s house and senate is working to pass a package of bills that will reverse these protective laws.
One bill removes Virginia’s requirement that abortions be performed by doctors. Nurse practitioners, physician’s assistants, and certified nurse midwives will soon be allowed to abort babies.
There’s also a bill repealing Virginia’s informed-consent requirement, under which abortion providers must provide each woman at least 24 hours’ notice of her right to withdraw consent for the procedure, to speak with the physician who is to perform the abortion, and to know the gestational age of her unborn child.
Another bill takes abortion facilities out of the “hospital” category, thus weakening their safety regulations.
The hard-won requirements that an ultrasound be performed on each woman seeking abortion, and that she be given the opportunity to see that sonogram, will be gone. Mandatory parental consent for minors seeking abortion will be abolished.
Pro-abortion advocates told Associated Press they hope to make Virginia a “safe haven” for women in neighboring conservative states that have these laws regulating abortion.
Tarina Keene, Executive Director of NARAL Pro-Choice America, says “These laws have been about shaming women, stigmatizing abortion, shutting off access, discouraging doctors from providing this care.” Care? These protective laws were a way to enhance safety and provide protective care for women who chose abortion, which is not care. Every abortion kills an unborn baby and damages its mother.
Pro-choice advocates in blue states see the Supreme Court chipping away at Roe v. Wade. They worry Roe will be reversed. So they are proactively repealing these abortion restrictions where they can. And negating a decade of progress.
————— by Penna Dexter, Contributing Authoris an author, lecturer, visiting professor and radio host and contributor on nationally syndicated Point of View and the “Probe” radio programs.
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by Rick Crawford: Last week, the House passed H. J. Res. 79, a resolution designed to negate the seven-year deadline for ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) originally set in 1972. Sadly, I was unable to participate in this vote because I was attending the funeral of a close family friend. However, I am not afraid to say that I would not have supported this resolution had I been present.
As a husband and a proud girl dad, I am, of course, supportive of a nation in which women enjoy all of the same freedoms as men. However, the legislation that came before the House of Representatives this week was not about equal rights for women but was instead an attempt by pro-abortion groups to overturn nearly all existing pro-life policies. This was not a movement for the expansion of women’s rights but a serious infringement on the lives of the voiceless. Pro-abortion groups like NARAL and Planned Parenthood have not shied away from speaking the truth about the ERA, blatantly promoting it as the next step for further solidifying Roe v. Wade and claiming it as the path to “bodily autonomy.” I support equal opportunity, equal pay, and equal rights for women, but I will not support a pro-abortion Equal Rights Amendment.
In addition to being a serious pro-life threat, H. J. Res. 79 was an attempt by House Democrats to force an amendment written over half a century ago into our founding document. The United States of 1972 is not the same as the United States today- our culture and society look dramatically different. If we are going to take on a task as monumental as amending the Constitution, we must ensure that our language and actions reflect the values of America in 2020. We cannot flagrantly ignore the process of governance intricately designed by our Founders, and we cannot legislate in the 21st century with the words of the 20th century.
At the end of the day, H. J. Res 79 is a tool to bury the beliefs of pro-life women and eliminate the rights of the unborn under the ruse of promoting equality. As the ERA conversation almost inevitably continues in our nation, I urge you to remember the importance of preserving the rights of all Americans, and I promise to do the same.
—————— Rep.Rick Crawford is a Republican serving the 1st District of Arkansas and is the the ARRA News Service Editor’s Congressman.
Tags:Arkansas, AR-01, 1st District, congressman, Rick Crawford, Equal Right AmendmentTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
. . . lives on in modern-day assisted death movement
by Anne Marie Williams: On January 27th, the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, ShoutMyStory.org executive director Cynthia Morales emailed supporters about the connection between the Nazi concept of “lebenswurtes leben” (life unworthy of life) and the recommended abortion of preborn babies diagnosed with “incompatible with life” conditions.
Strikingly, the same “lebenswurtes leben” concept sounds eerily similar to the ideology of the “right-to-die” movement now active across the United States and throughout Europe.
Of course, assisted suicide advocates would be quick to claim that the Nazi euthanasia movement — which first led to the killings of mentally or physically impaired German children, then mentally ill adults, then mentally or physically impaired concentration camp inmates, then Jews, Poles, gypsies, and others — was coercive.
The right-to-die movement is all about advocating “freedom” for “qualified terminally ill Americans” to “live and die according to our own beliefs,” per the website of Death with Dignity, the organization that’s crafted language for virtually every U.S. assisted suicide law on the books. Just as “lebenswurtes leben” was sequentially applied to larger and larger populations of people, right-to-die legislation casts a progressively wider net of “qualified” candidates.
Chillingly, Belgian Federal Control and Evaluation Committee on Euthanasia chairman Wim Distelmans led a group of assisted suicide practitioners to Auschwitz in 2014 (a place he called “inspiring”) because “there is no better place than Auschwitz to ponder the meaning of dignity.” Distelmans went on, “When we deal with euthanasia, we must also come to terms with its opposite. In Belgium we use euthanasia in the original sense of the word: It means ‘good death.’ That’s the problem. We will have to explain over and over that we intend the opposite of what occurred in Auschwitz.”
In reality, Distelmans has personally gained notoriety for euthanizing twin brothers who were going blind, and a transgender man whose sex reassignment surgery did not relieve his gender dysphoria. More broadly, Belgium, which legalized assisted suicide in 2002 and euthanasia for children in 2014, has come under fire for euthanizing children for cases including muscular dsytrophy, brain tumors, and cystic fibrosis.
As the world resolves to “never forget” the atrocities of the Nazi euthanasia movement, concentration camps, and more, we would do well to read the writing on the wall in our own states and countries. Wherever people are led to believe that suicide is the only “dignified” way to die given one subjective definition of “life unworthy of life” or another, loss of respect for all life — and gradually coercion to condone and even facilitate assisted suicide — are likely to follow.
———————– Anne Marie Williams writes for Life Action News.
Tags:Anne Marie Williams, Life Action News, Life Unworthy of Life, Nazi IdeologyTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
. . . As you read this article, the ARRA News Service editor asks you to consider: Why only 27 or 29 years for Heinous Murder?
by John Binder: A pair of Mara-Salvatrucha (MS-13) gang members were each sentenced to 27 years in prison for their involvement in murders, attempted murder, assaults, and drug dealing in Maryland.
MS-13 gang members Jose Garcia, 28-years-old, and Carlos Diaz, 29-years-old, were sentenced each to 27 years in federal prison and five years of supervised release for their involvement in a violent racketeering conspiracy that included murder, according to the Justice Department.
Garcia and Diaz were each involved in a murder carried out by the MS-13 gang. In one case, Garcia admitted to attacking a victim with machetes and knives in March 2017 alongside other gang members after luring him into Wheaton Regional Park. The victim was beheaded, dismembered, his heart was ripped out of his body, and he was buried in a pre-dug grave.
Diaz, in a separate incident in April 2017, and other MS-13 gang members helped lure an alleged rival gang member to the Frederick City Watershed to then murder him with machetes and dismember his body before throwing him in a pre-dug grave.
In Wheaton, Maryland, in 2016, prosecutors said Garcia was involved with a murder plot to kill a suspected rival gang member by luring him into Wheaton Park. When the victim would not go to Wheaton Park, another MS-13 gang member tracked him down and shot him on the street. The victim survived.
As Breitbart News reported in July 2018, the original case brought by the Justice Department saw the indictment of 24 MS-13 gang members in total in Maryland — all for their involvement in violent racketeering conspiracy, including murder.
Federal officials noted that every year, the Unaccompanied Alien Children (UAC) program is widely used by the MS-13 gang to import illegal alien members into the country. Annually, about 22,000 potential recruits for the MS-13 gang are resettled throughout the country by the federal government. The MS-13 gang originated in El Salvador and has used the U.S. immigration system to slowly build up its membership.
———————- John Binder (@JxhnBinder) is a reporter for Breitbart News.
Tags:Two MS-13 Gang Members, Get 27 Years, in Prison, for Maryland MurdersTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by John Porter, Contributing Author: All who love Freedom please hear me. Human life is one long struggle for Freedom. People struggle individually for Freedom from different personal things in their lives. You have your personal struggles and I have mine. But there is a Freedom that is paramount in importance to our personal ones.
It is the one Freedom which binds us all together. It is Freedom from the bondage of another individual or the bondage of a big overbearing Socialist government, meaning living the way you desire to live and the Freedom to pursue that desire, without causing harm to another or their property, the freedom to use the earnings from your labor as you see fit. If we find ourselves without these Freedoms, none other matters. Death would be better than suffering the consequences of the loss of this Liberty.
I think it good to be reminded, the citizens of the thirteen American Colonies were delivered from the human bondage of an overbearing King and his government with our long and bloody fight for independence from England. Citizens of the United States were delivered from human bondage of other citizens with our long and bloody Civil War. My writings on this subject are efforts on my part to hopefully help Americans see that we for many years have been allowing ourselves to again fall into bondage to a large, all powerful and overbearing Federal Government by continuing to elect (hire) people to serve us in Washington who believe it should be just that. More were elected to congress in November, 2018.
We finally elected a president in Donald Trump, who is trying his hardest to reverse that direction in which we have been traveling. A local Dr. friend emailed me his thoughts on President Trump which, with his permission, I must share with you here:
“I see Trump (who I do not identify with, nor even like personally) as the answer to the needs of America. I liken him to Jonah, who was forced to obey his call to serve God and go to his assignment in Ninniva. He has the tools and ideals of a true American. Thanks be to God for sending us a prophet to speak to the evil government which had developed before him, and grant him wisdom and strength to pull this evil-filled populace with Your spirit and Love. Please restore us to the nation we were designed to be and replace evil with good.”We must take care!! Our Freedom is in our hands. We are the caretakers of it, not only for ourselves, the living, but for those yet to be born generations who will follow. If the burning desire for it is not in our hearts we will surely lose it.
In 1944, Judge Learned Hand said, “Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women; if it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court can save it.” Why do I write so much about Individual Freedom, you ask? I am doing the very best I can to rekindle the flame of Liberty in the hearts of those who may have lost it, and keep it alive in those whom yet it flickers.
I can not state strongly enough the essential, paramount importance of our support for President Trump in his battle to protect us from bondage. SOCIALISM is the greatest threat to our nation and freedoms today, and besides those in our government promoting it, it is unlawfully pouring over our southern border every day and night with all the evils which come with it.
I am convinced that the only thing keeping us from a full blown Socialist takeover of America, even with all his faults, is our current president. Believe me when I say President Donald Trump IS the wall in more ways than you may possibly realize.
Please forward as far and wide as possible and post on Facebook. America needs all of us now. “If you do not take an interest in the affairs of your government, then you are doomed to live under the rule of fools.” Plato.
STOPPING SOCIALISM IS THE MOST IMPORTANT ISSUE BEFORE US TODAY!!
———————- John Porter is an Americans first, constitutional conservatives second. His allegiance is to the Constitution. He seeks to help save America from the grips of socialism and an all powerful, intrusive government, and from the evil of Islam. He is a contributing author to the ARRA News Service.
Tags:John Porter, Freedom In Our Hands, freedom, socialismTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
In 2010, the San Francisco Giants won the World Series in large part to 1st baseman Aubrey Huff. He finished 7th in the MVP race batting .290 with 26 home runs. He helped carry the team to the championship with a home run, 4 RBIs, and a .957 OPS percentage. It’s quite possible they wouldn’t have made it to the World Series without him in his first season with the team and they probably wouldn’t have won it all even if they made it. But they did and Aubrey Huff helped make it happen.
But Huff has two problems. At least they’re considered problems by the virtue-signaling leftists who make decisions for the team today. He’s a patriotic American and he has a sense of humor. Those two traits combined to make some “unacceptable” Tweets that have made him essentially anathema to the team. As a result, he is the only former player not invited to their 10-year World Series reunion.
Snubbed. @SFGiants tell #AubreyHuff he is not invited to the team’s 2010 World Series reunion set for August. The teams says @aubrey_huff‘s comments on social media are “unacceptable & run counter to the values of our organization.” pic.twitter.com/AHk8RASHas
Some players cheat with performance enhancing drugs. Others are convicted of crimes. But Huff committed the worst crime of all in the eyes of an increasingly sensitive society. He espoused conservative values and showed his support for President Trump. To a “woke” team like the San Francisco Giants, there’s really nothing worse than that.
His first “offense” was to Tweet out something millions of Americans agree with wholeheartedly. The backlash was swift, unhinged, and utterly ridiculous.
I was teaching my kids how 2 shoot guns responsibly. I did make a political opinion but at no time did I threaten anyone’s life. You & ur colleagues @espn@Disney create more political & racial divide everyday. See how you played the race & politics card here to fit ur narrative? https://t.co/6uoExntisW
The other “unacceptable” Tweet was about kidnapping Iranian women, saving them from the treatment they receive in the oppressive Islamic “republic” so they could gratefully feed him grapes. It was mildly offensive and clearly a joke, but the reactions to the Tweet were nothing short of complete outrage. He was accused of promoting human trafficking and rape. His response to the accusations demonstrated his self-proclaimed mastery of stick figure drawings.
In light of today’s post about rescuing Iranian women from that shit hole. This is what I would imagine grateful Iranian women would do to show their appreciation to any man who saved them from the assholes that beat them, & make them wear a long tunic & scarf in 110 degree heat. pic.twitter.com/LidqxedETG
A politically incorrect conservative is the cancel culture’s dream target. The Giants, ESPN/Disney, and MLB in general are playing their roles as woke virtue signalers. Snubbing Aubrey Huff is an example of why President Trump will win.
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The Evangelical Dark Web exposes Andy Stanley’s heretical worldview. Andy Stanley is a pastor at one of America’s largest megachurches, #5 according to Wikipedia, #1 according to Outreach. His influence on the evangelical church is perhaps second to none. As a result many, Christians and churches are influenced by his teachings. This video is intended to be a concise way to show fellow believers that Andy Stanley is a wolf in sheep’s clothing.
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For a few weeks, I’ve had an article brewing in my brain. It’s a follow-up to a previous article that I wrote, and I was pleased to read the new article last night. I didn’t write it, but it was pretty much the defense I was planning on making as a follow-up to the Christian perspective for supporting our President.
WesternChauvinist: Reluctant Trump Christians, Where Is Your Confounding Love? https://t.co/Znj1gslP6M
I have a new wrinkle to add to the argument. I was a NeverTrumper. In fact, I was such an angry NeverTrumper that I left the GOP in July, 2016, and started a new political party. Things were going extremely well as we surpassed 30,000 members very quickly, but I was blindsided by dissension from within that evicted me from the party I established. It hurt. I withdrew from politics and public society for several months.
The small, empty spot I left open in the world of politics would have stayed empty for a long time had it not been for two things. First, I had given everything to the party prior to being usurped. I sold my half of a company that I’d worked hard to build because I believed my calling was in politics, not advertising. Most of the money I received from the sale went into two things: The party and my newborn son’s healthcare. He was born with a bum ticker, putting me and my wife in hotels in Hollywood for three months through his three open heart surgeries. It was expensive, much more than expected. The party was expensive as well; getting to the point that fundraising could support it required money up front. Just as we were a month or two away from making the party self-sufficient and able to start paying me back, I was hit with the bad news that they were moving on without me.
At least I thought it was bad news at the time. As it turned out, the second thing that brought me back into the world of politics was a direct result of what took me out of it. Depressed, I turned to faith. The Bible is far more capable of curing all ills than most people realize. Human expression falls short in describing how amazing the Bible truly is because Λόγος, the Logos, the Word itself has power beyond what our feeble minds can grasp.
I can’t recall exactly what it was that made me realize the “bad” things that had happened were really blessings in disguise. It would be nice to tell a story at this point about how this verse or that passage made me reexamine politics and my place in it, but I was too stubborn to let it all happen at once. It was gradual. I started writing again. I even did a couple of interviews, something I did every other day when the party was going strong but had stopped doing mostly out of shame. Through it all, I gradually realized my complaints about the President weren’t nearly as prevalent as the good things I saw happening in America.
For the last year or so, my transition from NeverTrump to unabashed Trump supporter was completed. It doesn’t seem like a long time, but I actually have no lingering reservations about the President. Do I still get annoyed by some of his Tweets? Absolutely. But I’ve been wrong about him enough to realize the fight over his bombast is insignificant compared to the fight against the once-creeping Marxism that is now in full sprint towards America. I was sure he’d buckle on the wall. He hasn’t. I was sure he’d cave to gun control. He didn’t (bump stock ban notwithstanding). I was sure Chinese tariffs would cripple our economy. It hasn’t.
At heart, I’m still a conservative who opposes the populist, big government agenda. But I’m also aware that the long-term goal of less government and more constitutional conservatives in control in DC can only be achieved by walking the populist path for now. In fact, I’m confident that my dreams of inserting fiscal and social conservatism into the DNA of our lawmakers is only possible after the growing allure of Marxism is beaten back into its dark cave. The right person to do that is President Trump and the right party to see it through is the GOP.
Someday, I’ll be back to fighting for a resurgent Tea Party-esque entity that’s putting limited-government, federalism-minded conservatives in to replace RINOs and neocons. But the bigger fight right now is against Mike Bloomberg, Antifa, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Extinction Rebellion, Bernie Sanders, Justice Democrats, Everytown for Gun Safety, George Soros, Planned Parenthood, mainstream media, and the Democratic Party.
We need to limit government. We need to fight Cultural Marxism. We need a whole bunch of people fighting the good fight. For the next five years, the person to lead those fights is President Donald J. Trump.
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For the fifth-straight year, the state of Colorado is experiencing an increase in violent crime. In the wake of more restrictions on liberty. Sales of guns have decreased over roughly the same time span. Contrast this with a decrease in violent crime along with record gun sales in the rest of the nation.
An increase in violent crime in the wake of more liberty control is a common occurrence in the people’s republic of California, New York and Illinois. The news this morning that Virginia had turned away from this fate was welcomed by all of the pro-liberty right. Unfortunately, this was not the case with the Centennial State, which serves as a warning for everyone else (Hat-tip to Cam Edwards at Bearing arms).
Once again, it’s been proven that liberty control doesn’t work
The founding fathers were truly geniuses in creating a system of states that served as regional laboratories for various ideas. The states can adopt ideas that work, while rejecting ideas that don’t.
Unfortunately, leftists prioritize power over practicality, making them perfectly willing to adopt bad ideas if they will increase their power base. Liberty grabber leftists like to take on the pretense of being practical, desirous of “common sense” solutions. But when those solutions crash and burn, they fall back on the old standby of “good intentions.”
The problem for the left is that after repeated failure, they can no longer fall back on the “good intentions” excuse. There are plenty of examples of their freedom-destructive solutions failing to work. Nevertheless, they still push them elsewhere in a quest for power.
A steady stream of excuses proves the failure of any agenda
Point out to a liberty grabber leftist that their gun confiscation agenda is a complete failure and they will invariably parrot the usual excuses about gun trafficking or the need for even more draconian restrictions on freedom. Never mind that liberty control only impacts the innocent.
Leftists never have to answer for the fact that their agenda actually puts people in danger. They never question their belief that taking the guns from the innocent will create a perfect “gun free’ Utopia.
They never have an answer for the fact that “liberty free” (aka “gun free”) zones never work as advertised. Their only response is to double down on expanding the same bad idea.
The bottom line: The liberty grabber left only cares about power
If they truly cared about people, the liberty grabber left would take a hard look at the failure of their policies. They would examine whether or not their agenda of common sense gun confiscation is going to keep anyone safe.
They would not call for more liberty free zones since 94% of mass shootings take place in these death traps if they truly cared about the children. But that isn’t the case. The liberty grabber left never looks back at their failures, only forward to attaining more control over the people.
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OMG! Another coronavirus conspiracy theory! Block it! Kill it with fire!
Sorry, folks. This isn’t a call for mass hysteria, but it’s a cautionary analysis of what’s going on with Covid-19, the novel coronavirus that has been spreading across China, around the world, and aboard cruise ships that are supposed to be properly quarantined. At least one, the Diamond Princess, is having major challenges keeping its passengers and crew from getting sick despite a strict quarantine that, by all measures, should have contained the disease to a few dozen people at most.
As of this morning, the total hit 454 infected.
How is it spreading so quickly despite the quarantine being in place? Experts are attributing it to a long incubation period. I can buy that, especially considering 70% of those testing positive for the disease have been asymptomatic. But even as it seems to calm questions about why it spread so quickly, it doesn’t jibe with the fact that measures were taken at the beginning of the month to keep people from catching it. Even given a two-week window, the sharp rise in infections seems to indicate something was at work here beyond a man who left the ship over three weeks ago. If all the infections happened prior to quarantine, one would expect the total number of infected to be much lower and the percentage of people showing symptoms to be higher. What went wrong? Something did, but authorities aren’t sure what it could be.
Despite every American being tested three days ago, 14 turned out to be infected once evacuations started. Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health said he would not be surprised if more American evacuees get sick and that it’s clear quarantine on the Diamond Princess didn’t work.
“I mean, I’d like to sugarcoat it and try to be diplomatic about it, but it failed,” he said. “People were getting infected on that ship. Something went awry in the process of the quarantining on that ship. I don’t know what it was, but a lot of people got infected on that ship.”
Let’s be clear. Based on the information the various governments and health organizations are putting out, a basic quarantine should work. The disease is supposed to be spread by close contact—sharing someone’s air, so to speak—or direct contact. If someone sneezes or coughs in front of us, we can catch it. If we touch something that was recently touched by an infected person and then we rub our eyes or touch our mouths or noses, we can catch it. It’s very much like the flu, or so we’re told. Defending against these events is relatively easy if everyone stays in their rooms and remains a safe distance from others when in open air. In other words, the quarantine process should have worked unless other things are in play.
It’s very concerning that the United States decided to evacuate people from the quarantined ship early. In fact, it makes absolutely no sense unless they feared something they’re not telling us. Otherwise, the proper course of action is to maintain the integrity of the quarantine and wait it out until everyone can be tested after a two week period. Pulling people off early tells us unambiguously that they had other fears, that the quarantine was not effective and they knew it.
There are three possibilities popping around mainstream and conspiracy news sites over the past few days.
The infection was initially much larger than anyone knew with dozens already infected before the quarantine went into effect.
Someone is spreading the disease through indirect contact such as meals or delivered messages.
The disease is spreading through the ventilation system.
Here’s the problem. None of these are supposed to be possible based on the information the public is being given. For the virus to be widespread before the quarantine means a lot more people would be showing symptoms; the incubation period is 4-14 days.
Paranoia is thick enough on the ship that most everyone should be washing their hands thoroughly before and after handling anything such as plates or envelopes. The diseases is supposed to have about a 15-minute window from the time it’s transferred to a surface before it must find a new host. Indirect transmission seems very unlikely to have caused such a widespread outbreak.
That leaves the ventilation system. According to the CDC, “there is no current evidence to suggest that the virus spreads through air-handling systems. Staying in your room and limiting contact with other people are the best ways to minimize exposure.”
The words “no current evidence” should stand out when considering the move by the U.S. to evacuate. What if there is evidence? Would they tell us? Probably not yet. Doing so would cause widespread concerns, even panic, while not actually being beneficial towards finding a solution. But knowing there was an issue with the quarantine would demand their action of pulling people off the ship as quickly as possible.
It’s taboo to ask certain questions about the coronavirus because doing so runs the risk of causing panic. But as it’s becoming increasingly clear this disease is unlike anything our world has ever faced, a little panic seems to be in order.
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BREAKING: Special prosecutor John Durham & his team have been investigating the #SpyGate scandal since at least March 2019, yet almost a year later, they still have NOT interviewed the central figures in the scandal:James Comey nor Andrew McCabe nor John Brennan nor James Clapper
There are four possibilities why U.S. Attorney John Durham has not moved on the Deep State players the President and most conservatives have vilified for the better part of three years.
The investigation is collecting so much information that they’re trying to get everything nailed down before making a public move.
The Deep State apparatus is too strong, holding back the Department of Justice from doing its job.
The people in question did nothing that can easily be criminally charged.
The DoJ is waiting to unveil their findings, file charges, and make arrests at a time when it is more productive for the 2020 election.
Under normal circumstances, I would never assume someone like Attorney General William Barr would ever sign off on option four. He’s not immune to political expediency, but he seems to rank delivering justice and doing his job higher on his decision-making hierarchy than election-year politics. However, these aren’t normal circumstance. The Deep State has taken the most direct and aggressive stance against this administration than against any other since President Kennedy. Could Barr and Durham really be playing politics, timing out their moves to calibrate (though not necessarily collaborate) with the Trump campaign?
Yes, it’s possible. At this point I wouldn’t say it’s likely, but the timing of the McCabe announcement is telling. There was no need to release this information to anyone, including McCabe’s lawyers, unless they’re either winding down the investigation or ramping it up. In hopes of not sounding naive, I am very hopeful that it’s the latter. Former Trump campaign adviser and Deep State target George Papadopoulos believes the DoJ simply has its sights on bigger fish than McCabe.
The errand boys like McCabe were never the target. Brennan was running this with Clapper. Be patient. Case is being built around them with the lower level grunts like Alexander Downer and others having already been interviewed.
Will conservatives be patient? No. We’ll complain. We expected great things out of Durham and Barr and after a year of great expectations they have nothing to show for it. The wheels of justice turn slowly, but considering that wrongdoing has already been exposed on multiple levels by other investigations, even the impotent Inspector General report, it’s not an unfair expectation that we see charges and arrests very soon.
It would be the biggest letdown for Republicans since the midterm elections if nothing comes from the Spygate investigation. Then again, it would be a strategic masterpiece if the hammers start dropping closer to the election.
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Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam’s sweeping measure to ban ‘assault weapons’ and ‘high capacity magazines’ was defeated in the state senate’s Judiciary Committee this morning. Four Democrats voted with all of the Republican’s on the committee to reject the legislation.
Senators voted to shelve the bill for the year and ask the state crime commission to study the issue, an outcome that drew cheers from a committee room packed with gun advocates.
Four moderate Democrats joined Republicans in Monday’s committee vote, rejecting legislation that would have prohibited the sale of certain semiautomatic firearms, including popular AR-15 style rifles, and banned the possession of magazines that hold more than 12 rounds.
It was only a few weeks ago on January 20, 2020 that a record number of pro-liberty demonstrators flooded the streets of Richmond, Virginia, voicing their opposition to these draconian measures against freedom. Demonstrators sporting ‘Guns SAVE Lives’ stickers cheered the defeat of the ban, a measure that threatened to rip the state apart.
The sponsor of HB961 , Delegate Mark Levine, wanted to limit everyone’s unalienable human rights by defining an “Assault Weapon” based on how a gun can held. This could essentially designate any gun as an “Assault Weapon”, opening the door to the banning of all guns known to mankind.
American Conservative Movement
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Atlanta, GA – While liberal billionaire presidential candidate Mike Bloomberg spends millions buying off politicians in Georgia, Democrat Senate candidates remain silent on his overt efforts to curry favor from their party’s leaders.
This morning, The Atlanta Journal-Constitutionreportedthat State Senator Jen Jordan has endorsed Bloomberg, citing his ‘money’ and ‘investment in infrastructure’. This comes days after Bloomberg secured the endorsement of Congresswoman Lucy McBath, who received $4.5 million from Bloomberg’s super PAC during her 2018 campaign. Bloomberg also recently held an event with the failed gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, whose organization accepted a $5 million check from Bloomberg.
But while some on the left have raised concerns about Bloomberg’s racially charged comments, troubling history with women, and controversial record as New York City Mayor, none of the Democrat candidates running for Senate in Georgia have expressed their views on his actions. With Bloomberg spending millions to buy support from Democrat politicians across the state, they cannot remain silent.
Jon Ossoff, Teresa Tomlinson, Sara Riggs Amico, Raphael Warnock, and Matt Lieberman owe voters an answer. Do they take issue with Mike Bloomberg’s overt efforts to buy the Georgia Democrat Party? Or will they speak out against his activities?
For questions, contact Stewart Bragg at (404) 500-9546 or stewart@gagop.org.
American Conservative Movement
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Richmond, VA – Today, the Virginia State Senate voted to ‘carry over’ an anti-Second Amendment bill designed to strip thousands of Virginians of their rights, also known as HB 961. While Democrats are undoubtedly disappointed that Virginia stood up for itself, this bill is dead until next session.
‘This is what happens when you organize and take action,’ said RPV Chairman Jack Wilson. ‘To the tens of thousands of Virginians that came from all over the Commonwealth to advocate for your rights, your efforts were rewarded. While the fight is far from over, Republicans should feel good about what happened today.’
‘The Republican Party of Virginia intends to capitalize on the energy of the Second Amendment movement and carry that forward into election season. We’re registering more voters, knocking more doors, and working harder than ever to re-elect President Trump and make Virginia red again. The Democrats have poked a hornets nest and they have no idea what’s coming.’
American Conservative Movement
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Happy Tuesday! As we continue to experience the slightest of lulls in the political news cycle, we thought it worth turning for a moment to another big national story: cheating in baseball. In recent years, we’ve seen Americans’ faith in our institutions erode considerably, with scandals affecting the standing of the U.S. intelligence community, the Catholic Church, the financial sector, major news outlets, etc. Baseball has weathered its problems with steroids, but now faces a new test with this sign-stealing scandal and the league’s incompetent handling of it.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The global outbreak of coronavirus has already been taking a human and diplomatic toll; the virus’s spread is now being felt economically, too. Apple announced Monday it expects to miss its revenue projections this quarter, as iPhone production is complicated and demand shrinks in China.
Former National Security Adviser John Bolton spoke at Duke University on Monday, but played hard-to-get in questions about his role in Trump’s Ukraine impeachment scandal. Asked if the call was “perfect,” Bolton responded that “you’ll love Chapter 14” of his forthcoming book.
The Boy Scouts of America filed for bankruptcy amid a series of lawsuits alleging sexual abuse.
NASCAR driver Ryan Newman is in serious condition after a crash in the final lap of the Daytona 500. Our prayers this morning go out to him and his family.
Houston, We Have a Problem
The temperature in Chicago reached a balmy 38 degrees last night, which can mean only one thing: Baseball season is nearly upon us.
But pitchers and catchers migrating to spring training in Arizona or Florida are returning to a game rattled by the worst cheating scandal since the Mitchell Report uncovered hundreds of players’ steroid use nearly 15 years ago.
Just a few months after someone at the White House blew the whistle on a certain “perfect” phone call, another whistleblower was preparing to turn the baseball world upside down.
“That’s not playing the game the right way,” former Houston Astros pitcher Mike Fiers told Ken Rosenthal and Evan Drellich of The Athletic in November, detailing an elaborate system set up by his old team in 2017 to relay pitch signs and eliminate opposing teams’ ability to preserve a sense of ambiguity about which pitches were coming, and when.
Here’s how it worked: During home games, a camera above the centerfield fence zeroed in on the opposing catcher’s signals. Team employees would watch the feed on a television monitor near the team’s dugout, decode the signs, and bang loudly on trash cans to warn batters of upcoming curveballs or changeups, allowing them to adjust their timing. Twitter user @Jomboy broke down the system in action:
MLB offseasons are notorious for their monotony. But once Fiers blew the Astros’ cover, chaos reigned. Commissioner Rob Manfred promised to conduct a “really, really thorough investigation” of the situation. Players around the league began to level allegations at one another—both subtly and not. A Twitter account purporting to belong to the niece of an Astros player claimed the cheating extended after the 2017 season and that two of the team’s best hitters—Jose Altuve and Alex Bregman—wore “buzzers” under their jerseys that transmitted signs even more quickly. A resurfaced video of Altuve telling his teammates not to rip his jersey off in celebration after a game-winning home run only added to the suspicions.
Dropping The Hammer?
And then came the punishment. Manfred announced the results of MLB’s investigation into “the banging scheme” in mid-January, confirming nearly all of Fiers’ charges. No individual players were penalized (Manfred granted them immunity in exchange for their cooperation), but the commissioner concluded that “virtually all of the Astros’ players had some involvement or knowledge of the scheme.”
Manfred also absolved Astros owner Jim Crane of any wrongdoing: “Jim Crane was unaware of any of the violations of MLB rules by his club.”
Rather, Manfred aimed his prosecutorial power at the team and its front office leaders. The Astros had to forfeit both $5 million—a relative pittance, but the maximum fine leviable by the league—and their top two draft picks in both 2020 and 2021. Manager A.J. Hinch and General Manager Jeff Luhnow were both suspended without pay for one season. For completely unrelated reasons (taunting female journalists by praising an Astros player arrested on domestic violence charges), the Astros’ former assistant general manager Brandon Taubman was also banned from the game for a year.
That incident spurred Manfred to include a more sweeping condemnation of the Astros’ organization as a whole:
“The culture of the baseball operations department, manifesting itself in the way its employees are treated, its relations with other Clubs, and its relations with the media and external stakeholders, has been very problematic. At least in my view, the baseball operations department’s insular culture—one that valued and rewarded results over other considerations, combined with a staff of individuals who often lacked direction or sufficient oversight, led, at least in part, to the Brandon Taubman incident, the Club’s admittedly inappropriate and inaccurate response to that incident, and finally, to an environment that allowed the conduct described in this report to have occurred.”
The scandal has since claimed two more scalps—Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora, a bench coach for the Astros in 2017, and New York Mets manager Carlos Beltran, an Astros outfielder that season, were both fired from their new clubs after Manfred’s report exposed their role in scheme.
‘I Lost Respect for Those Guys’
Astros players and management publicly addressed their transgressions last week, issuing very narrow and contradictory apologies at a press conference that could perhaps be most generously described as … imprudent.
But with spring training getting underway, players from the other 29 teams are speaking out.
“I thought the apologies were whatever,” Los Angeles Dodgers star and 2019 National League MVP Cody Bellinger said. “I thought Jim Crane’s was weak. I thought Manfred’s punishment was weak, giving them immunity. I mean, these guys were cheating for three years. … I know personally I lost respect for those guys. I would say everyone in the show, in the big leagues, lost respect for those guys.”
“What a disgrace that was,” Chicago Cubs third baseman Kris Bryant told reporters. “Watching their apology yesterday too, there’s no sincerity, there’s no genuineness. … A lot of the apology yesterday was a lot about 2017, 2017. It’s like, I’m pretty sure it was going on in 2018 and 2019 too.”
Even Mike Trout, the famously soft-spoken Los Angeles Angels superstar, pulled no punches. “I don’t agree with the punishment, the players not getting anything,” he said Monday. “It sucks, because like you said, guys’ careers have been affected, a lot of people lost jobs, it was tough.” (Trout was likely referring to pitchers like Mike Bolsinger, who, after one rough game against the Astros in 2017, was cut from his team and never pitched in the majors again.)
Baseball is in some ways a self-policed game. Infringements of various “unwritten rules” are typically met with a 90-plus mile an hour fastball between the shoulder blades. But the past few days have revealed an astonishing lack of faith among players in Manfred to keep the game from being corrupted.
Many within baseball believe the commissioner approached his investigation into the Astros with a “see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil” mentality. His office, for example, had heard whispers of the Astros’ scheme for years, but acted only after Mike Fiers spoke out. And then Manfred decided to take the Astros’ denials about the longevity of the scheme at face value. He has refused to entertain the idea of stripping Houston of their 2017 World Series championship, saying “the idea of an asterisk or asking for a piece of metal back seems like a futile act.”
Dodgers infielder Justin Turner was appalled by that last comment from the commissioner. “The reason every guy’s in this room, the reason every guy is working out all offseason, and showing up to camp early and putting in all the time and effort is specifically for that trophy,” he said. “So for him to devalue it the way he did yesterday just tells me how out of touch he is with the players in this game.”
“In a perfect world,” Manfred said in an interview with ESPN, Astros players “would have been punished.”
So why weren’t they?
“I think if you watch the players, watch their faces when they have to deal with this issue publicly, they have paid a price,” he argued. But he also admitted it would have been exceedingly difficult to discern how much blame to place on each individual, and that, with the MLB Players Association’s ability to appeal punishments, “we didn’t think we could make discipline stick.”
That may very well be true. But the entire saga has severely diminished the credibility of Manfred—and the league as a whole. The drama and intra-MLB sniping may provide a short-term ratings boost as fans tune in to see how opposing teams deal with the Astros. But with the national pastime’s popularity continuing to nosedive, the integrity of the game cannot continue to sustain the bruising it’s taken in recent weeks.
Bloomberg and Sanders Go Low
Michael Bloomberg is the latest Democrat to take on Bernie Sanders directly, with a new video highlighting the incivility of some of Sanders’ most aggressive followers. In so doing, Bloomberg is giving voice to complaints we’ve heard from traditional Democrats for months.
Over at Commentary, Noah Rothman has a smart, even-keeled look at how Bloomberg is trying to execute this attack and what complications he brings to the effort. On the one hand: “Let’s stipulate that Bloomberg is among the worst ambassadors for this message” given his own “willingness to get down in the mud.” On the other: “While Sanders has made rhetorical overtures toward civility, he’s also surrounded himself with people who cultivate a very different atmosphere. His campaign has taken on a slate of formal surrogates who have a conspicuous habit of engaging in anti-Semitic rhetoric and who reserve the most caustic vitriol for their fellow Democrats—at least, those who do not display a sufficiently zealous commitment to his ‘revolution.’”
At Sanders’ events over the past several weeks, top surrogates have led the booing of Hillary Clinton and offered sharp critiques of the Democratic National Committee. And online, they’ve amplified conspiracy theories about a rigged process and threatened supporters of other candidates.
The back-and-forth between the two campaigns intensified when Bloomberg campaign manager, Kevin Sheekey, released a statement accusing Sanders of Trump-like tactics after the Sanders campaign put out video from 2016 in which Bloomberg appears to downtalk farmers. Sanders responded by tweeting a photo of Bloomberg golfing with Trump.
Bernie Sanders@BernieSanders
Sahil Kapur@sahilkapur
Mike Bloomberg’s campaign manager Kevin Sheekey releases a statement responding to attacks from Sanders. Subject line: “BERNIE’S NEW BRO… DONALD TRUMP” https://t.co/1PeQMBcQdu
It’s hard to imagine many voters following the blows of this particular middle-school back-and-forth among the leading Democrats—or becoming a supporter of either candidate as a result. But Bloomberg has shown a knack for picking fights that result in abundant media coverage—free airtime that supplements the more than $400 million he has reportedly spent on paid media.
But now he and Sanders can air out their differences face-to-face instead of squabbling on Twitter via surrogates. It turns out that Bloomberg has qualified to be onstage at Wednesday’s debate in Las Vegas.
In today’s information environment, the pressure to remain “plugged in” at all times is immense. In The Atlantic, Talmon Joseph Smith writes that “it’s okay to leave your headphones at home.” Going for a run recently, Smith realized “this was the first time in weeks (or was it months?) that I had actually been alone with my thoughts for more than 12 minutes.”
Just realized that @amyklobuchar’s campaign colors are the same as Hidden Valley Ranch and now I desperately hope this was all part of her master plan to win the Midwest and unite the country #Election2020 https://t.co/RhAaB4uxvJ
Toeing the Company Line
In the latest episode of Advisory Opinions, Sarah and David discuss the Department of Justice’s decision to not prosecute Andrew McCabe, the eye-opening interview Harvey Weinstein’s attorney gave, and which novels have most impacted them. Download and subscribe here!
Perhaps you’re not the kind of person who thinks that “3,000 words about federal architecture regulations” is your idea of a good time. Well, neither are your Morning Dispatchers, but we loved every word of Sherri and Robert Tracinski’s opus on the White House’s proposal to mandate “classical” architecture in federal buildings, up on the site today.
Up on the site, Samuel J. Abrams has a lovely piece about the joys of local parks, both dog and human: “Friendships and communities are formed on the playground thanks to the very nature of the space. That might not sound like much, but in an era where we are not only increasingly polarized but also actively isolating ourselves thanks to technology, civic leaders are seeking effective and cost-effective ways to strengthen communities and bring people together.”
In a different look at how “acting locally” matters, Avi Woolf points out that conservatives have become far too focused on the goings on in Washington, D.C., and lays out some suggestions for how to get the movement back to its roots.
Let Us Know
In honor of Presidents’ Day on Monday, we pinged our readers for their favorite tidbits of presidential esoterica. Here are some of our favorites of your favorites:
From reader David: “James and Dolley Madison were known to serve bowls of oyster ice cream at official government functions.”
From reader Linda: “George Washington actually has two birthdays: Feb. 11, 1731 and Feb. 22, 1732. The reason? Due to Protestant foot-dragging, the British Empire waited a couple hundred years to replace the Julian calendar with the more accurate Gregorian calendar (named for Pope Gregory). In 1752, September 2 was followed by September 14 (no doubt creating havoc for financial arrangements like wages and rents). To accurately reflect his age, Washington used the ‘new style’ calendar to determine his birthday: February 22, 1732.”
From reader Alex: “Harry Truman was the last president to not have a college degree. Ronald Reagan is the most recent president to not have an Ivy League degree.”
From reader Oliver: “John Tyler, the 10th president of the U.S., had grandsons living in 2018.”
From reader Kevin: “Dwight D. Eisenhower lobbied to have a tree cut down on the 17th at Augusta National. They told him to buzz off, kept the tree, and it was mockingly named after him. Just in case you were wondering if it’s harder to defeat Germany or get Augusta to change its layout.”
From reader Alex: “Lincoln was the first president with facial hair; Taft was the last. Every president with facial hair served in the 52 year period (1861-1913) spanning their presidencies. (This does ignore the fact that Truman occasionally grew a beard on vacation while president.)”
From reader Brandon: “Eisenhower enjoyed (and had a knack for) cooking.” (Here is his eggnog recipe.)
From reader Nash: “John Quincy Adams approved a trip to the North Pole because he was convinced that the Earth was hollow and there was a hole at the North Pole which lead to the center of the Earth.”
From reader Raymond: “Martin Van Buren was the only U.S. president whose native tongue was not English (he was raised in a Dutch speaking household in upstate New York).” And from reader Alex: “Martin Van Buren was technically the first president to be a natural born citizen, as he was the first born after the signing of the Declaration of Independence.”
From reader Thomas: “Richard Nixon is the only VP-turned-POTUS not to succeed the president he served under as VP.”
Declan has done some really good reporting debunking conspiracy theories, so it is disappointing to see him discuss the “buzzer” scandal without mentioning that, in fact, it is nothing more than an internet conspiracy theory. While the Astros did cheat by using the camera and trash can method in 2017, the commissioner’s report found no wrongdoing in 2018 and 2019. In particular, Manfred specifically notes that zero witness could corroborate the buzzer story.
Presented by Author Neal Simon: Biden and Barack; FBI Raid; Know-Nothings
Good morning. It’s Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2020. Despite its obvious flaws, the two-party system has proved enduring in this country. So has a latent desire among the electorate for more options. But despite the obvious vacuum, which is particularly acute today, third (or fourth) political parties don’t tend to arise from the ideological center. The passion that it takes to start a movement is usually on the ideological fringes.
And so it was on this date in 1856, when the national council of an anti-immigration political movement called The American Party met in Philadelphia. “The Know-Nothings,” as they were to be known, assembled in the City of Brotherly Love to agree on a platform that was the opposite of ecumenical — and to name a presidential nominee who would stump for their exclusionary program in that year’s presidential election.
The “Knowing-Nothing” moniker wasn’t a slur on their platform, as you might assume. I’ll explain in a moment. First, I’d point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Biden’s Stuck Between Barack and a Hard Place. Bill Whalen explores possible reasons former President Obama hasn’t endorsed his ex-running mate, and whether he ever will.
FBI Raids Business Tied to Biden’s Brother. The probe of a bankrupt hospital is the latest sign of trouble for James Biden. Mark Hemingway has the story in RealClearInvestigations.
Why New Disease Outbreaks Often Start in China. RealClearScience editor Ross Pomeroy explains how the Asian nation has become a “mixing vessel” for viruses.
The Wrongheaded Effort to Wreck Huawei. RealClearMarkets editor John Tamny writes that business history and basic economics demonstrate the folly of U.S. attempts to undermine the Chinese tech giant.
Crucial Provision of Tax Cuts Law Is Set to Expire. Also in RCM, Andrew Wilford urges lawmakers to make permanent a feature that allows companies to immediately write off investments made in their business rather than resort to depreciation schedules.
Google and the “Copyright Case of the Century.” In RealClearPolicy, Michael Shore lays out the particulars of Google v. Oracle.
Markets Must Better Value Flexible, Dispatchable Coal Power. In RealClearEnergy, Conor Bernstein spotlights an overlooked benefit of the fossil fuel.
* * *
In the 1840s and 1850s, the great American “melting pot” at times seemed more like an overboiling cauldron of competing cultures, religions, and ethnicities. In the first three and a half decades of the 19th century, tens of thousands of immigrants arrived on these shores. Then, in a 10-year span from 1845 to 1854, nearly 3 million more arrived to stake their claim on the dream of a New World.
The promise of instant riches lured them from Asia and Australia and other points around the globe to the California gold fields. Most ended up working the land or on railroad crews or in other Western mines — or building the port of San Francisco into a vibrant city — but the point is that once here, they stayed. On the East Coast, the nation’s largest cities were utterly transformed by the newcomers. The reasons for this migration ranged from political instability in Germany to simple population pressures on the tapped-out agrarian economy in Scandinavia. The single most momentous factor in the seismic demographic shift taking place was the devastating potato famine in Ireland. All at once, half the population of New York City was foreign-born.
The influx of the Irish was not, to put it mildly, universally welcomed. For one thing, many of the newcomers were unskilled. They had large families. And they were, for the most part, Roman Catholic. None of these traits made them reticent about engaging in U.S. politics, however, so the sources of the tension were organic, you might say. If this dynamic seems to have contemporary relevance to you, well, keep reading.
We’re now in the mid-1850s. Until that point, two political parties had dominated U.S. civic affairs since the nation’s founding: the Federalists of Alexander Hamilton and John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson’s Democrat-Republican Party.
To make a long story short: the Federalists had given way to the Whigs. Jefferson’s old party had morphed into Andrew Jackson’s Democratic Party. Where do immigrants fit into this model? And which party would cater to Americans who felt threatened by immigration? Those two questions led to the rise, originally in New York City, of the Order of the Star Spangled Banner. It began as a secret society of men identifying themselves, quite consciously, as Anglo-Saxon Protestants. The group espoused xenophobia and racial conspiracy theories. They came by the latter honestly, as they were conspiratorialists themselves.
They weren’t exactly about “dog whistles” — their anti-Catholic, anti-immigrant beliefs were overt — but they were all about keeping themselves under cover. “Omerta” wouldn’t be a thing in New York for another half-century, but discussing the OSSB outside its ranks was strictly verboten. If asked about the group, its members were to respond, “I know nothing.”
But a movement like that depended on converts, and electing its adherents to public office, and so it gradually went public, as did its platform, which included deportation for any crime (including the “crime” of begging); a 21-year waiting period for naturalized citizens; and mandatory Bible instruction in schools. Catholics were to be opposed whenever they ran for office; alcohol was to be banned everywhere.
The Know-Nothings often referred to themselves as Native Americans. This was not meant to be ironic: The term “Native American” hadn’t yet been formally applied to the various indigenous tribes that were fighting a losing battle for their lands against whites.
In any event, they met in a February 1856 nominating convention. In Philadelphia, they chose Millard Fillmore — who had served as president from 1850 to 1853 after the death of Zachary Taylor — as their standard-bearer. He would carry just one state that November, Maryland, but their problems were worse than having a lousy candidate. The seeds for the Know-Nothing’s demise were planted in Philadelphia when a wing of Southerners moved to pass a platform plank calling for the preservation of slavery. This alarmed many Northern and Midwestern Know-Nothings. Many of them bolted to another newly formed political entity, with a clearer and more inclusive political vision: the Republican Party.
Echoes of conflicting cross-currents still exist in our politics today, and not only within the GOP. One comforting thought is that Abraham Lincoln, as usual, saw things clearly — and before almost anyone else.
“I am not a Know-Nothing. That is certain. How could I be?” he wrote in an Aug. 24, 1855 letter to Joshua F. Speed. “How can anyone who abhors the oppression of negroes, be in favor of degrading classes of white people?
“Our progress in degeneracy appears to me to be pretty rapid,” Lincoln continued. (I have retained his spelling and capitalization.) “As a nation, we begin by declaring that ‘all men are created equal.’ We now practically read it ‘all men are created equal, except negroes.’ When the Know-Nothings get control, it will read ‘all men are created equal, except negroes, and foreigners, and catholics.’ When it comes to this I should prefer emigrating to some country where they make no pretence of loving liberty — to Russia, for instance, where despotism can be taken pure, and without the base alloy of hypocracy.”
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On February 12, 2020 the Center hosted a panel on the rising tide of international anti-Semitism and the threat it poses to the United States. The panel feature Elan Carr, the Department of State’s Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism, David Wurmser, Director of the Project on Global Anti-Semitism and the US-Israel Relationship at the Center, and analyst Maya Carlin.
Jim Banks is a naval officer and veteran of the Afghan war. He’s continuing to fight our country’s adversaries in his current role as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives.
Rep. Banks has been commendably focused on a largely neglected battlefront: the use Communist China is making of U.S. capital markets to fund its military build-up, domestic repression and other ominous activities. Notably, he’s introduced legislation that would keep our service personnel and civilian government employees from having their pension funds invested in malevolent Chinese companies.
Last week, the Congressman urged California’s governor to fire a Chinese expatriate named Yu Ben Meng who has enthused about his commitment to “work for the motherland” via Beijing’s espionage-tainted “Thousand Talents Program.” Meng shouldn’t be investing billions of dollars of retired California employees’ pensions in corporations tied to the Chinese Communist Party.
This is Frank Gaffney.
With Raymond Ibrahim
RAYMOND IBRAHIM, Author of Sword and Scimitar: Fourteen Centuries of War between Islam and the West (2018), Author of Crucified Again: Exposing Islam’s New War on Christians, His writings, translations and observations have appeared in The New York Times, CNN, LA Times, Fox News, Financial Times, etc., Born and raised in the U.S. by Coptic-Egyptian parents born and raised in the Middle East:
The significance of 14 centuries of battles between Islam and the West
The historical motivations behind the rise of ISIS
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President Momjeans decided to insert himself back into the conversation yesterday (which Megan wrote about here) and I have no doubt that he thought he was being brilliant. He does, after all, believe everything that he does is brilliant.
The Trump economy took off upward about an hour after he was sworn in three years ago and has been chugging along quite nicely ever since. Because every Democrat in America moved into an alternate reality in January, 2009, they have been insisting that all of this economic goodness is just really the magic touch of Obama reaching across time.
It isn’t surprising that the Lightbringer’s devotees need to tell themselves this story, because the economic reality when he was in office was pretty dismal:
On almost every measure examined, the 2009-15 recovery since the recession ended in June of 2009 has been the meekest in more than 50 years.
Obama’s tweet on Monday was extraordinarily arrogant, even for a guy whose entire career has been based on undeserved smugness. The only thing out of character was the fact that it may have been the first self-congratulatory picture that he’s ever shared on social media that didn’t have his face in it.
Here it is, complete with my rather indelicate reply:
Eleven years ago today, near the bottom of the worst recession in generations, I signed the Recovery Act, paving the way for more than a decade of economic growth and the longest streak of job creation in American history.
Did you hear the latest con job? President Obama is now trying to take credit for the Economic Boom taking place under the Trump Administration. He had the WEAKEST recovery since the Great Depression, despite Zero Fed Rate & MASSIVE quantitative easing. NOW, best jobs numbers….
Donald J. Trump
✔@realDonaldTrump
….ever. Had to rebuild our military, which was totally depleted. Fed Rate UP, taxes and regulations WAY DOWN. If Dems won in 2016, the USA would be in big economic (Depression?) & military trouble right now. THE BEST IS YET TO COME. KEEP AMERICA GREAT!
Perhaps one day historians won’t merely be leftist hack academics and a truthful accounting will be given of the overwhelming economic and foreign policy failures of the Obama years. For the near future we are going to suffer through largely fictionalized accounts of his “accomplishments.”
Which he will no doubt keep sharing with us in that oblivious, irony-free way of his.
Over 417,000 Hours Of Private Presidential Conversations Discovered After No One Remembered To Turn Off Richard Nixon’s Tape Recorder https://trib.al/FozwpAu
As I heard at the doctor’s office this morning, “Happy Monday-Tuesday.” On the menu today: Why former president Barack Obama has been quiet during the most intensely divided Democratic primary in recent memory; gun-control advocates take it on the chin in Virginia; a new batch of data gives a clearer sense of the fatality rate of the coronavirus; and remembering America’s easily forgotten but still significant presidents.
“Makes an original and compelling case for nationalism . . . A fascinating, erudite—and much-needed—defense of a hallowed idea unfairly under current attack.” — Victor Davis Hanson
MANHTTAN INSTITUTE
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February 18, 2020
Featuring the latest analysis, commentary, and research from Manhattan Institute scholars
CALIFORNIA
Photo: Patrick T. Fallon/Reuters/Newscom
The Moral Crisis of Skid Row
Los Angeles’s addiction epidemic is creating a permanent underclass, cut off from the rest of the city.
By Christopher F. Rufo
City Journal
Winter 2020 Issue
NEW YORK CITY & STATE
Photo: Kevin Frayer/Getty Images
Coronavirus Hasn’t Hit New York but It’s Still Hurting the Local Economy
“What happens to New York when a huge chunk of the global economy is under quarantine? … Because of coronavirus, America is effectively off limits to Chinese people. The coronavirus thus imperils one of Gotham’s biggest industries: tourism.”
By Nicole Gelinas
New York Post
February 18, 2020
HOUSING POLICY
Photo: Scott Heins/Getty Images
The Problem With ‘Just-Cause’ Eviction: A Dangerous Idea That Will Hurt Renters and Landlords
“Radical changes in New York’s housing regulations seem to pop up with little warning these days … But rather than boost the supply of homes, today’s changes strangle the housing market and work against the interests of the same tenants in whose name they are enacted.”
By Howard Husock
New York Daily News
February 17, 2020
Photo: Nirian/iStock
Britain’s Prosperous, Closed Enclaves
Decades of restrictive housing policies have made it hard to afford living in thriving urban areas—and likely played a key role in the Brexit vote.
By Sam Watling
City Journal Online
February 17, 2020
CRIME & POLICING
Photo: artisteer/iStock
Bogus Criminal Justice Reforms Are Endangering Police, Civilians Across USA
“[With] political momentum currently in favor of leniency and decarceration, more repeat offenders will likely walk free on the streets of American cities.”
By Rafael A. Mangual
New York Post
February 17, 2020
Adapted from City Journal
ECONOMY & FINANCE
Photo: Laurence Dutton/iStock
Who Owns the Stock Market? It’s Not Just the Wealthy
“Traditionally, the rich were the only ones who owned stock at all. But stock ownership increased over the years through 401(k) type plans that made the market more accessible to many American households.”
By Allison Schrager
Economics21
February 14, 2020
LEGAL REFORM
Photo: Mr_Twister/iStock
We’re From the Government and We’re Here to Build a Bike Path
Municipal officials are using eminent domain to take private property for recreational uses.
By Steven Malanga
The Wall Street Journal
February 15, 2020
INFRASTRUCTURE & TRANSPORTATION
Photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images
The CTA Red Line Extension Is a Mistake — Metra Is Ready to Better Serve the South Side
“[Chicago] should support efforts to fix up Metra, as community and business advocates on the South Side have long advocated.”
By Alex Armlovich, Connor Harris
Chicago Tribune
February 14, 2020
CULTURE & SOCIETY
Photo: Courtesy of Author
Reviving Classicism
Modernist architecture answers to a cloistered elite—it’s time for a change.
By Catesby Leigh
City Journal Online
February 14, 2020
Photo: Supreme Court Building, Washington D.C. (P_Wei/iStock)
Why Classical Architecture Matters
Catesby Leigh joins Seth Barron to discuss President Trump’s draft executive order to give priority to classical-style architecture in the design of federal courthouses, agency headquarters, and other federal office buildings.
Photo: Lior Mizrahi/Getty Images
France Is Failing to Fight Its Rising Tide of Anti-Semitism
“The most dangerous place to be a Jew in Europe is France. That’s the conclusion of an unpublished, two-year report on anti-Semitism in 11 European countries, conducted by former NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly at former US Ambassador to Austria Ronald Lauder’s behest.”
By Judith Miller
New York Post
February 18, 2020
Adapted from City Journal
Photo: FotoCuisinette/iStock
The Lonesome Death of Thomas Valva
An eight-year-old boy’s murder in Long Island exposes the fallacy that mothers and fathers are equally likely to be good caregivers for young children.
By Naomi Schaefer Riley
City Journal Online
February 14, 2020
EDUCATION
Photo: Ali Siraj/iStock
The Right Measurement
Standardized tests remain the fairest means of evaluating student merit.
By Connor Harris
City Journal
Winter 2020 Issue
BOOK REVIEW
Photo: ViewApart/iStock
Decadence As Alienation
Ross Douthat’s new book examines our cultural disaffection as a problem of absence.
By Tara Isabella Burton
City Journal Online
February 14, 2020
CIVIL SOCIETY AWARDS
Nominations are open for the Manhattan Institute’s 2020 Civil Society Awards. This fall, four winners will each receive a $25,000 award for their efforts to keep our social fabric from fraying, assist those who need it most, and help people change the course of their lives. Nominate an outstanding nonprofit by March 20, 2020. Learn more at civilsocietyawards.com.
SUBMIT A NOMINATION
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All Posts After years of criminal activity attacks and attempted coups President Trump on Tuesday warned that he may sue the deep state operatives behind… Read more…
Former New York City Mayor and President Trump’s personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani was on Lou Dobbs Tonight on FOX Business channel to discuss recent events… Read more…
Former President Obama, the only President in US history who had his FBI and other Intel agencies spy on the opposition party candidate, claims that… Read more…
Italian prosecutors last year reported the notorious deep state spy Joseph Mifsud was dead after he had gone missing for two years. Joseph Mifsud is… Read more…
Just weeks after President Donald Trump was acquitted by the Senate of bogus partisan impeachment charges by the House of Representatives, a group of federal… Read more…
Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) joined Sean Hannity Monday night to discuss the latest developments in the Spygate scandal. Once again Sean Hannity teased a huge… Read more…
Approximately 17,000 people turned out to see Bernie Sanders Monday night in Tacoma, Washington. The band “Portugal. The Man” are the latest band to… Read more…
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BLOOMBERG: Former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg (D) qualified for Wednesday’s Democratic presidential primary debate in Las Vegas after receiving 19% in an NPR/Marist national poll. In a statement, campaign manager Kevin Sheekey confirmed that Bloomberg will participate. (release)
VIRGINIA PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY: A Monmouth University poll (Feb. 13-16; 400 LVs; +/- 4.9%) found Bloomberg and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) at 22% each, former Vice President Joe Biden at 18%, former South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg (D) at 11%, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) at 9%, and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) at 5%. (release)
WI-07: Voters are voting today in the special primaries to replace former Rep. Sean Duffy (R). Polls are open through 8 p.m. and the winner of each primary will advance to the May 12 general election. (WEAU) On the Democratic side, businessman Lawrence Dale (D) is squaring off against Wausau School Board President Tricia Zunker (D). But in the Likely Republican district, the main event is the race between Army veteran Jason Church (R) and state Sen. Tom Tiffany (R), whom Duffy endorsed. (Cook Political Report)
ENDORSEMENTS: Sanders received an endorsement from Mijente, a group that mobilizes and organizes Latino voters. (Politico) Nevada Lt. Gov. Kate Marshall (D), Las Vegas City Councilman Cedric Crear (D), and former Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx endorsed Biden. (release) Tucson Mayor Regina Romero (D) endorsed Warren. (Twitter) The Houston Chronicle editorial board endorsedKlobuchar. (Houston Chronicle) 2010 FL GOV candidate Alex Sink (D) endorsed Bloomberg. (Florida Politics) Vermont Gov. Phil Scott (R) endorsed former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld (R). (WPTZ)
VA GOV: State Sen. Amanda Chase (R) “says she’s running for governor next year as an unabashed conservative whose top priority will be to promote gun rights.” She “announced her candidacy Monday to a crowd of about 100 outside the Capitol … saying voters were unhappy with the state’s new liberal direction under a Democratic majority—particularly on gun laws. … Chase is the first major candidate to formally announce a gubernatorial campaign..” (AP)
TX SEN: A University of Texas/Texas Tribune poll (Jan. 31-Feb. 9; 1,200 RVs; +/– 4.1%) found 2018 TX-31 nominee MJ Hegar (D) in the lead with 22% as all other candidates remained in the single-digits. Of those polled, 34% said they’d vote for someone other than the seven candidates named. Hegar also had the highest name ID at 31%. (Texas Tribune) The Austin American-Statesman editorial board endorsed Hegar on Friday. (Austin American-Statesman)
AL SEN: A WT&S Consulting poll (Feb. 9-10, 1,048 LVs; +/– 3.3%) found former Attorney General Jeff Sessions (R) narrowly led former Auburn University football coach Tommy Tuberville (R), 32%-30%, while Rep. Bradley Byrne (R-01) followed with 22%. The rest of the field polled in the single-digits. (Alabama Today) Byrne released his campaign’s latest TV ad Saturday, going negative against Sessions and Tuberville. (Yellowhammer News) Meanwhile, Grit PAC, a group backing Tuberville, launched a TV spot in the Huntsville and Montgomery markets, as well as a radio spot in Dothan, which argue Sessions and Byrne won’t defend Trump. (release)
NC GOV: State Senate Pro Tempore Phil Berger (R) endorsed Lt. Gov. Dan Forest (R) over state Rep. Holly Grange (R) in the race for the GOP nomination on Monday. (release)
GA SEN SPECIAL: A University of Georgia poll (Feb. 2-14; 922 RVs; +/– 3.2%) found Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R) “is on roughly equal footing as one of her main November rivals,” Rep. Doug Collins (R-09), with about one-third of voters holding favorable opinions of each. DSCC-backed Rev. Raphael Warnock (D) “is still largely unknown to Georgians,” with about one-fifth holding a favorable view and about “the same proportion” holding “a negative view.” (Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
It’s finally happening—Mike Bloomberg will appear on a debate stage with his rivals for the Democratic nomination. Thanks to his fortune, he’s been able to blanket the country with ads while escaping scrutiny. That ends now. Two enterprising investigations into his philanthropic spending and his company’s culture were published over the weekend, and when the debate starts on Wednesday, his opponents will likely waste no time attacking him. It’s up to Bloomberg to prove whether or not he can take a punch. — Matt Holt
Unlike in 2018, when PA-08 fell off the GOP radar as other races required more attention, expect the Scranton-based district to remain on both parties’ priority lists. Last cycle, Republicans shifted their focus in the state away from the Scranton-based seat, where Matt Cartwright defeated attorney John Chrin, when Brian Fitzpatrick, Mike Kelly, and Scott Perry appeared vulnerable. But Kelly is safe this cycle, and Democrats are not particularly optimistic about beating Fitzpatrick. Given that Trump won Cartwright’s district by 10 points (the congressman won by seven in 2016 in a race no one paid attention to), it’s not a stretch to imagine a closer race in November with a greater investment by the GOP. But Democrats are sure to spend as well, especially considering the area’s importance in the presidential election. — Alex Clearfield
Fresh Brewed Buzz
Trump “went from the Daytona 500 on Sunday to attending the wedding of two top members of his administration, senior adviser Stephen Miller and Katie Waldman, press secretary for Vice President Mike Pence.” (AP)
“It would be doing a disservice to every woman of color, every woman of ambition, every child who wants to think beyond their known space for me to say no or to pretend, ‘Oh, no, I don’t want it’ … Of course I want it.” — 2018 GA GOV nominee Stacey Abrams (D), referring to the vice presidency on The View. (ABC News)
“The man who runs the @easychinedu account—widely accused of being a sockpuppet for” Lis Smith, senior adviser to Buttigieg, “told BuzzFeed News that he is a genuine supporter and has nothing to do with the South Bend mayor’s campaign.” (BuzzFeed)
If you think the public conflict between White House counselor Kellyanne Conway and her husband, George, is “all shtick, some wink-and-nod act by a couple who fights by day and snuggles by night, planning a payday after Mr. Trump leaves the scene, think again, say some people close to America’s oddest political couple. … Friends say the Conways are staying together for their children, although the couple is not always in the same city.” (New York Times)
Dorothy “Dot” Burns “died Feb. 10 at age 84.” She was an RNC Committeewoman for Georgia “from 1992 to 1996, served on the Executive Committee for the Georgia Republican Party, was a six-time delegate at the” RNC “and was elected multiple times as a presidential elector. She was involved in over 100 local, state and federal elections.” (Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
Clayton Williams, “a hall of famer in the oil industry and one of the greatest characters in the history of Texas politics” died on Friday. He was the Republican nominee for TX GOV “in 1990, losing a spirited race to” then-state Treasurer Ann Richards (D). (Midland Reporter-Telegram)
Former Rep. Chris Gibson (R-NY) was named the “12th president at his alma mater, Siena College.” (WNYT)
“Annie Glenn, the wife of the late astronaut and” Sen. John Glenn (D-OH), turned 100 “on Monday and is doing fine, a spokesman said.” (Columbus Dispatch)
Rooster’s Crow
The House is in for a pro forma session at 10:30 a.m. The Senate is out.
Trump joins a briefing with the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee and LA 2028 Organizers at 7:10 p.m. ET in Beverly Hills, CA. At 9:15 p.m. ET, he speaks at a joint fundraising committee dinner.
Swizzle Challenge
Actor Kevin Costner campaigned in New Hampshire last week for Buttigieg.
Kevin Spicer won Friday’s challenge. Here’s his challenge: One of the Democrats running for president is from a state whose state bird has been notably referenced in an elegy for a Republican president. Name the state, the bird, the poet who wrote the elegy, and the president.
“Perhaps you should consider … expanding your research to the realm of dating.” — The Doctor
“You mean procreation?” — Seven of Nine
“One step at a time. Dating is a human ritual, wherein two people share a social activity, get to know each other. In time, it can lead to a romantic involvement, and eventually, if all goes well, even marriage.” — The Doctor
“One step at a time.” — Seven of Nine (Star Trek: Voyager)
Declan has done some really good reporting debunking conspiracy theories, so it is disappointing to see him discuss the “buzzer” scandal without mentioning that, in fact, it is nothing more than an internet conspiracy theory. While the Astros did cheat by using the camera and trash can method in 2017, the commissioner’s report found no wrongdoing in 2018 and 2019. In particular, Manfred specifically notes that zero witness could corroborate the buzzer story.
Astros AL ROY Yordan Alvarez home/road splits:
.349/.272
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