MORNING NEWS BRIEFING- JUNE 23, 2020

Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday June 23, 2020

THE DAILY SIGNAL

 

Jun 23, 2020

Good morning from Washington, where a mob last night defaced and tried to tear down a statue of Andrew Jackson near the White House before police stepped in. But police aren’t intervening as statues fall elsewhere, Fred Lucas reports. Such rampant vandalism across the nation is a sign of mob rule, Jarrett Stepman writes. On the podcast, the attorney general of a red state talks tough on China and COVID-19. Plus: critical differences between absentee voting and mail-in elections, and what conservatives need to do for America. On this date in 1972, Title IX becomes law, prohibiting federally funded educational institutions from discriminating against students or employees based on sex.

Commentary
Photo
By Jarrett Stepman
Abraham Lincoln warned us what would happen to America if we became a nation of mob rule, not law and order.
News
Photo
By Fred Lucas
The lack of arrests by police is almost certainly a result of two dynamics, either politics or trying to protect officers from engaging in force, says Jason Johnson of the Law Enforcement Legal Defense Fund.
Commentary
Photo
By Sebastian Gorka
We have arrived at this deeply disturbing point because of a decadeslong campaign by the left and cultural elites to transform our country.
Analysis
Photo
By Rachel del Guidice
“China knew it had a problem that was getting out of control and it failed to warn the rest of the world and instead of something that could have been kept there in Wuhan, China, it was released out into the world,” says Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge.
News
Photo
By Virginia Allen
After a New York Post op-ed, “Call Them the 1619 Riots,” linked rioting occurring across the country to The New York Times’ controversial “1619 Project,” the journalist behind the project responded: “It would be an honor. Thank you.”
News
Photo
By Fred Lucas
Absentee voting is prone to fraud, election experts say, but has more safeguards than all-mail voting.
LOGO-CHARCOAL_75percent.jpg

The Daily Signal is brought to you by more than half a million members of The Heritage Foundation.

How are we doing?
We welcome your comments, suggestions, and story tips. Please reply to this email or send us a note at comments@dailysignal.com.

The Daily Signal
214 Massachusetts Avenue, NE
Washington, DC 20002
(800) 546-2843

Add morningbell@heritage.org to your address book to ensure that you receive emails from us.

You are subscribed to this newsletter as rickbulow1974@gmail.com. If you want to receive other Heritage Foundation newsletters, or opt out of this newsletter, please click here to update your subscription.

 

THE EPOCH TIMES

Alternate text

 

Alternate text
Alternate text

“Study the past, if you would divine the future.”

 

CONFUCIUS

 

Alternate text
Alternate text

Good morning,

 

Attorney General William Barr says he hopes to see some developments in the probe by U.S. Attorney John Durham by the end of the summer.

 

Durham was tasked by Barr to investigate the origins of the FBI’s investigation of the Trump campaign, which has reportedly evolved into a criminal investigation.

 

Barr said Durham is “pressing ahead as hard as he can.”

 

Read the full story here.

 

Alternate text

 

Alternate text
Alternate text

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) is introducing legislation that would require all senators and representatives to disclose any Paycheck Protection Program loans received by a business to which they or a family member… Read more

Alternate text

The Supreme Court imposed limits on the Securities and Exchange Commission’s ability to compel defendants through the federal court system to disgorge profits earned through fraud. Read more

Alternate text

The COVID-19 pandemic, which has taken a tremendous toll on the global economy, will fundamentally reshape international trade, exacerbate U.S.–China tensions, and accelerate the ongoing shift away from… Read more

Alternate text

With the war on terror melting away, military activity is picking up in the frozen seas of the Arctic, as the United States continues its pivot to so-called great power competition with Russia and China. Read more

Alternate text

Since the recent resurgence of the CCP virus in Beijing, local authorities have begun mandating testing for certain city residents. Zhang Qiang, a top official in the city government’s leadership team… Read more

Alternate text

America’s housing market is expected to weather the pandemic and stage a solid rebound, with a Reuters poll showing that U.S. house prices are likely to outpace consumer price increases in 2020… Read more

 

Alternate text

ANNOUNCEMENT

Our New Digital Referral Program

 

We are happy to announce the launch of our new digital referral program—more of the news you love for both you and your friends.

 

For every five friends you invite that register, you get 6 months added to your digital subscription.

 

Each friend you invite will get one month of The Epoch Times digital for FREE. Click here to learn more.

 

Alternate text
Alternate text

Black Lives Don’t Matter to Black Lives Matter
By Roger L. Simon

 

In case you missed it, and you could have considering the endless thumb sucking regarding just how many came or didn’t to the Trump rally in Tulsa, 60 were shot, 9 fatally, at last count, over Father’s Day weekend… Read more

Alternate text

Erasing Historical Statues a Monumental Mistake
By Ryan Moffatt

 

Historical monuments have been lightning rods of protest in the wake of George Floyd’s death. The demand to remove statues from public spaces has greatly intensified… Read more

 

Alternate text
Alternate text

Regulators Take Down Comcast-Time Warner Merger Without a Fight

By Jonathan Zhou

(April 24, 2015)

 

This morning, Comcast called off its proposed $45 billion merger with Time Warner Cable, a deal that would’ve resulted in the conglomerate controlling 40 percent of the broadband market and a sizable fraction of cable access as well. Read more

 

Alternate text

Just how are the Chinese regime’s encroachments on Hong Kong, esp. with the pending National Security Law, part of its pursuit of global dominance?

Copyright © 2020 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved.

You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive newsletter communications from The Epoch Times.

 

Our mailing address is:

The Epoch Times

229 W. 28 St. Fl. 5
New York, NY 10001

Click here to unsubscribe.

DAYBREAK

Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
Having trouble viewing this email? View the web version.
The Daybreak Insider
Sponsored By
Pepperdine University
Tuesday, June 23, 2020
1.
Trump Administration Moves to Limit Immigration Visas

Including H1 B visas for tech workers, H-2B visas for short-term seasonal workers, J-1 visas for short-term workers like camp counselors and L-1 visas for internal company transfers. Wall Street Journal Reports: Administration officials say the move will safeguard jobs for unemployed Americans as the economy sputters—and joblessness has soared—because of lockdowns designed to contain the pandemic (WSJ). Washington Examiner: One other aspect of the Trump move is to force corporations, especially high-tech firms, to hire Americans instead of foreigners who come in on the visas to work at a lower hourly rate or salary. There was once a need for those workers, but the officials said that corporations are abusing the system (WashEx). Lindsey Graham was critical (TheHill).

2.
Don’t Assume the Cancel Culture Won’t Come for You

Karol Markowicz: To fight this moral panic, ordinary people will have to be brave, and we all need to show solidarity: People will have to stand up for their friends when they’re in danger of being swarmed, companies will have to stand up for their employees and the rest of us will have to speak out for all of them (NYPost). Senator Tom Cotton has issued his own similar warning: The mob doesn’t stop at statues. Rioters have torched police precincts & low-income housing. Churches and synagogues have not been spared. Next, perhaps, the mob will target the homes of police officers. Soon enough, the mob may come for you, your home, & your family (Twitter).

Advertisement
3.
Book Exposes Harmfulness of Sex-Change Operations; Amazon Sets Content Limits Yet Again

From Abigail Shrier: Amazon informed it that Regnery wouldn’t be permitted to run a sponsored ad for my book, “Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters.” Amazon’s stated reason for barring the ad—a simple picture of my book’s cover—was this: “It contains elements that may not be appropriate for all audiences, which may include ad copy/book content that infers or claims to diagnose, treat, or question sexual orientation.” (WSJ). The book timed well. The California Assembly has passed a bill that would bypass parental rights and leave young women sterilized (CaliforniaFamily). Remember: National Health Services in the U.K. will no longer provide these services for minors (Catholic).

4.
Four Authors Signed to J. K. Rowling’s Literary Agency Quit in Protest

In protest, of course, over her unwillingness to concede to her critics on the nature of the human as male and female. Among the books that may be harder to come by are volumes by Ugla Stefanía Kristjönudóttir Jónsdóttir. The publisher seems to be holding their ground. From CNN: The Blair Partnership, which was established in 2011 with Rowling as its main client, said in a statement that the agency supported “freedom of speech” for all its clients and would not comment on individual views. “We support the rights of all of our clients to express their thoughts and beliefs, and we believe in freedom of speech,” said the statement, emailed to CNN (CNN).

5.
Take the Polling the Year With a Grain of Salt

The social desirability bias is even worse than it was four years ago. This bias refers to the inclination to respond to a pollster with an answer deemed socially acceptable (RCP). The latest averages, however, indicate quite a spread: 9.5 percentage point-lead for Biden (RCP).

Advertisement
6.
When Schools Do Resume, Watch for Woke Politics in the Classroom

With racism as a case in point, expect this—as quoted from Education Week: “As Dr. Ibram X. Kendi would say, there is no ‘not racist.’ There is only racist and anti-racist. Your silence favors the status quo and the violently oppressive harm it does to black and brown folk everywhere” (CityJournal). Be ready: It’s time to re-open schools (CNN).

7.
The American Soul in the Year of the Plague and Violent Unrest

Eric Cohen: What measure of man and citizen would emerge from quarantine? Would we leave our homes slowly, humbly, more appreciative of the gift of life and the time to reflect, or would we rush angrily and bitterly back into the streets? Would we accept the long, difficult, daily labors of teaching the young of all races and creeds how to be decent and good, or would we seek, through mass protest, immediate answers to our most difficult social problems? Would we focus on the renewal of family as a sacred responsibility, or would we blame our broken government and corrupt system for all our woes? Would we return to and rebuild our churches, or would we burn them? Would we remember that faith alone points men toward the ultimate Redeemer, or would we act as if Cartesian science is the only power necessary to steer and save us? (NationalAffairs).

8.
Now They Are Coming for Jesus

But it wouldn’t be the first time. Shaun King: Yes, I think the statues of the white European they claim is Jesus should also come down. They are a form of white supremacy. Always have been … Tear them down (Twitter).

Advertisement
Copyright © 2020 DaybreakInsider.com

SUBSCRIPTION INFO

This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It is only sent to people who signed up from one of the Salem Media Group network of websites OR a friend might have forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy.

Unsubscribe from The Daybreak Insider

OR Send postal mail to:
The Daybreak Insider Unsubscribe
6400 N. Belt Line Rd., Suite 200, Irving, TX 75063

Were you forwarded this edition of The Daybreak Insider?
Get your own free subscription

Copyright © 2020 Salem Media Group and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.

THE SUNBURN

If there is any doubt about why I wrote this:

Nikki Fried sends horrible message on domestic abuse,

… it’s because of what can be heard on the 9-1-1 audio, acquired by the Miami Herald on Monday, an incident between Fried and her fiancee, Jake Bergmann.

In her recent altercation with fiancee Jake Bergmann, Nikki Fried is not offering a good look.

… the guy he pushed this girl into the street. And then he hit her again.

Situational awareness
@RealDonaldTrump: Unlike the radical left, I will ALWAYS stand against socialism and with the people of Venezuela. My Admin has always stood on the side of FREEDOM and LIBERTY and against the oppressive [Nicolás] Maduro regime! I would only meet with Maduro to discuss one thing: a peaceful exit from power!

@KFile: Since Parscale sent his Death Star tweet it appears Biden’s lead has grown by around 4 points in the average.

@RepTedDeutch: Social distancing & mask-wearing shouldn’t be partisan or political. Thanks @SenRickScott for saying this. Florida needs a unified public health message to combat the spread of COVID-19.

Tweet, tweet:

@Yashar: Not trying to sound like a jerk but none of the examples you all are giving are what I’m talking about. I’m referring to stories by news organizations like the Tampa Bay Times, Miami Herald etc. tweets from non-reporters and a blog called Florida Politics aren’t reputable

@JoseJavierJJR: Farmworkers are essential workers, at risk on the front lines feeding our families. Florida’s leaders should at least recognize their important role in Florida’s economy and health. An apology is needed and, more importantly, so are work safety protections.

@KatieCOBrien: I’ve noticed men who wear masks, their penises look bigger. I think the science is new, but wanted to pass it along.

Tweet, tweet:

Days until
NBA training camp — 7; “The Outpost” with Orlando Bloom and Scott Eastwood premieres — 10; NBA teams travel to Orlando — 14; Major League Soccer will return to action — 15; Disney World Magic Kingdom & Animal Kingdom to reopen — 18; Disney World Epcot and Hollywood Studios to reopen — 22; Federal taxes due — 22; “Mulan” premieres — 31; TED conference rescheduled — 32; Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” premieres — 38; NBA season restart in Orlando — 38; Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee begins — 55; Florida primaries for 2020 state legislative/congressional races — 56; NBA draft lottery — 61; Indy 500 rescheduled — 61; Republican National Convention begins in Charlotte — 63; Rev. Al Sharpton’s D.C. March — 66; U.S. Open begins — 69; “A Quiet Place Part II” premieres — 73; Rescheduled running of the Kentucky Derby — 75; Rescheduled date for French Open — 97; First presidential debate in Indiana — 101; “Wonder Woman” premieres — 101; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 102; First vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 109; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 111; Second presidential debate scheduled at the University of Michigan — 114; NBA draft — 114; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 115; NBA free agency — 117; Third presidential debate at Belmont — 123; 2020 General Election — 133; “Black Widow” premieres — 137; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 140; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 147; “No Time to Die” premieres — 154; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 161; “Top Gun: Maverick” premieres — 203; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 229; New start date for 2021 Olympics — 395; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 404; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 500; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 598; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 640; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 682; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 836.
Corona Florida
Florida marks 100,000th coronavirus infection” via Tamara Lush and Mike Schneider of The Associated Press — More than 100,000 people in Florida have been diagnosed with the coronavirus, state health officials reported, as public health officials reissued advisories urging social distancing and mask wearing. Some businesses have begun reevaluating their decisions to reopen amid the spike in cases reported by the state health department on its website. More than 3,100 people in Florida have died from COVID-19. Ron DeSantis has ordered the Health Department to reissue advisories urging Floridians to consider wearing masks to help keep the virus from spreading and to refrain from attending gatherings of more than 50 people.

SeaWorld and Universal Orlando reopened earlier June 2020, while Disney plans to reopen in phases starting July 11. Image via AP.

Florida hits 100,000 mark as state confirms another 2,926 daily coronavirus cases” via Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — Florida’s Department of Health reported 2,926 new infections of COVID-19, bringing the state’s total to 100,217 confirmed cases. There were also 12 new deaths announced, raising the statewide toll to 3,173. An analysis of public and nonpublic COVID-19 data found that through June 3, new cases in Florida had consistently been trending up since mid-May and the trends could not be attributed solely to increases in testing. And as bars, gyms, vacation rentals and movie theaters reopened at partial capacity in all but three South Florida counties, the number and rate of new COVID-19 cases were rising statewide.

Senate Democrats ask Ron DeSantis to apologize after blaming COVID-19 spike on minority farmworkers” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Senate Democrats called on DeSantis to issue an apology for his latest comments alleging that Hispanic farmworkers are to blame for the rise of COVID-19 cases in Florida. Last week during a news conference, DeSantis said the source of many of the new COVID-19 cases was from “overwhelmingly Hispanic farmworkers and day laborers.” Senate Democrats chastised the Governor’s remarks in a collective letter addressed to him. The letter went on to ask DeSantis for a public apology to Florida’s Hispanic community.

The surge in Florida coronavirus cases wasn’t caused just by an increase in testing” via David Fleshler and Aric Chokey of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — As Florida posted one record-breaking coronavirus total after another, many suggested the huge counts simply reflected increased testing. DeSantis blamed more widespread testing for much of the jump last week, as test kits became more widely available and restrictions on who could be tested were loosened. Many commenters on social media invoked the higher test counts to dismiss media reports of record-breaking COVID-19 numbers. While deaths have dropped, experts say it’s highly misleading to invoke the increased number of tests to explain the higher number of cases.

Florida’s Surgeon General quietly advises everyone to wear masks in public spaces” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — As Florida’s positive COVID-19 cases soared to a one-day record, Surgeon General Scott Rivkees quietly issued a public health advisory recommending people wear face masks in public. “All individuals in Florida should wear face coverings in any setting where social distancing is not possible,’’ Rivkees wrote in a document date-stamped Monday by the Department of Health, which was included in a news release Saturday titled “an additional public health advisory.” The advisory also recommends “all individuals should refrain from participation in social or recreational gatherings of more than 50 people.”

Coronavirus takes hold among immigrant workers; to priest, they were always ignored” via John Pacenti of The Palm Beach Post — At the start of the pandemic, Central American immigrants kept working their “essential jobs.” They cooked your food. They delivered it. They picked your vegetables. They mowed your yard. They maintained the golf courses. Some drove Ubers; others cleaned toilets. And they got sick with the coronavirus. The community is now DeSantis’ favorite punching bag for making Florida a hotspot in the nation for the deadly pathogen. DeSantis last week said clusters of “overwhelming Hispanic” day laborers and agriculture workers were to blame for daily records of cases being set in Florida though other groups, mainly young adults, are also tipping points.

Tweet, tweet:

‘We clearly haven’t beat it’: Florida politicians alarmed over coronavirus spike” via Caitlin Oprysko of POLITICO — Florida politicians signaled concern Monday morning over a dramatic uptick in the state’s coronavirus infection rate, urging residents, particularly young people, to stay vigilant about social distancing as the state prepares to host part of the Republican National Convention in two months. “We are obviously extremely concerned,” Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, a Republican, said of the spike. Calling mitigation measures like wearing a face covering and social distancing “pretty basic,” Scott warned Floridians that the virus is “still deadly” and reiterated that it was imperative to stay focused on the continued threat.

Florida company caught not paying worker for time worked or time on COVID-19 quarantine” via David J. Neal of the Miami Herald — A Sanford maker of fishing lures got caught not paying an employee money due under a pair of federal acts, the U.S. Department of Labor announced. Labor’s Wage and Hour investigators found Producto Lure didn’t pay an employee two weeks of emergency sick leave after a doctor ordered the employee to self-quarantine for the coronavirus. Producto owed that money under the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, which applies to some public entities and private employers with fewer than 500 people. Wage and Hour also found Producto owed the worker for work done before the self-quarantine, a basic violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act.

‘They deserve to be put on blast’: Social media is policing COVID-19 rule breakers” via Carlos Frías and David Smiley of the Miami Herald — Social media has stepped in to police rule-breakers where governments may lag behind, public floggings that have not gone unnoticed. A new Instagram account, @covid_305, sprouted over the weekend, posting videos of restaurants, bars and hotels that appear to be ignoring the rules. Among the events shown was a party at the SLS Hotel, with a full pool ringed with partygoers dancing shoulder to shoulder. On Saturday, three Miami restaurants were shut down as part of a crackdown after social media videos made the rounds.

Corona local
Miami-Dade’s largest cities to require masks in public as COVID-19 numbers spike” via Joey Flechas and Ana Claudia Chacin of the Miami Herald — The mayors of seven Miami-Dade cities announced new rules requiring people to wear face masks anywhere in public, a response to rising numbers of COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations, a measure they conceded will be tough to enforce. The cities of Miami, Hialeah, Miami Gardens, North Miami Beach, Miami Shores, Aventura, and Key Biscayne will require people to wear masks at all times in public. The sudden announcement left some specific details unexplained. Multiple mayors pleaded with the public to cover their faces and practice social distancing.

City of Miami Mayor Francis Suarez speaks during a COVID-19 news conference outside of Miami City Hall in Coconut Grove, Image via Miami Herald.

Palm Beach County considers a mandatory COVID-19 cover-up … finally” via Frank Cerabino of The Palm Beach Post — Will Palm Beach County embrace the mandatory wearing of masks? It might finally happen when county commissioners, who have made the county the South Florida oasis for mask-optional living, are set to discuss a mask requirement. Palm Beach has been the only county in South Florida that doesn’t require mask wearing for workers and customers in stores and other public places. But that’s becoming a harder position to maintain now that infection rates are climbing in the county and elsewhere in Florida.

FAU to require masks, saves 100 dorm rooms for sick students” via Sonja Isger of The Palm Beach Post — Florida Atlantic University leaders anticipate a fall term with nearly full dorms but a roster of courses, most of which are delivered online. Their vision includes campuses where students and staff are required to carry masks on them at all times and wear them in close quarters. Their tentative reopening plans also permit cafeteria-style dining, albeit with fewer indoor seating options and many more outdoor ones. They limit events to 50 people or fewer — except when it comes to athletics. And they prescribe steps to test, rehouse and otherwise accommodate any student who comes down with the scourge that made all these plans necessary in the first place: COVID-19.

More local
66 Jacksonville firefighters self-quarantining due to exposure to coronavirus” via The Florida Times-Union — The diagnosis that three Jacksonville firefighters and one lifeguard tested positive for coronavirus has sent 66 other city firefighters and 13 lifeguards into self-quarantine. None apparently have been hospitalized, Jacksonville Fire and Rescue Department officials said. Jacksonville Fire Chief Keith Powers discussed the situation Monday during a news conference led by Mayor Lenny Curry about the status of the coronavirus pandemic in the city. Powers emphasized the number of firefighters currently affected is fewer than the number of those self-quarantining earlier in the pandemic when 77 Jacksonville firefighters were self-isolating in mid-April after three tested positive for COVID-19.

Before 20 Jacksonville inmates tested positive for COVID-19, a doctor was the first to test positive” via Andrew Pantazi of The Florida Times-Union — A doctor working in the Duval County jails was the first to test positive for COVID-19, which led to at least 20 inmates testing positive over the weekend, the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office confirmed. Although the Sheriff’s Office has said it has been testing inmates since March, when asked how many in total have been tested, Undersheriff Pat Ivey said it was about 100. “In regards to the total number of tests: Probably just over 100,” Ivey said. He noted there was a current jail population of 2,706, which is split among the Pre-Trial Detention Facility, the Montgomery Correctional Center and the Jacksonville Re-Entry Center.

Conservatives file lawsuit challenging Jerry Demings’ face mask order” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Three Central Florida conservative Republicans, Rep. Anthony Sabatini, John Stemberger, and Charles Hart, filed a lawsuit Monday morning challenging Orange County Mayor Demings‘ executive order that everyone wear face masks in public. In a phone interview, Hart, a lawyer, called the order “massive government overreach” and contended it was a violation of the right to free speech. Stemberger, counsel in the suit, charged that Demings order is not clear, and, among others, leaves church pastors wondering if they, too, must wear masks while preaching.

John Stemberger addressees media about a lawsuit challenging Orange County’s mask order

Orlando Pride withdraws from NWSL Challenge Cup due to COVID-19 cases” via Julia Poe and Iliana Limón Romero of the Orlando Sentinel — The Orlando Pride will not participate in the NWSL Challenge Cup after six players and four staff members tested positive for COVID-19 Monday morning. The Pride had to quarantine such a large group of athletes and staff that they could not field a team to compete in the NWSL tournament. All of the individuals who tested positive were asymptomatic. The Pride were previously set to depart Wednesday for Utah to face off against the Chicago Red Stars Saturday in the opening day of the tournament.

Disney World workers start petition urging theme park to delay reopening” via Caroline Glenn of the Orlando Sentinel — Some Disney World workers are pleading with theme park executives to reconsider plans to reopen in July, following days of record-number cases of COVID-19 infections that have pushed the statewide total past 100,000. Reopening would mean bringing back tens of thousands of workers who were furloughed April 19 and since then have struggled to navigate Florida’s broken unemployment system. Still, workers who signed the petition said it’s too soon to welcome back guests. But with Disney set to start its phased-in reopening in just a few weeks, nearly four months after it voluntarily shut down March 16, it’s unclear if executives will be swayed by the plea.

Pasco schools superintendent Kurt Browning tests positive for COVID-19” via Jeffrey S. Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — Browning announced through his office that he was diagnosed as having the coronavirus. Browning experienced symptoms on Friday, including fever, chills and general achiness, and decided to get tested, district spokesman Steve Hegarty said. “He’s resting at home,” Hegarty said. “He is at home in isolation.” Deputy superintendent Ray Gadd is running the district in Browning’s absence. Browning had been going into his office regularly to conduct district business. However, Hegarty said, most of his interactions were held at a distance and in small numbers.

Pensacola Mayor urges residents to wear masks in public, but no plans to make it mandatory” via Jim Little of the Pensacola News Journal — As Florida topped 100,000 positive COVID-19 cases and Escambia County topped 1,200 positive cases, state health officials issued a public health advisory over the weekend calling on everyone to wear a mask in public. Pensacola Mayor Grover Robinson echoed the health department’s advisory at his Monday morning news conference calling on everyone in the city to wear masks in public. Robinson said he has personally seen a decline in the number of people wearing masks in public when he’s gone out to places like the grocery store or Joe Patti’s Seafood. He stopped short, however, of saying he would issue an emergency order to require masks to be worn in public indoor spaces.

Some Sarasota-Manatee restaurants close temporarily amid COVID-19” via Jimmy Geurts of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — As new COVID-19 cases continue to rise in Florida and Sarasota-Manatee, more local restaurants have chosen to close their doors for the time being. Anna Maria Island Beach Cafe announced it would immediately close until further notice due to a staff member testing positive for COVID-19. Japanese-Thai fusion restaurant Pacific Rim announced that it would close temporarily due to “an infectious person” recently visiting the establishment. While the Florida Department of Health in Sarasota County reports other issues including food service workers testing positive for hepatitis A, it will not provide names of restaurants where COVID-19-positive employees have been identified.

Corona nation
U.S. preps for ‘tremendous burden’ of flu, COVID-19 hit at once” via Anna Edney of Bloomberg — U.S. health agencies are preparing for a flu season that will be complicated by the coronavirus pandemic, which they don’t expect to be mitigated by a vaccine anytime soon. COVID-19 activity is expected to “continue for some time” and “could place a tremendous burden” on an already stretched health care system if coupled with the influenza season that comes each fall, top officials including Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, will tell House lawmakers, according to prepared testimony. The CDC developed a test that can check for both viruses at the same time and requested emergency authorization from the FDA last week.

The U.S. is bracing for a double whammy — COVID-19 and flu season. Image via Bloomberg.

Anthony Fauci pushes back at critics over his pessimism about NFL season” via John Lauerman of Bloomberg — Fauci, the top U.S. infectious disease specialist, said he’s been mistakenly painted as an obstacle to the National Football League’s upcoming season and only gave its officials advice after they requested it. The director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said he was consulted by the NFL as it searches for a way to preserve the safety of players and the public during the pandemic. Fauci told CNN last week that the league’s season may not be played if there’s a resurgence in cases, unless players are essentially kept in a “bubble” isolating them from others and tested almost every day.

An easier-to-administer treatment moves to human trials.” via The New York Times — Gilead Sciences, an American biopharmaceutical company, will soon start trials of an inhalable version of remdesivir, an antiviral drug that has shown some preliminary promise as a virus treatment. Currently, remdesivir is given intravenously, which restricts its use to hospitals. Remdesivir, which interferes with virus replication, is the first drug to show effectiveness against the coronavirus in human trials. The drug has not yet been approved, and its safety and efficacy are currently being investigated in several clinical trials.

Emergency rooms see fewer heart attacks, strokes in pandemic” via Ayshatu Diallo of Bloomberg — Emergency-room visits by people suffering heart attacks or strokes have fallen during the COVID-19 pandemic. In the early stages of the coronavirus’s spread in the U.S., federal regulators recommended that health care systems prioritize urgent visits and delay optional care. Many people experiencing symptoms not related to the virus have stayed away from hospitals as a result. Between March 15 and May 23, hospital visits related to heart attacks declined 23%, while visits related to stroke fell 20% and visits for high blood sugar decreased 10%.

U.S. rejects additional flights sought by Chinese airlines” via Ryan Beene of Bloomberg — U.S. officials rejected additional flights proposed by Chinese airlines but said they would reconsider if the Beijing government adjusts its policies affecting American passenger carriers. In a statement, the Transportation Department said it disapproved of service schedules submitted by four China-based carriers that currently are allowed to make four combined flights to the U.S. each week, plus additional proposals submitted by three other Chinese carriers. Shares of three China-based airlines fell in Hong Kong trading. American officials have relayed to their counterparts in Beijing that the move is a “procedural matter only and that it should not be viewed as an escalation on our part,” the Transportation Department said.’

The U.S. is not allowing flights from China to enter the country.

As movie theaters reopen, they’re tackling a role they never expected to play: Psychologist” via Steven Zeitchik of The Washington Post — All industries, of course, must figure out how to put customers at ease during the pandemic. But movie theaters face a distinct strain of the problem. More than airlines, retail and even restaurants, movie theaters thrive on a sense of refuge, peddling the joy of leaving reality at the door to plunge into imaginary new worlds. That’s tough to do when employees are handing out masks, enforcing seat distances and scanning for pallid complexions. They need to reassure customers it’s safe to share a dark room with dozens of strangers but not freak them out with clinicalities.

Corona economics
Vast federal aid has capped rise in poverty, studies find” via Jason DeParle of The New York Times — An unprecedented expansion of federal aid has prevented the rise in poverty that experts predicted this year when the coronavirus sent unemployment to the highest level since the Great Depression, two studies suggest. The assistance could even cause official measures of poverty to fall. The studies carry important caveats. Many Americans have suffered hunger or other hardships amid long delays in receiving the assistance, and much of the aid is scheduled to expire next month. Millions of people have been excluded from receiving any help, especially undocumented migrants, who often have American children.

IRS expands criteria to withdraw money from retirement plans for those affected by coronavirus” via Kelly Tyko of the USA Today — More Americans are eligible to withdraw money from their retirement plans if they have been affected by COVID-19, according to the IRS. The Internal Revenue Service announced that it has expanded eligibility to “take into account additional factors such as reductions in pay, rescissions of job offers and delayed start dates.” The act allows investors of any age to withdraw as much as $100,000 from retirement accounts including 401(k) plans and individual retirement accounts this year without paying an early-withdrawal penalty of 10%.

More Americans can withdraw money from their retirement plans, the IRS decides. Image via Getty.

U.S. home-mortgage delinquencies reach highest level since 2011” via John Gittelsohn of Bloomberg — U.S. home-mortgage delinquencies climbed in May to the highest level since November 2011 as the pandemic’s toll on personal finances deepened. The number of borrowers more than 30 days late swelled to 4.3 million, up 723,000 from the previous month, according to property information service Black Knight Inc. More than 8% of all U.S. mortgages were past due or in foreclosure. The increase in delinquencies was smaller than the 1.6 million jump in April when the economy ground to a halt nationwide. The delinquency count includes homeowners who missed payments as part of forbearance agreements, which allow an initial six-month reprieve without penalty.

Judge weighs battle over unemployment system” via Jim Saunders of the News Service of Florida — After four hours of arguments, a Leon County circuit judge will decide whether to move forward with a potential class-action lawsuit stemming from massive problems in Florida’s unemployment compensation system. Attorneys for the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity and Deloitte Consulting, a contractor that helped put the online system in place in 2013, argued that Judge John Cooper should dismiss the lawsuit, which was filed after a crush of coronavirus-caused unemployment claims overwhelmed the system this spring. The lawsuit makes a series of allegations, including negligence and breach of fiduciary duty. Cooper last month rejected a preliminary injunction that plaintiffs sought to force the Department of Economic Opportunity to “fix” the system.

Florida banks skid to loss” via John Hielscher of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — The coronavirus pandemic took its toll on Florida’s banking sector in the first three months of 2020. The state’s 102 banks and thrifts posted a combined loss of $281 million in the first quarter, the weakest performance since the Great Recession era, according to a report last week from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. That red ink compares with profits of $560 million in fourth quarter 2019 and $467 million one year earlier, FDIC records show. Florida lenders set aside $1.3 billion in reserves to cover future losses from loans to customers, up sharply from just $162.3 million reserves a year ago.

More corona
Carnival Cruise Line extends sailing suspension, won’t resume cruising until October” via Julia Thompson of the USA Today — Carnival Cruise Line will extend its sailing suspension in North America through the end of September, the cruise line announced. “During this unprecedented pause in our business, we have continued to assess the operating environment and confer with public health, government and industry officials,” Carnival Cruise Line President Christine Duffy told cruisers and travel agents in a letter announcing all cruises are canceled through Sept. 30. The CDC’s “no-sail order” is scheduled to expire July 24, and Canada has issued a ban on cruises in the country’s waters through Oct. 31.

Carnival will not be sailing until October, company officials announced.

MSC Cruises plans to resume operations from Florida in November” via Taylor Dolven of the Miami Herald — MSC Cruises plans to resume cruises from Florida in November 2020. The company said it will begin cruises on is MSC Meraviglia and MSC Armonia ships from PortMiami and on its MSC Seaside ship from Port Canaveral in November. The ships will visit Jamaica, Mexico, the Cayman Islands, among others, and the company’s private island in the Bahamas, according to a release. The announcement came before the CDC had begun the process of determining how and when cruising can safely resume in the U.S. amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the agency said. Caribbean countries remain closed to cruise ships and have not announced plans to reopen yet.

Hit hard by virus, fine dining finds new ways to serve” via Dee-Ann Durbin of The Associated Press — In the U.S. alone, the fine dining industry lost 6 million jobs in March and April. But fine dining was hit hardest of all, says David Portalatin, an industry adviser. At the low point, in April, U.S. fine dining transactions were down 82% from a year ago, he said. Fourteen U.S. restaurants have earned the highest rating of three stars from the Michelin Guide. Of those, just one, The Inn at Little Washington in rural Virginia, has reopened its dining room at half capacity. The restaurant put mannequins at its empty tables to make the space look more inviting. Other restaurants aren’t offering carryout but are still cooking. Eleven Madison Park in New York is making 3,000 meals per day for front-line workers.

The ice cream industry is having a meltdown” via Aaron Mak of Slate — While grocery sales for ice cream have largely remained consistent, with even modest gains in some cases, ice cream shops are still floundering under the new strictures that COVID-19 has placed on the food industry, even as Americans spend more time out in the ice cream-beckoning heat. The overall effect is an economic slump for the industry. Each year, ice cream shops count on a surge in customers come springtime. Retailers typically try to build up a nest egg during the warmer months that can tide them over during the winter, but the pandemic forced Americans indoors just when demand would usually start to pick up.

Smoldering
Who caused the violence at protests? It wasn’t antifa.” via Meg Kelly and Elyse Samuels of The Washington Post — Antifa is a moniker, not a single group with a clear organizational structure or leader. It is a decentralized network of activists who don’t coordinate. Their common ground is opposing anything that they think is racist or fascist. In recent years, antifa activists appeared whenever there was a large gathering of white nationalists. Roughly 80 federal charges, including murder and throwing Molotov cocktails at police vehicles, reveal no evidence of an antifa plot. Four people who identify with the far-right extremist “boogaloo” movement are among those facing the most serious federal charges. The DHS said in a June 1 internal intelligence report that “most of the violence appears to have been driven by opportunists.”

Man threatens to shoot up Black Lives Matter rally” via The Associated Press — Sheriff’s investigators began looking at Quintin Adkins June 11 after receiving an anonymous tip from an “old friend” about social media posts that included videos of him handling, loading and firing weapons. He was arrested Thursday on a single count of written threats to kill. The arrest affidavit said that Adkins used profanity in the videos while threatening to attend a Black Lives Matter demonstration and begin shooting. Some of the videos showed him driving, loading a handgun and pointing it at other vehicles on the road around him. The Florida legislature, in response to a 2018 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in South Florida, expanded a state statute to include threats to “conduct a mass shooting or an act or terrorism.”

Quintin Adkins has been arrested after an anonymous tip alerted the authorities he was about to shoot up a Black Lives Matter protest.

Miami Gardens fires cops after tussle with Black man. But the city won’t say why” via Charles Rabin of the Miami Herald — Two Miami Gardens police officers involved in the rough arrest of a man at a RaceTrac gas station three months ago were fired last week when the police chief was informed of additional information that could be “criminal in nature,” she said. Miami Gardens Police Chief Delma Noel-Pratt has not disclosed the nature of that information, only saying in a prepared statement that it had been forwarded to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. The man involved in the incident with the two officers, Miguel McKay, was charged with resisting an officer without violence. The charge has since been dropped.

Court rejects challenge the Confederate monument move” via Jim Saunders of the News Service of Florida — A three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that opponents did not have legal standing to challenge the monument’s move, saying they did not allege “a concrete, particularized injury.” Several plaintiffs filed the lawsuit after Lakeland officials in 2018 decided to move from the city’s Munn Park to Veterans Park a monument to Confederate veterans who died during the Civil War. Munn Park is in Lakeland’s historic district, while Veterans Park is not, according to the ruling. The city in 1908 gave permission to the United Daughters of the Confederacy to erect the monument in Munn Park.

In America’s oldest city, a reckoning over Confederate past” via Bobby Caina Calvan of The Associated Press — At the center of the debate in St. Augustine is a monument, located in the city’s historic central plaza, memorializing dozens of the city’s sons who died fighting for the Confederacy during the Civil War. The towering structure, which was built in 1879, takes the form of an obelisk jutting into a canopy of oak trees. Inscribed on it are the names of the fallen soldiers. The Rev. Ron Rawls, a pastor at St. Paul’s African Methodist Episcopal Church, calls the monument disrespectful and wants it removed.

Assignment editors — The Florida Legislative Black Caucus will host a Virtual Town Hall featuring civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump. Zoom town hall begins 6:30 p.m.: ID — 82024149198; Password — 603734; Call-in number — (312) 626-6799.

Broward School Board member says hacker posted ‘white privilege’ meme on her Facebook page” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Broward School Board member Ann Murray said a hacker posted a meme on her Facebook page about white privilege that many criticized as racist. At about 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Murray’s Facebook page shared a post from another user with the meme, “When I was born, they must have ran out of white privilege because I had to work my ass off to get where I am.” The reaction was strong, with commenters using terms such as “racist,” “tone-deaf,” “disgusting” and “reprehensible.” Several called for her to resign. The post was deleted by 9 p.m. Sunday. Murray said “I swear on my husband’s grave” the post didn’t come from her.

Confederate flag finally may be banned in Indian River schools; board taking first step Tuesday” via Sommer Brugal of TC Palm — The School Board Tuesday is to take the first step toward banning the Confederate flag and other symbols, such as the swastika and gang symbols, associated with hate groups, from campuses and any school-sponsored activity. The move would be part of the district’s updated student code of conduct, which is up for board approval next month. This won’t be the first time the hot-button issue comes before the Indian River County School Board. In 2017, community members petitioned the board to ban the Confederate flag from campuses, but the board refused to take the step. In 2016, the School Board rejected the NAACP’s call to ban the flag.

Miami restaurant worker quits after owner nicknames blackened wings ‘I can’t breathe’” via Laine Doss of the Miami New Times — Brandon Gonzalez was working his shift at the Hole in the Wall Pub and was about to deliver a plate of blackened chicken wings to a customer when he noticed a phrase printed in red underneath the order on the ticket: “I CANT BREATHE.” “I initially brushed it off as a mistake, but the owner came into the kitchen and mentioned the joke to the kitchen workers,” Gonzalez said. “They just looked at him.” Gonzalez says he finished out his shift, collected his tips and quit. He then posted a photo of the receipt on Twitter.

‘The officers feel like they can’t win’: Tampa chief responds to police criticism” via Kavitha Surana of the Tampa Bay Times — Tampa police Chief Brian Dugan painted a picture of a beleaguered police force, worn down by weeks of protests and media scrutiny. “The police, we always have everybody’s back and nobody has our back,” he said. “Right now the officers feel like they can’t win. And I would have to agree with them.” He said demonstrations against police brutality that have blocked traffic and sometimes led to tense standoffs have created a dilemma for police. Officers have kept their distance from recent protests in an effort to diffuse tension, but Dugan said that wasn’t sustainable.

Racist hate for Bubba Wallace was inevitable. Now NASCAR must stand with him.” via Jerry Brewer of The Washington Post — Hate, not heritage. Pure hate. What else could prompt a person or multiple people, to place a noose in the garage stall of Wallace, the man who nudged NASCAR into finally outlawing the Confederate flag? For such a racist, there is only one threat greater than a trailblazing black driver with aspirations of change: a trailblazing black driver who succeeds at change. Wallace isn’t scared, and now NASCAR is on a mission to “identify the person(s) responsible and eliminate them from the sport.” With video surveillance and limited access to key areas because of novel coronavirus precautions, it shouldn’t be difficult to find the scum.

NASCAR has launched an investigation after a noose was found on June 21 in the garage of Bubba Wallace, the only black driver competing in its top Cup series. Image via AP.

As Doak Campbell Stadium name comes under fire, FSU president says university will study issue” via Curt Weiler of the Tallahassee Democrat — Campbell‘s legacy has come under fire over the last few weeks. Campbell was a trailblazer in getting the stadium that went on to bear his name built during his time as FSU president. However, he was also called out in an online petition by former FSU football linebacker Kendrick Scott for his “noninclusive views of blacks as a segregationist.” In Scott’s petition, he calls for Campbell’s name to be removed from the stadium. Thrasher’s public comments on the matter bring credence to what has been a growing outcry on social media from FSU fans about the need to change the name of the stadium.

— “Doak Campbell III defends his grandfather amid petition to change stadium name” via Tom D’Angelo of the Tallahassee Democrat

D.C. matters
Donald Trump says he’d meet with Nicolás Maduro to discuss ‘a peaceful exit from power’ in Venezuela” via David Smiley, Nora Gamez Torres, Michael Wilner and Francesca Chambers of the Miami Herald — Trump said that he would consider meeting with Maduro, but administration officials say there’s no ongoing effort to secure a meeting with a foreign leader viewed by the U.S. as a narco-terrorist and illegitimate president. Trump’s willingness to meet with the socialist ruler could have political ramifications in Venezuela, a once-thriving South American nation now racked by poverty and political turmoil. It could also complicate Trump’s reelection campaign, which has aggressively courted Hispanic voters in Florida, home to narrowly decided presidential elections and the largest community of Venezuelan exiles in the country.

Donald Trump is floating the idea of meeting with Nicolás Maduro.

The lapses that let a Saudi extremist shoot up a U.S. Navy base” via Michael LaForgia and Eric Schmitt of The New York Times — Breakdowns in vetting systems in the United States and Saudi Arabia occurred at virtually every step of the way. Saudi security services failed to detect early clues from Lieutenant Mohammed Alshamrani’s online life that might have disqualified him from joining the military and prevented him from receiving clearance to apply for the American training program. This past December, Lieutenant Alshamrani opened fire in a classroom building at the base, killing three sailors and wounding eight other people before being fatally shot by sheriff’s deputies.

Statewide
As the state budget deadline looms July 1, key organizations ask Ron DeSantis to deliver on long-awaited proposals” via Danielle J. Brown of Florida Phoenix — DeSantis prepares to make state budget cuts, a letter signed by 35 Florida organizations calls on the governor to protect long-standing public services by finding funds from every route possible. Those groups range from the League of Women Voters of Florida and Habitat for Humanity of Florida to the Florida PTA and United Way of Florida, touching on areas including housing, health, conservation, children and retirees. DeSantis has said that he is preparing to make big cuts in the budget to address the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, including declining sales tax revenues.

Attorney General investigating Panama City Beach Bookit” via Nathan Cobb of the Panama City News Herald — The Florida attorney general’s office is investigating a recently shuttered local travel agency after it allegedly left customers high and dry. According to Kylie Mason, spokeswoman for the Florida attorney general’s office, Attorney General Ashley Moody has received nearly 700 complaints related to Panama City Beach-based BookIt.com since January. This led the office to open an investigation in April. Mason estimated that Bookit owes customers more than $2.1 million. Due to the ongoing investigation, Mason couldn’t release any additional information.

Jacksonville Civic Council voices support for Duval Schools sales tax” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — Over a year since the Duval County School Board first launched an initiative to get a half-cent sales tax for school maintenance on ballots, additional supporters are coming out of the woodwork. Last month, JAX Chamber voiced its backing of the bill and now, the Jacksonville Civic Council is doing the same. Last week the business group voiced its “full support.” “The Civic Council has always supported a halfpenny sales tax referendum to improve our schools,” the statement said. “With the adjustments to the plan made in recent months, we fully support this particular proposal and with enthusiasm.”

Judge: Florida school shooting trial off indefinitely” via Curt Anderson of The Associated Press — The death penalty trial of the man charged with killing 17 people at a Florida high school is off indefinitely because of restrictions related to the coronavirus outbreak. Broward Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer said in a hearing held remotely that it’s not even clear when the Broward County courthouse will reopen to the public. It has been closed since March 16 to everyone but essential personnel. “We have to take it one day at a time, quite frankly,” Scherer said. “We’re not there yet. When we are, I don’t know.” A complicating factor, again related to the coronavirus, is when it would be permissible to allow possibly hundreds of prospective jurors to gather at the courthouse to be questioned about their views of the case.

The death penalty trial of Parkland High School shooter Nikolas Cruz is off indefinitely. Image via AP.

Florida man got 4 years for stealing 4 $15 phone chargers. He was beaten to death in prison” via Samantha J. Gross and Ben Conarck of the Miami Herald — Christopher Howell was less than halfway into a four-year sentence at Lake Correctional Institution, a men’s prison near Orlando, when he died. He was serving time for stealing four phone chargers from a West Palm Beach Target. Howell was killed at the hands of a corrections officer, who beat him while the inmate’s hands were cuffed, multiple prison sources said. The brutal beating happened Thursday. The Florida Department of Corrections says he was pronounced dead Friday at an area hospital.

FPL pitches vehicle charging proposal” via Jim Saunders of the News Service of Florida — Pointing to “range anxiety” as an obstacle to motorists driving electric vehicles, Florida Power & Light is asking regulators to approve a proposal that could lead to more vehicle-charging stations in the state. The proposal, filed Friday at the Florida Public Service Commission, would create a pilot program that includes the possibility of FPL operating vehicle-charging stations or partnering with businesses or governments in operating the facilities. The proposal involves what the utility describes as “fast charge” stations that allow motorists to charge electric vehicles more quickly than, for example, they can charge vehicles at home.

Lobby regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:

Marc Dunbar, Dean Mead: Professional Parking Management Corporation

Richard Fidei, Fred Karlinsky, Greenberg Traurig: United States Fire Insurance Company

Jim Horne, Strategos Public Affairs: Hogan Marren Babbo & Rose

Susan Goldstein, Robert Schenck, The Legis Group: Real Diagnostics, Yawn Properties

Andrew Ketchel, Capital City Consulting: Barnett Southern Corporation

Lori Killinger, Martin Lyon, Lewis Longman & Walker: Navarre Beach Fire Rescue

Matt Spritz, The Spritz Group: Peak Targeting Corp. dba ContactTracing. US

Christopher Snow, Snow Strategies: Aveanna Healthcare

2020
With ‘Kung flu,’ ‘thugs,’ and ‘our heritage,’ Trump leans on racial grievance as he reaches for a campaign reset” via Jose A. Del Real of The Washington Post — Trump has long used his raucous rallies to road test potential campaign themes and attack lines. And while much attention on his Saturday night appearance in Tulsa focused on the sparse turnout for his first rally since the pandemic ended mass gatherings, Trump’s litany of racially offensive stereotypes sent a clear signal about how he plans to try to revive his flagging reelection effort. “If you want to save your heritage, you want to save that beautiful heritage of ours, we have a great heritage, we’re a great country,” he said to cheers, using a phrase often used to defend Confederate statues and regalia.

Tulsa rally failure may spark Trump campaign team shake-up” via Hunter Walker and Jon Ward of Yahoo News — Poor attendance at his rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Saturday night has Trump increasingly frustrated with his campaign manager, Brad Parscale, and considering shaking up his reelection team, according to sources familiar with the issue. According to a former adviser, Trump, who is “getting madder by the day,” has recently made dismissive comments about Parscale’s experience. Before working for Trump, Parscale worked at a web design and marketing company he founded in San Antonio. He was named campaign manager of the president’s reelection bid in early 2018.

Donald Trump’s Tulsa rally was a disappointment, could lead to a campaign shake-up.

Trump’s Maduro comments create political mess in must-win Florida” via Matt Dixon and Gary Fineout of POLITICO — Trump distanced himself from his own comments that signaled an openness to talks with Maduro, but the reversal is unlikely to prevent a political mess in Florida and still complicates the GOP’s 2020 attempt to brand Democrats as socialists. “Unlike the radical left, I will ALWAYS stand against socialism and with the people of Venezuela,” Trump tweeted. “My Admin has always stood on the side of FREEDOM and LIBERTY and against oppressive Maduro regime!” The mere flirtation with diplomatic talks with Maduro could hurt Trump’s standing in the nation’s largest swing state, which he needs to win in November in order to return to the White House for a second term.

With unsubstantiated claim, Trump sows doubt on U.S. election” via The Associated Press — Trump opened a new front in his fight against mail-in voting, making unsubstantiated assertions that foreign countries will print up millions of bogus ballots to rig the results and create what he called the “scandal of our times.” The claims not only ignore safeguards that states have implemented to prevent widespread fraud but they also risk undermining Americas’ faith in the election, spreading the very kind of disinformation U.S. authorities have warned foreign adversaries could exploit to foment doubt in the voting process.

As Trump slumps, his campaign fixes on a target: Women” via Michael Scherer and Josh Dawsey of The Washington Post — Just 4½ months from the election, an already historic partisan gender gap appears to be solidifying, with Joe Biden enjoying a 23-point advantage over Trump among women voters, up from the 14-point edge for Hillary Clinton in 2016. Trump still has an advantage among white non-college-educated women, winning them by 14 points, compared to college-educated women, who Biden wins by a margin of 28 points. But both groups have moved in the Democrat’s direction since 2016, by 11 points among those without college degrees and 12 points among those with college degrees.

Despite dreamy polls, Dems can’t shake their 2016 nightmare” via Burgess Everett and Marianne Levine of POLITICO — Trump is down or within striking distance in nearly every battleground state, his approval ratings are stubbornly low and he’s threatening to bring down the GOP Senate majority with him while helping to douse Republican chances of House takeover. Some Democrats are even beginning to feel confident about their prospects this fall. “In 2016 we thought for sure we were going to win in Minnesota. And Trump lost by only a point and a half,” said Sen. Tina Smith. Citing the uncertainty of coronavirus and turnout, Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin said he has “a very tentative feeling about the polling under these circumstances.”

—“For Joe Biden and Democrats, confidence comes with a chaser: Fear” via Matt Viser of The Washington Post

Convention countdown
Sen. Rick Scott demands masks and social distancing at relocated Republican National Convention in Jacksonville despite Trump wanting packed mask-free coronation” via Katelyn Caralle of the Daily Mail — Scott said that if Republicans move their convention to Florida, he expects the massive crowds to wear masks and practice social distancing. ‘You have to do this safely. People need to wear masks. They need to social distance. You need to do this in a manner no one gets sick,’ Scott said. The senator said he wants the convention to be moved to Florida from the original location in Charlotte, North Carolina, although the reason for it being moved was because Trump wanted no masks and no social distancing.

Rick Scott believes social distancing and masks should be enforced at the Republican National Convention in Jacksonville. Image via AP.

Poll shows Duval voters oppose RNC coming to Jacksonville, worry about coronavirus impact” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — A majority of Duval voters do not want the Republican National Convention in their city this Summer, according to a new poll. The poll commissioned by Republican Voters Against Trump found 49% of those surveyed did not support Jacksonville hosting Trump’s nomination speech in August. Only 39% said they supported it. Further, 57% said they were concerned the convention would spur a new COVID-19 outbreak while only 43% said they weren’t worried. The poll was conducted on June 17 and 18, before Trump took the stage in Tulsa for his first major return to the campaign trail.

The Ritz-Carlton Amelia Island reports 638 layoffs, work-hour reductions” via Mark Masch of the Jacksonville Daily Record — The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Co. filed a notice with state and local officials reporting temporary layoffs or reductions in hours for 638 of the 649 employees at its Amelia Island resort hotel. The Ritz-Carlton, which filed its notice on June 2, joins two other major Northeast Florida hotels that filed layoff notices in the first week of June under the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act. All three hotels are likely to receive a large number of visitors during the Aug. 24-27 convention.

More from the trail
Poll finds Kat Cammack, Judson Sapp atop CD 3 Republican primary” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — A new poll commissioned by Cammack’s congressional campaign found the Republican primary for Florida’s 3rd Congressional District is a two-way race between her and Sapp. The poll found Sapp, who ran for the seat two years ago against incumbent U.S. Rep. Ted Yoho, in the lead with 12% support among Republican primary voters. Cammack followed with 10% support. The remainder of the field either showed up in the low single digits or fell in the catchall of “unsure,” which accounted for 60% of survey respondents. The poll identified another positive angle for the Cammack camp: her support is stronger among self-identified Trump Republicans, 15% of whom say she’s their top pick.

Byron Donalds touts Trump’s praise in first TV ad” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Trump hasn’t issued an endorsement in Florida’s 19th Congressional District, but in a television ad, Donalds highlights personal compliments the Commander-in-Chief threw his way. “I want to thank Representative Donalds,” Trump says in news footage. “He’s got a tremendous future ahead of him.” The quote comes from an event last October when Donalds introduced the President at the Second Step Presidential Justice Forum and presented him with the Bipartisan Justice Award. The moment now provides the foundation of a 30-second video spot.

To view the ad, click on the image below:

Local Congressional candidate denies affiliation with arrested man, despite contrary evidence” via Dave Elias of NBC 2 — A campaign staffer for the man who wants to be Southwest Florida’s next congressman has been arrested but candidate Dr. William Figlesthaler said the man was never affiliated with his campaign. Matthew Hurley was arrested for contempt of court charges, and numerous sources have confirmed Hurley has worked with Figlesthaler’s campaign. A campaign flyer for Figlesthaler lists Hurley’s name as part of the team. When asked about Hurley’s arrest, Figlesthaler denied any relationship. An arrest document lists Figlesthaler’s campaign as a possible employer to wage garnishments.

Dueling fundraisers for state Senate candidates have Democrats online, Republicans outdoors” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — It’s a tale of two parties for state Senate candidates in Seminole County this week. Democrat Patricia Sigman’s meeting Tuesday will be entirely online. But Wednesday’s fundraiser for Republican Jason Brodeur will be in person at McKinnon Groves in Winter Garden. Brodeur’s event will be outside, according to its description as “an outdoor evening of food and fellowship,” which could lessen the potential for infection compared with an indoor event.

Pam Bondi gets behind Ray Rodrigues in SD 27 race” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Bondi threw her endorsement to Rodrigues in his Senate bid. Fresh off successfully defending Trump during the impeachment trial, Bondi said now was a critical time to elect conservative lawmakers. “Now more than ever we need conservative warriors like Ray Rodrigues fighting for the issues that matter to the hard-working people of Southwest Florida and families across the Sunshine State,” Bondi said. “Ray is unapologetically pro-life, fought to ban sanctuary cities, and will fight to secure our borders. I am proud to endorse Ray Rodrigues because he stands for our shared, conservative values.”

Lake County Sheriff endorses Keith Truenow for HD 31 — Sheriff Peyton Grinnell is endorsing Truenow, an agribusinessman who has entered the Republican primary to replace retiring Rep. Jennifer Sullivan. “Keith supports those of us who go to work every day to keep our community, state and nation safe. He advocates for the adequate funding of public safety and pledges to never support the absurd proposal to defund law enforcement,” Grinnell said. Truenow founded Lake Jem Farms based in Mount Dora. He is a farmer and rancher producing sod sold throughout Florida. Truenow also serves on local and statewide boards including Turfgrass Producers of Florida, Lake County Farm Bureau and the Lake County Fair Association.

Construction trade union endorses Samuel Vilchez Santiago for HD 48 — The International Union of Painters & Allied Trades (IUPAT) District Council 78 has formally endorsed Santiago. The IUPAT is among Florida’s preeminent skilled labor unions, specializing in representing the interests of painters, glaziers, drywall installers, and trade show workers. Wayne Lukash, Government Affairs and Communications Director for the IUPAT said: “The needs of working families are top priority to the IUPAT. That’s why we are supporting Samuel Vilchez Santiago for Florida HD 48. We have confidence in his ability to be a fierce advocate for our members in Tallahassee and we look forward to working alongside him.”

Fiona McFarland takes pro-military message to Sarasota airwaves” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — McFarland has gone on television with an ad buy stressing her military service. In her new “Service Above Self ” ad, the House candidate running in District 72 shows off military honors in a biographic montage. Campaign spokeswoman Maryann Grgic said the ad will run on cable outlets in the Sarasota market. Footage of a Naval warship leads into images of the candidate in uniform, fading into an aerial view of Sarasota. Notably, the candidate moved to the region last year just as she prepared to run for office.

To view the ad, click on the image below:

Firefighter groups back Demi Busatta Cabrera in HD 114” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — The South Florida Council of Fire Fighters (SFCFF) and the Coral Gables Professional Fire Fighters Association are both backing Busatta Cabrera’s bid. Busatta Cabrera is the lone Republican to qualify in the three-person field. Jean-Pierre Bado and Susi Loyzelle are competing for the Democratic nomination in HD 114. Busatta Cabrera has handily outraised Bado. She raised just under $11,000 in May, as fundraising in the region has slowed due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Before the outbreak, Busatta Cabrera brought in some hefty monthly sums. Through June, Busatta Cabrera has added just over $96,000. She has just under $60,000 still on hand.

—“Meet Stevan Novakovic, a Republican running for House District 31” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics

Karen Marcus, county term-limited officials can run again after break, judge rules” via Hannah Morse of The Palm Beach Post — A Palm Beach County judge has ruled that former county commissioners can indeed run for the office again, as long as they sit out for at least one term. The order affirms former Commissioner Karen Marcus’ run for her old seat on the board, less than a month after a Republican resident of Tequesta filed a legal challenge against her and elections chief Wendy Sartory Link. Judge Glenn Kelley, who heard arguments Thursday, sided with Marcus and Palm Beach County. The decision can be appealed.

Top opinion
UF ‘Gator Bait’ chant is gone. Kick FSU’s offensive ‘tomahawk chop’ to the curb, too” via the Miami Herald editorial board — It must have been a surprise to many to learn of the racist foundation of the University of Florida’s “Gator Bait” chant. Still, to some, the decision to ban the chant that Gator fans use to taunt their opponents might seem the height of tedious political correctness. It is anything but. Now Florida State University President John Thrasher should do something similar and get rid of the “Tomahawk Chop” at Seminole games.
Opinions
Trump is flat-out wrong. Mail-in voting is safer, not vulnerable to fraud, like he says” via Juan-Carlos ‘J.C.’ Planas of the Miami Herald — After the dismal reviews of his political rally in Tulsa this weekend, Trump is back tweeting falsehoods about voting by mail and how it could “fraudulently” rob him of his reelection. As a former Republican member of the Florida Legislature, whose parents fled political oppression, I am appalled that my community would tolerate such an attack on our voting rights. In the last decade, there have been no cases in Florida where vote-by-mail fraud has been alleged, let alone, proven or overturned the results of an election.

Florida TaxWatch recommends the expansion of virtual learning in K-12, colleges and universities to ‘reduce operating costs.’ It is a lazy recommendation, and here is my open letter to the TaxWatch CEO.” via Paul Cottle of Bridge to Tomorrow — Florida TaxWatch recommends the Legislature consider expanding the use of virtual learning in public schools, colleges and universities as a way to reduce operating costs. There is at present no physics education research supporting the assertion that any existing virtual learning model comes close to reproducing the learning gains that are characteristic of a well-designed and well-taught in-person active learning physics class. Furthermore, the student subpopulations who benefit the most from the in-person active learning model are those that suffer from severe underrepresentation.

Today’s Sunrise
Florida has reached another grim milestone in the fight against COVID-19; we’ve now had more than 100,000 cases. And the death toll has reached 3,266, averaging more than 29 fatalities per day since the first deaths were reported on March 5.

Also, on today’s Sunrise:

— Last week, Gov. DeSantis suggested migrant farmworkers were spreading coronavirus. A lot of Latinos are saying the Governor should apologize for trying to blame people considered essential workers — and couldn’t get protective gear.

— Advocates for seniors are also blasting DeSantis for saying the recent spike in COVID-19 cases isn’t as bad as it seems because most of the victims are young adults. People in nursing homes are still in danger, they say, and shouldn’t write them off in the rush to reopen.

— Rep. Dianne Hart, a leading voice in the legislature for prison reform, says why she is urging the Department of Corrections to fire the guard who beat an inmate at Lake Correctional Thursday. The prisoner died the next day.

— The latest in Florida man, who fought his way into Walmart without a mask because, well, it’s Florida.

To listen, click on the image below:

Instagram of the day
Aloe
Disney World announces more reopening dates for its hotels” via DeWayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — Walt Disney World has revealed more reopening dates for some of its on-property hotels as the resort continues a phased reopening from its coronavirus shutdown. On Monday, select Disney Deluxe Villa Resorts and Disney’s Fort Wilderness Resort & Campground opened for previously booked guests. Disney set these hotel reopening dates for already-booked guests, but the company emphasized that plans remain fluid and that folks could still be reassigned to other Disney lodging options. Disney World’s theme parks will start reopening July 11 with Magic Kingdom and Disney’s Animal Kingdom, followed by Epcot and Disney’s Hollywood Studios July 15.

Walt Disney World park reservation system slammed on opening day” via Sharon Kennedy Wynne of the Tampa Bay Times — Walt Disney World’s new theme park reservation system was slammed by fans when it went live for select guests Monday, and some days are already sold out at the theme parks that will reopen next month. Disney opened its system first for people who already had a Walt Disney World hotel reservation. It goes live to annual passholders Friday and to the general public, but they may find days already booked. A Disney spokeswoman said that there is still availability for most parks on most days throughout the year.

Amid pandemic, Live Nation announces drive-in concert series” via Mesfin Fekadu of The Associated Press — Tour promoter Live Nation has announced its first-ever drive-in concert series in the U.S. for July, months after the live music industry has been on lockdown due to the coronavirus pandemic. Concertgoers will be able to drive into the parking lots of the amphitheaters, a maximum of four people per car, and will have two empty parking lot spaces in between each vehicle so fans can watch and party from their designated individual tailgating zones. Attendees are encouraged to bring food, drinks and chairs, setting up around their cars to view the performers from the stage and also from the large LED screens.

This artist rendering released by Live Nation shows the set up for Live Nation’s “Live from the Drive-In,” concert series taking place July 10-12. Image via AP.

Golden Globes postponed until Feb. 28 amid coronavirus pandemic” via Anika Reed of the USA Today — The Golden Globe Awards are being pushed back amid the coronavirus pandemic. The awards show, usually held in early January, will take place Feb. 28, 2021, joining other major awards shows in delaying celebrations amid the pandemic. “We are excited to announce the 78th annual Golden Globe Awards will take place Sunday, February 28, 2021,” the Golden Globes said in a tweet. The ceremony, hosted by Tina Fey and Amy Poehler, will take place on the originally scheduled date of the Oscars, which has been pushed back two months.

Happy birthday
Best wishes to Rep. Joy Goff-Marcil, Bill Horne, Danielle McGill, and Kate Wallace.

JUST THE NEWS

 

THE FLIP SIDE

View this email in your browser

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Editor’s Note: We received over four thousand responses to our survey! Thank you all so much for sharing your thoughts. Per your feedback, we’ll alternate which side comes ‘first’ starting today and see how it goes. We’re also brainstorming other exciting features to be rolled out in the coming weeks and months, so stay tuned!

Statues

“Portraits of four former House of Representatives speakers who served the Confederacy will be removed from the U.S. Capitol, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said [last] Thursday.” Reuters

“Protesters who took to the streets in Portland, Oregon for the 22nd consecutive night tore down a statue of George Washington that was erected in the 1920s, the Portland Police Bureau said [last] Friday.” AP News

Last weekend, “Protesters tore down more statues across the United States, expanding the razing in a San Francisco park to the writer of America’s national anthem and [Ulysses Grant], the general who won the country’s Civil War that ended widespread slavery.” AP News

“The American Museum of Natural History will remove a prominent statue of Theodore Roosevelt from its entrance after years of objections that it symbolizes colonial expansion and racial discrimination, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Sunday.” AP News

See our previous coverage of Confederate monuments hereThe Flip Side

From the Right

The right generally opposes removing statues.
“This current anti-monument wave degrades what originated as a legitimate grievance: the presence of Confederate monuments, many erected during the Jim Crow era to perpetuate the Lost Cause myth and advance white supremacy. But that idea has been taken over now by what has turned into a mob intent on willy-nilly eradication of chunks of American history

“During the recent protests in Boston, we saw the spray-painting of the Shaw 54th Regiment Memorial, a monument to the first African-American regiment to fight in the Civil War and an emblem of racial reconciliation and harmony. On Friday they toppled a statue of Ulysses S. Grant in San Francisco. Never mind that as President, Grant enforced Reconstruction, lobbied for passage of the Fifteenth Amendment and prosecuted the Ku Klux Klan.”
Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal

Similarly, “Philadelphia protesters went and defaced a statue of Matthias Baldwin, an abolitionist who had attacked slavery, fought for black people’s right to vote, and founded a school for black children that he ran largely out of his own pocket. He did more to advance the principles of equality and justice than most people alive today, yet protesters slandered his memory with the words ‘colonizer’ and ‘murderer’ spray-painted in bright red across his face. As if in a frenzy of self-parody, protesters have similarly defaced memorials to Abraham Lincoln, Winston Churchill (the man is honored for defeating the Nazis), and even Charles de Gaulle…

“This is where it becomes clear that the Left’s iconoclasts do not care for the facts or the history. If their concern had anything to do with removing memorials to racism and white supremacy, they would not have touched Baldwin’s statue. But they did — because Baldwin is a white man who existed in the past. As such, he must be considered part of the problem. America’s entire history deserves condemnation, according to the Left… The things we’ve accomplished as a nation, including the unprecedented harmony we enjoy amid racial diversity, do not matter as much as the flaws of the past do.”
Kaylee McGhee, Washington Examiner

“We don’t honor any of the founders because they were sinners — because they owned slaves or shared common, bigoted attitudes of their day. We honor them for those things they did that were bigger than their time. We honor them because they risked hanging and made great personal sacrifices to establish a free, prosperous republic governed by and for its people — including, ultimately, people of all races… When we celebrate our Founding Fathers, we’re celebrating the egalitarian values they espoused in spite of the fact that most of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were slaveholders…

“Defending our celebration of the Founding Fathers doesn’t necessitate defending their worst crimes. In fact, it’s the perfect time to acknowledge how messy and tragic the origins of the greatest nation in history were from the start. But we ought to defend the men who gave us a republic with the DNA to become a nation where we strive to instill equal rights under the law.”
Tiana Lowe, Washington Examiner

“There are those who say that Western civilization itself ought to be undone — that monuments to people such as these ought to be destroyed because of their participation in an endeavor that included global colonialism and racism…

“[But] Just about every pre-modern political regime was predicated upon the idea that its purported superiority justified treating outsiders over whom it ruled as if those people were not human beings. Aztecs murdered their war captives as human sacrifices to their gods. Many black Africans did not see other black Africans as fellow human beings to be protected against white slave traders; instead, they simply captured them and sold them to profit themselves. Mongol conquest of Russia and China was brutal and tyrannical as the warrior clan ruled on its own and for its own benefit…

“Modern Western civilization and its revolutionary ideals, however, have allowed for the peaceful, pan-racial democracies protesters say they want. The West’s ideals of universal freedom and human equality permit it to reform itself peacefully and extend the reality of freedom to fit the reality of human diversity. We take a multiethnic, free state for granted, but no such thing had ever existed before modern times. That is the achievement that statues to people such as Washington and Grant honor, an achievement that makes today’s protesters possible.”
Henry Olsen, Washington Post

Finally, “There is no doubt that [Roosevelt] partook of the prejudices of his time and reflected some of its worst intellectual influences, particularly Social Darwinism. But he was the characteristic American of the early 20th century, who exulted in his country and made enduring contributions to it. It is for that, that we honor him, and the museum of natural history is one of the obvious places to do it, given that his father was a founding member and TR was a great naturalist and conservationist.”
Rich Lowry, National Review

From the Left

The left supports removing confederate statues, and calls for further discussion regarding those of former presidents.
“[McConnell] called it ‘nonsense that we need to airbrush the Capitol and scrub out everybody from years ago who had any connection to slavery’… The real nonsense is McConnell’s suggestion that slavery and the Civil War are just minor imperfections and blemishes and that the Confederate soldiers and politicians whose statues stand in the Capitol Building only had a ‘connection’ to slavery. As General (Ret) David H. Petraeus recently pointed out, the Confederate leaders ‘committed treason’ by taking up arms against their country. And they had much more than a ‘connection’ to slavery.”
Gregory J. Wallace, The Hill“[McConnell] felt moved to list for reporters some of the early presidents who owned slaves. ‘Washington did. Jefferson did. Madison did. Monroe did’…“None of those presidents, it should be noted, went to war against the United States to defend slavery. Nor are all the 11 statues of peripheral figures who had just ‘any connection’ to the war for chattel slavery. The statues include one of Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederate States of America; Alexander Hamilton Stephens, the vice president; and its most famous general, Robert E. Lee. There are other statues of men less central to the rebel cause. But given that states can select any person of note from their state, surely there are many other men or women who don’t have the Confederacy on their résumés.”
Editorial Board, New York Times“There is an obvious difference between George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, who founded our union, and, say, Jefferson Davis and Stonewall Jackson, who tried to destroy it. The fact that Washington, Jefferson and other early presidents owned slaves should temper our admiration for them but not erase it entirely. They gave us a nation grotesquely disfigured by slavery, but they also gave us the constitutional tools, and the high-minded ideals, with which to heal that original, near-fatal flaw…“[Regarding Teddy Roosevelt] He was relatively enlightened for his times: He invited civil rights leader Booker T. Washington to dine at the White House, for which he was pilloried. And he did much to preserve wildlife (when he wasn’t shooting it) and our natural wonders. The problem is the statuary itself. Roosevelt is astride a horse, and flanking him — on foot, thus beneath the great man — are a Native American man on one side and an African man on the other. The tableau amounts to a visual parable of white supremacy. We put statues in places of honor to depict our heroes and our values. Overt racism is not an idea we honor.”
Eugene Robinson, Washington PostSome point out that “In an 1886 speech in New York, [Teddy Roosevelt] declared: I don’t go so far as to think that the only good Indian is the dead Indian, but I believe nine out of every ten are, and I shouldn’t like to inquire too closely into the case of the tenth…“That same year Roosevelt published a book in which he wrote that ‘the so-called Chivington or Sandy [sic] Creek Massacre, in spite of certain most objectionable details, was on the whole as righteous and beneficial a deed as ever took place on the frontier.’ The Sand Creek massacre had occurred 22 years previously in the Colorado Territory, wiping out a village of over 100 Cheyenne and Arapaho people. It was in every way comparable to the My Lai massacre during the Vietnam War… As Teddy Roosevelt’s status falls, let’s remember how truly dark his history was.”
Jon Schwarz, The InterceptOthers write, “I warned five years ago that we’re rushing down this road with only the haziest notion of where we’ll wind up. Now that we have a better idea (Cervantes? Who hates Cervantes?), it’s less clear than ever that the road is worth taking. But if this is to be our journey, we would do better to travel it democratically. Decisions about which historical figures to (literally) deplatform should be taken within, not outside of, the ordinary processes of political debate… Racial flat-earthers who insist on defending them all don’t have much of a case; but neither do those who think the decision should rest on anything less than proper democratic debate.”
Stephen L. Carter, Bloomberg“Of the estimated 5,193 public statues depicting historic figures on display on street corners and parks throughout the United States, only 394 of these monuments are of women. There are even fewer depicting Black historic figures. This answers the question of who gets to be memorialized in America…“Groups like Philadelphia’s Monument Lab are helping cities focus on what they want their monuments to say about their collective histories and futures. In the fall of 2017, Monument Lab started a weeks-long project where they set up 10 ‘labs’ across Philadelphia where visitors were invited to answer the question: ‘What is an appropriate monument for Philadelphia today?’… It’s a model that could be implemented by cities that are now debating what to do with the space left behind by the Confederate monuments.
Ashlie D. Stevens, Salon
On the bright side…

Startup Space Perspective plans space tourist cruises using stratospheric balloons.
The Nations

The Flip Side team spends hours each night scanning the news, fact-checking, and debating one another, so your 5 minutes each morning can be well spent. If you’ve found value in our work, we welcome you to help sustain our efforts and expand our reach. Any support you can provide is greatly appreciated!
 

You have <<RH_TOTREF>> referrals.
Your bear mug is at 25 referrals!

Share The Flip Side just a few more times, and we’ll mail our favorite mug in the world your way.

Share on Twitter – Share on Facebook – Share via Email

Or, copy/paste your referral link to others:
<<RH_REFLINK>>

 

Copyright © 2020 The Flip Side, All rights reserved.

You can unsubscribe from this list here.

AXIOS

Axios AM

By Mike Allen
Mike Allen
Mike Allen

Good Tuesday morning!

  • 🎧 Listen here for our AM podcast, “Axios Today,” hosted by Niala Boodhoo.

💻 You’re invited: Tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET, in partnership with No Kid Hungry, Axios will host a conversation about the pandemic’s effect on child hunger in America.

  • Join executive editor Sara Kehaulani Goo and CEO Jim VandeHei for interviews with chef JJ Johnson, founder of FieldTrip Harlem, and former Virginia First Lady Dorothy McAuliffe, national policy advisor at Share Our Strength.
  • Register here.
1 big thing: Race’s media moment
Featured image

Photo Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios. Photos: Getty Images

Across every type of media — music, TV, books, podcasts and more — messages about systemic racism and social change are topping the charts and dominating the country’s attention span, Axios media trends expert Sara Fischer writes.

  • Why it matters: Just as the late 1960s propelled new soundtracks, movies and shows about social justice, media today will serve as a lasting record of this moment in America’s history.
  • At the same time, material that doesn’t meet today’s standards of respect for racial justice is getting axed.

Music: Beyoncé released a new song, Black Parade, on Juneteenth. The song focuses on black empowerment, and references reparations and her own roots growing up in the South.

  • Artists like Wale, Black Eyed Peas, Teyana Taylor and others all debuted new albums and songs on Juneteenth to commemorate the protests.
  • A remixed version of Childish Gambino’s 2018 hit “This is America” has become a viral anthem on TikTok to discuss police brutality.

Television: U.S. demand for Netflix’s “Dear White People” grew 329% during the week of May 27-June 2, just as the nationwide protests were starting, per Parrot Analytics. Another Netflix show, “When They See Us,” was up 147%.

  • Both shows launched last year, but interest in them intensified after Netflix launched a Black Lives Matter collection, promoting over 45 titles about racial injustice and the experience of black Americans.
  • Reality shows about police officers — including “Cops” and “Live PD” — have been canceled for glorifying police violence.
  • ABC’s sitcom “Black-ish” has been moved up to return in the fall.

Movies: Several films on Netflix with black themes are receiving traction, thanks in large part to Netflix’s new collection, including Spike Lee’s newly released film “Da 5 Bloods” and Ava DuVernay’s documentary “13th.”

  • HBO Max temporarily removed “Gone with the Wind.”

Books: Bestseller lists from Amazon, Barnes & Noble and the N.Y. Times are dominated by books on race.

  • Books about race topped both nonfiction and fiction lists, meaning consumers want to engage with the issue on an emotional level.

Podcasts: Top podcasts on Apple’s charts include the N.Y. Times’ 1619, about the history of slavery in America; NPR’s Code Switch, about race and identity; and Crooked Media’s Pod Save the People, which discusses race and social justice.

Gaming: Fortnite removed police cars.

2. Protests fuel record traffic to donation sites
Data: SimilarWeb. Chart: Naema Ahmed/Axios

Traffic to donation websites has exploded over the past few weeks amid the social reckoning around systemic racism, Axios’ Sara Fischer writes.

  • More than 20% of that traffic came from countries outside the U.S., which speaks to the tremendous impact that the protests are having abroad.
  • Traffic to sites collecting donations around police reform organizations saw by far the biggest increase.

Share this graphic.

3. Axios interview: Bolton’s fears about a second Trump term
Photo: Alex Brandon/AP

John Bolton tells Axios’ Jonathan Swan that his fears about what could come to pass if President Trump is elected to a second term include inviting biological weapons attacks, the U.S. withdrawal from NATO and criminalization of political dissent.

  • Why it matters: Never before in American history has a former White House national security adviser made such an assessment of the president they served less than a year ago — while that president remains in office.

In an interview yesterday at his office in downtown D.C., ahead of today’s release of “The Room Where It Happened,” Bolton elaborated on hypothetical scenarios that keep him up at night:

Biological weapons: “If Trump’s response to the pandemic has proven [anything] to anybody who’s contemplating acquiring a biological weapons capability, it’s that he’s not able to respond to it in a systematic fashion,” Bolton said.

  • “Whatever the source of this pandemic, it’s a roadmap for the people who do control biological weapons, or aspire to biological weapons, what can happen.”

Withdrawal from NATO: Bolton says it’s “highly questionable” that Trump would stick with NATO through a second term.

Alliances: “I think the alliances with Japan, South Korea, Australia, are question marks at this point,” Bolton said. “If you believe the world’s far away, then why have these alliances at all?”

Swan pressed Bolton on how he can vouch for the veracity of his stories given that he now says he destroyed all his government notebooks. He was cagey about his methods:

  • “I took lots of notes. The notes, as I said in my exit interview from the White House, were destroyed during the course of my tenure there.”
  • But he would not say how he could write, working entirely from memory, a hyper-detailed, 500-page book with detailed dialogue and scenes.

“I’ve been a litigator for many years,” Bolton said. “I know witnesses who sit in the same meeting and come away with different recollections. I’m perfectly prepared to deal with that.”

  • “I am very comfortable that what I wrote in the book is an accurate depiction of what happened. And I think it will stand the test of time.”

The other side: Trump, in a Friday interview with Swan, described Bolton as a “nut job” who may be the “dumbest human being on earth” for persistently supporting the Iraq War.

4. Pic du jour

Photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Protesters tried to pull down a statue of President Andrew Jackson near the White House yesterday before being dispersed by police.

  • The statue — a target because of the 19th century president’s ruthless treatment of Native Americans — remained on its pedestal, AP reports.
5. ⚾ Play ball!

Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios

It looks like baseball will finally be played in 2020, Axios Sports editor Kendall Baker reports.

  • MLB owners voted unanimously yesterday to implement a 60-game season that will begin around July 24, assuming players sign off on health-and-safety protocols and agree to arrive in home markets by July 1 to begin “spring” training.

We’ll soon find out what changes have been made to MLB’s original 67-page coronavirus safety plan, which included stipulations against high-fives and chewing sunflower seeds — and required managers and coaches to wear masks in the dugout.

  • Sign up for Kendall Baker’s daily newsletter, Axios Sports.
6. Red states get more cautious
Data: Ipsos/Axios survey; case data from The COVID Tracking Project. Chart: Andrew Witherspoon/Axios

Red states are starting to get more cautious now that they’re seeing spiking coronavirus cases, Axios’ Margaret Talev writes from the latest installment of the Axios-Ipsos Coronavirus Index.

  • In the states where new cases climbed by 50% or more last week, populations that had been leaning into visits with friends, or getting haircuts, are now pulling back compared with Americans in states that were hit harder earlier on.

The states with the highest percentage jumps in cases last week (June 9-16) included Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina and Wyoming, according to The COVID Tracking Project.

  • Ipsos compared the behavior of survey respondents living in those states with respondents who live in more than a dozen states where the case rates also rose last week but at smaller rates.

The bottom line: 85% of respondents worry about a second wave.

7. Behind Trump’s forthcoming SCOTUS list

DACA supporters rally outside the Supreme Court. Photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images

President Trump tweeted after last week’s DACA decision: “I will be releasing a new list of Conservative Supreme Court Justice nominees, which may include some, or many of those already on the list, by September 1.”

  • The list may be adjusted to remove some older candidates and replace them with potential nominees who are younger, women or people of color, according to a source familiar with the discussions, Axios’ Alayna Treene reports.

Trump didn’t give a heads-up to key outside allies.

  • The Federalist Society’s Leonard Leo, who helped Trump first list, said he was “surprised” by the tweet, but added that a new list makes sense.
  • Top aides and advisers had been urging Trump to put together a new list to remind his base why a Republican needs to remain in the White House.

Share this story.

8. Tech blasts Trump’s extended H-1B visa restrictions

Illustration: Lazaro Gamio/Axios

Tech companies — including Facebook, Amazon, Google, Intel and Twitter, along with several tech trade groups — quickly spoke out against the Trump administration’s announcement that it is extending a ban on entry by those with visas through the end of the year, Axios’ Ina Fried and Scott Rosenberg write.

  • Duolingo CEO Luis von Ahn tweeted: “Imagine if Real Madrid or Barcelona could only hire players from Spain. They probably wouldn’t be the best in the world anymore.”

Share this story.

9. College students still want Warren

Even as the protests over the police killings have upped the urgency for Joe Biden to select a black running mate, college students are favoring Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Axios’ Neal Rothschild writes from a new College Reaction/Axios poll.

  • Why it matters: The poll of 854 college students shows that progressive ideology is still a top consideration for young voters.

The results:

  1. Sen. Elizabeth Warren: 28%
  2. Sen. Kamala Harris: 19%
  3. Stacey Abrams: 13%
  4. Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer: 11%
  5. Sen. Amy Klobuchar (who has withdrawn from consideration): 8%
  6. Former national security adviser Susan Rice: 7%
  7. Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms: 6%
  8. Sen. Tammy Duckworth (Ill.): 4%
  9. New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham: 2%
  10. Rep. Val Demings (Fla.): 1%
10. 1 small to go: Plants fill opera house seats
Photo: Emilio Morenatti/AP

In Barcelona, Spain, this string quartet is rehearsing at the Gran Teatre del Liceu for the first concert since the lockdown.

  • Instead of people, the UceLi Quartet played Giacomo Puccini’s I Crisantemi (Chrysanthemums) for 2,292 plants.
  • The concert also livestreamed for humans to watch, AP reports.

Spanish artist Eugenio Ampudia said he was inspired by nature during the pandemic: “I heard many more birds singing. And the plants in my garden and outside growing faster. And, without a doubt, I thought that maybe I could now relate in a much intimate way with people and nature.”

  • At the end of the eight-minute concert, the sound of leaves and branches blowing in the wind resonated throughout the opera house like applause.
Mike Allen

📬 Thanks for reading Axios AM. Please invite your friends to sign up here.

THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES

Sign up for this newsletter Read online
The morning’s most important stories, curated by Post editors.
(Kevin D. Liles for The Post)

Barring a landslide, election night might not yield a result in White House race

An expected surge in voting by mail during the pandemic means that close counts in key states could take days — even weeks — to resolve.

Election 2020 ●  By Amy Gardner ●  Read more »

As movie theaters reopen, they struggle with how to allay concerns

The theaters thrive on a sense of refuge, peddling the joy of leaving reality at the door. Theater operators say that’s tough to do when employees are handing out masks, enforcing seat distances and scanning for pallid complexions.

By Steven Zeitchik ●  Read more »

Activists halt protests in S.C. after some demonstrators become infected

The decision came as the number of new cases reported daily in the United States approached levels not seen since March and April.

By Brittany Shammas, Chelsea Janes, Lateshia Beachum and Lenny Bernstein ●  Read more »

Florida is crucial to the return of sports. It’s also a coronavirus hot spot.

The state began reopening May 4, when it recorded 819 new cases, and a spike has followed. On Monday, Florida surpassed 100,000 total confirmed cases.

By Adam Kilgore ●  Read more »

NASCAR shows what it wants to be, finds out how far it has to go

Bubba Wallace, the Cup series’ lone African American competitor, was embraced by NASCAR’s full complement of drivers and crew members before the start of Monday’s race in Alabama — less than 24 hours after a noose was discovered hanging in his garage stall.

By Liz Clarke ●  Read more »

In Atlanta, hundreds pay respect to Rayshard Brooks

Mourners visited a historic church to pay their respects to Rayshard Brooks, the latest black man to become a household name after dying at the hands of police.

By Fenit Nirappil ●  Read more »

Kenyan fathers grapple with their sons’ deaths in police custody

Death at the hands of Kenyan police or in their custody happens at a far greater rate than in any other African country, human rights groups say.

By Max Bearak and Rael Ombuor ●  Read more »

Opinions

There is no earthly reason this nation should be defiled by Confederate statues

By Eugene Robinson ●  Read more »

The U.S. is falling behind its peers. Americans are starting to notice.

By Catherine Rampell ●  Read more »

The missing factor in Trump’s presidency? Decency.

By Charles Lane ●  Read more »

Trump faced a moment of truth in Tulsa. He chose the low road.

By Editorial Board ●  Read more »

Trump’s sparse crowd in Tulsa means nothing

By Hugh Hewitt ●  Read more »

What Democrats get wrong about the 2016 election

By Matt Bai ●  Read more »

More News

Trump fixated on defending his physical and mental health

After months attacking Democratic opponent Joe Biden’s acuity and strength, the president finds himself being mocked by critics for incidents including “the ramp and the water” at West Point.

By Ashley Parker and Josh Dawsey ●  Read more »

Citing pandemic, Trump orders limits on foreign workers

The executive order will affect technology firms, forestry companies and others who fill some jobs with temporary workers and it will curb immigration visas through the end of the year

By Nick Miroff and Tony Romm ●  Read more »

As the president slumps, his campaign fixes on a target: Women

The revolt against President Trump among college-educated women in 2018 is now spreading to non-college and older women, polls show.

By Michael Scherer and Josh Dawsey ●  Read more »

We think you’ll like this newsletter

Check out The 5-Minute Fix for a weekday afternoon cheat sheet on the biggest story in politics — that can be read in 5 minutes or less. Sign up »
Manage my email newsletters and alerts | Privacy Policy | Help
You received this email because you signed up for Today’s Headlines or because it is included in your subscription.
©2020 The Washington Post | 1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071

THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The Washington Times
MORNING EDITION
Tuesday, June 23, 2020
Like Us. Follow Us.                                     
President Donald Trump gives a thumbs-up while walking across the tarmac as he boards Air Force One at Morristown Municipal Airport, Sunday, June 14, 2020, in Morristown, N.J. Trump is returning to Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
EXCLUSIVE: ‘We caught them’: Trump hits FBI leaders on dossier hoaxIt has been two months since Washington learned that the Kremlin fed anti-Trump disinformation into the infamous dossier, and there … more
Top News  Read More >
D.C. protesters declare ‘Black House Autonomous Zone,’ desecrate St. John’s Church
St. John&#39;s Episcopal Church is visible as a large banner that reads Black Lives Matter is hung from the AFL-CIO building on part of 16th Street renamed Black Lives Matter Plaza, a site of protests, Friday, June 12, 2020, near the White House in Washington. The protests began over the death of George Floyd, a black man who was in police custody in Minneapolis. Floyd died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)
Trump to cut 525,000 foreign guest-workers to speed COVID jobs recovery
President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally at the BOK Center, Saturday, June 20, 2020, in Tulsa, Okla. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)
Suppression or fraud? 2020 election poses challenges that threaten confidence in results
In this June 2, 2020, file photo, stickers for voters casting their ballots in the Pennsylvania primary sit on a table in Philadelphia. The civic ritual of casting a ballot has been disrupted by a global pandemic and dramatically animated by social unrest. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)
‘Trending in the right direction’: White House says COVID spike isn’t ‘second wave’
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany speaks during a press briefing at the White House, Monday, June 22, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Film warns of ‘one world government,’ rise of the anti-Christ if Trump isn’t reelected
Trump 2024 (Resurrection Pictures)
FCC takes down Chinese ‘border blaster’ over propaganda fears
U.S. and Chinese national flags are hung outside a hotel during the U.S. Presidential election event, organized by the U.S. Embassy in Beijing. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)
SUBSCRIBE TODAY

Click to subscribe to trusted and exclusive reporting only on The Washington Times
Click to subscribe to trusted and exclusive reporting only on The Washington Times
Opinion  Read More >
U.S. treating China like Russia after the Cold War was a big mistake
A Chinese man stands alone to block a line of tanks heading east on Beijing&#39;s Cangan Blvd. in Tiananmen Square on June 5, 1989. The man, calling for an end to the recent violence and bloodshed against pro-democracy demonstrators, was pulled away by bystanders, and the tanks continued on their way. The Chinese government crushed a student-led demonstration for democratic reform and against government corruption, killing hundreds, or perhaps thousands of demonstrators in the strongest anti-government protest since the 1949 revolution. Ironically, the name Tiananmen means &quot;Gate of Heavenly Peace&quot;. (AP Photo/Jeff Widener)
Trump’s West Point graduation address — the right speech at the right time
President Donald Trump speaks to over 1,110 cadets in the Class of 2020 at a commencement ceremony on the parade field, at the United States Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., Saturday, June 13, 2020. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Google and NBC try to censor free speech with ad bans for The Federalist and Zero Hedge
Illustration on restricting free speech in online platforms by Alexander Hunter/The Washington Times
Politics  Read More >
John Bolton noncommittal on subpoena: What Dems do next is up to them
In this March 5, 2019, file photo, then-National Security Adviser John Bolton adjusts his glasses before an interview at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) ** FILE **
Schumer asks DOJ IG to investigate firing of Manhattan U.S. Attorney
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of N.Y., speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, June 16, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
McConnell tees up procedural vote for policing package on Wednesday
HOLD FOR STORY- FILE - In this Oct. 7, 2019, file photo, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., addresses the Kentucky chapters conference of The Federalist Society at the Kentucky State Capitol in Frankfort, Ky. McConnell is up for reelection in November 2020. (AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley, File)
Special Reports for Times Readers
Security  Read More >
U.S. Army soldier charged with plotting terror attack on own unit
In this June 14, 2018, file photo, the FBI seal is seen before a news conference at FBI headquarters in Washington. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File)
Secret Service tells media to evacuate White House grounds
The White House is visible at 16th Street Northwest renamed Black Lives Matter Plaza, Friday, June 19, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)
DOJ defends faulty FISA warrants after IG raps Trump surveillance, says errors mostly minor typos
Carter Page, an adviser to U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, speaks at the graduation ceremony for the New Economic School in Moscow on July 8, 2016. (AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin) **FILE**
Sports  Read More >
Wizards’ Bertans to skip NBA’s restart in Orlando
Washington Wizards forward Davis Bertans (42) stands on the court during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Golden State Warriors, Monday, Feb. 3, 2020, in Washington. The Warriors won 125-117. (AP Photo/Nick Wass) ** FILE **
MLB plans 60-game slate after union rejects offer
MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred answers questions at a press conference during MLB baseball owners meetings, Thursday, Feb. 6, 2020, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux) ** FILE **
A year after Nationals drafted him, Rutledge talks minor leagues on pause, working out in basement
Jackson Rutledge, a right-handed pitcher from San Jacinto Junior College in Pasadena, Texas, receives a cap after being selected No. 17 by the Washington Nationals in the first round of the Major League Baseball draft, Monday, June 3, 2019, in Secaucus, N.J. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez) ** FILE **
© The Washington Times, 3600 New York Avenue NE, Washington, DC 20002

Facebook  Twitter  Instagram  Google+  RSS Feeds

 

 

You received this email because you signed up for newsletters from The Washington Times.
Manage my newsletters | Unsubscribe
3600 New York Avenue NE Washington, DC 20002

THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

 

Subscribe to the Magazine View this as website
by Hugo Gurdon and David Freddoso
ADVERTISEMENT

HIGHLIGHTS

Republicans see Left alienating nation by toppling Roosevelt and Grant memorials

Republicans see Left alienating nation by toppling Roosevelt and Grant memorials

As the outrage surrounding the death of George Floyd extends beyond calls for police reform and moves into the destruction of public statues, some Republicans believe an electoral opportunity for President Trump is presenting itself.

Anti-abortion pastor runs strong in most left-wing district in America

Anti-abortion pastor runs strong in most left-wing district in America

Democrats in the most liberal congressional district in the country, located in the South Bronx, face the possibility on Tuesday of nominating Ruben Diaz Sr., an anti-abortion, anti-gay marriage, Pentecostal pastor, as their candidate for an all-but-guaranteed win.

Texas-sized problem: Gov. Abbott says tougher anti-COVID restrictions might come back

Texas-sized problem: Gov. Abbott says tougher anti-COVID restrictions might come back

The number of new coronavirus cases and hospitalizations has increased in Texas and several states in the South and West, leading governors to eye more aggressive responses.

Editorial: The malign precedent of Bolton’s book

Editorial: The malign precedent of Bolton's book

Former national security adviser John Bolton’s tell-all book threatens to destroy all future presidents’ ability to seek advice from aides outside their most trusted inner circle.

ADVERTISEMENT

Trump strategically stretches truth to manipulate media, former adviser says

Trump strategically stretches truth to manipulate media, former adviser says

President Trump routinely strategically exaggerates his achievements and stretches the truth to manipulate the media, according to a former adviser.

Education Department uncovers $1B in anonymous foreign funding at higher education institutions

Education Department uncovers $1B in anonymous foreign funding at higher education institutions

An Education Department investigation unearthed $1 billion in anonymous foreign funding on campuses nationwide and discovered a school with direct contracts with the Chinese Communist Party, leading to reforms instituted Monday.

Police to return to precinct in Seattle’s CHOP ‘in the near future,’ mayor says

Police to return to precinct in Seattle's CHOP 'in the near future,' mayor says

The CHOP appears to be on the chopping block.

Devin Nunes: ‘We’re up to somewhere around 14 criminal referrals’ to Justice Department

Devin Nunes: 'We're up to somewhere around 14 criminal referrals' to Justice Department

House Intelligence Committee Republicans have sent up to 14 criminal referrals to the Justice Department related to the Russia investigation and the 2016 presidential campaign.

‘KILLER’: Police clash with protesters trying to tear down Andrew Jackson statue near White House

'KILLER': Police clash with protesters trying to tear down Andrew Jackson statue near White House

Police cleared protesters from near the White House after they attempted to topple a statue of former President Andrew Jackson.

Jerry Nadler says House Judiciary Committee has ‘begun the process’ of subpoenaing William Barr

Jerry Nadler says House Judiciary Committee has 'begun the process' of subpoenaing William Barr

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler confirmed that he is preparing to issue a subpoena targeting Attorney General William Barr.

US brands four Chinese state media outlets ‘foreign missions’

US brands four Chinese state media outlets 'foreign missions'

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has branded four more Chinese state-run media outlets as foreign missions, a decision that subjects the employees to the scrutiny and restrictions applied to diplomats and undercover intelligence officers.

THE ROUNDUP

ADVERTISEMENT

 

Washington Examiner
Follow on Twitter   Friend on Facebook
Copyright © 2020 MEDIADC, All rights reserved.Washington Examiner | A MediaDC Publication
1152 15th Street NW Suite 200 | Washington, DC 20005
You received this email because you are subscribed to Examiner Today from The Washington Examiner.
Update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive.We respect your right to privacy – View our Policy
Unsubscribe

CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Chicago Tribune
VIEW IN BROWSER JUNE 23, 2020 CHICAGOTRIBUNE.COM

DAYWATCH

Good morning, Chicago. Here’s the coronavirus news and other stories you need to know to start your day.

1

Illinois will enter phase 4 of its coronavirus reopening plan Friday. Here’s a guide to what’s allowed.

Gatherings of up to 50 people will be allowed across the state starting Friday as Illinois moves into the fourth phase of its reopening plan.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced Monday that Chicago would be following along with the rest of the state as well. According to the reopening plan, schools, child care programs and restaurants are allowed to resume a range of services and activities as long as they follow public health guidelines. Movie theaters, health clubs and retail stores will also be allowed to open with limits in place for capacity. Employees at “nonessential” businesses are allowed to return to work, as long as employers provide accommodations for those who are vulnerable.

2

Chicago’s violent weekend renews search for answers in a tense city, points again to entrenched problems

New Chicago police Superintendent David Brown has been in his post for just two months, but his walk to a lectern at police headquarters had a familiar feel Monday. Another weekend of stunning bloodshed in Chicago had given way to another round of police and city leaders grasping for explanations.

 

 

3

Amazon to build two distribution warehouses in south suburbs, but local officials want more — an airport in Peotone

A host of local officials welcomed Amazon Inc.‘s decision Monday to open distribution centers in Matteson and Markham, and the 2,000 jobs that go with them, but asked for more — a company decision to use the long proposed south suburban airport as an air cargo hub.

4

How much did protests spread COVID-19 in Chicago? No way to know for sure, but overall figures continue to trend downward.

At the start of June, public health officials wondered whether major street protests over police killings of African Americans would lead to a spike in coronavirus cases. Crowds of people, at times shoulder to shoulder, had marched through Chicago and some suburbs at a time when people had been told for weeks to stay away from each other as much as possible.

 

 

5

‘I feel like I’m built to do shows in an environment like this:’ Laurence Holmes zigs when others zag — and it makes for must-listen sports radio

Sammy Sosa predictably was the subject du jour on Chicago sports radio the day after “Long Gone Summer” aired on ESPN, much of the chatter echoing themes debated for years about steroids, the Hall of Fame and his relationship with the Cubs.

Then there were the 20 or so minutes on WSCR-AM 670 during which noon-2 p.m. weekday host Laurence Holmes ensured listeners think twice before making fun of Sosa’s lightening complexion. It’s part of what makes Holmes so valuable in local sports talk radio, where the dearth of diversity among front-line daytime hosts is especially evident.

PRO TRUMP NEWS

 

THE HILL

The Hill's Morning Report
Presented by Facebook

© Getty Images

 

 

Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is 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!

Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 119,977. Tuesday, 120,402.

 

Worldwide coronavirus cases surpassed 9 million on Monday (Reuters). 

President Trump will head to Arizona today to rally supporters and try and pick up the pieces four and half months before Election Day as voters go to the polls and take part in a number of key primary contests.

 

The president will make multiple stops in the key Western state today, including one in Yuma to commemorate the 200th mile of new border wall and another in Phoenix to address young voters, all in an attempt to steer the conversation toward immigration as uncertainty surrounds his reelection bid.

 

As The Hill’s Brett Samuels writes, Trump signed an executive order on Monday to temporarily cut off access to a number of employment-based visas, freezing new H-1B visas for skilled workers and those in the tech industry, H-2B visas for seasonal workers, and J visas for work and study-abroad programs, among others.

 

The Hill: Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) says Trump’s visa order will have “a chilling effect on our economic recovery.”

 

Trump also said over the weekend he intends to refile paperwork to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program after the Supreme Court rejected his first attempt to do so. While the issues surrounding “Dreamers” are more politically perilous, officials close to the administration argue Trump has must dig in on immigration or risk alienating his core supporters.

 

The New York Times opinion by Maria Woltjen: Under the guise of public health, U.S. Border Patrol agents have turned back more than 2,000 unaccompanied immigrant children at the U.S. southern border since March, flouting a federal anti-trafficking law.

 

The turn toward immigration also comes amid chatter that the president could make personnel changes to his campaign operation. On Monday, Yahoo News reported that the underwhelming rally in Tulsa, Okla., on Saturday could lead to a campaign shakeup, with all eyes pointed at campaign manager Brad Parscale.

 

A change at the top would by no means be surprising given Trump’s history. In 2016, the president had three campaign managers during the course of his bid, with the first change taking place almost four years ago to the day when he canned Corey Lewandowski in favor of Paul Manafort. Kellyanne Conway, counselor to the president, carried the ball across the goal line after taking over the campaign in August.

 

According to Politico, the Tulsa snafu has forced campaign officials to reconsider plans to hold arena-style rallies in the future. Instead, they are kicking around the possibility of holding them in open-air facilities, including airport hangars and amphitheaters.

 

ABC News: After Trump’s dismal return rally, finger-pointing, blame game intensifies.

 

The Washington Post: Trump increasingly preoccupied with defending his physical and mental health.

 

The New York Times: Biden campaign dismisses Trump request for fourth debate as “distraction.”

 

With the president out West, multiple states will hold key primary contests that could be brutal for a number of longtime incumbents and Democratic establishment favorites, with progressives sensing an opportunity to make their mark.

 

In Kentucky, Amy McGrath, long viewed as the front-runner to take on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) in November, has found herself in a slugfest with Charles Booker, a black state representative who has forced the former fighter pilot to spend millions in the final weeks as the race has become competitive. Booker’s surge is due in part to the response to George Floyd’s death, with his candidacy buoyed by key endorsements from Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.).

 

In New York, Democrats are bracing for what could be a turbulent primary day for incumbents. As Jonathan Easley and Julia Manchester write, the lion’s share of attention in the state has been directed at Rep. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.), who is seeking a 17th term in Congress. Engel, however, is the underdog in his primary against liberal upstart Jamaal Bowman, who has been ascending for weeks ahead of Election Day. Elsewhere, Rep. Yvette Clarke (D-N.Y.) faces a rematch against progressive Adem Bunkeddeko, who fell only 2,000 votes short against her in 2018.

 

However, the coronavirus pandemic is expected to create what could be a tense few days or weeks of vote counting, with delays in reporting results widely expected as states turn to mail-in and absentee balloting. For example, there is not expected to be a resolution in the Kentucky Senate primary for a week, as Jefferson and Fayette counties — which represent roughly one-third of the vote — will not report their tallies until June 30 (The Hill).

 

The New York Times: Booker, McGrath intensify advertising blitz in Kentucky.

 

Niall Stanage: The Memo: Storm brewing after chaotic Geoffrey Berman firing. The Hill: House Judiciary Committee to subpoena Attorney General William Barr over U.S. attorney firing.

 

Gerald F. Seib: Amid virus fears and racial discord, the world’s bad guys dig in.

 

Business Insider: The Pences voted by mail in the Indiana primary, trusting the U.S. Postal Service to deliver their ballots using a mansion address they haven’t lived in for four years.

 

The Hill: Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), who is in a battle for reelection, voted on Monday against advancing Trump’s pick for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. A final vote on the nomination is expected this week.

 

Axios: Stacey Abrams won’t say if she’s still in the running for Biden’s VP.

 

© Getty Images

 

SPONSORED CONTENT — FACEBOOK
Every vote is a voice heard

 

Facebook is building the largest voter information effort in US history, starting with the new Voting Information Center, where you can find the latest resources about voting in the 2020 election.

 

Learn more about our efforts.

LEADING THE DAY
CORONAVIRUS: House Democrats, eager to gather the latest updates from the nation’s top public health experts about COVID-19, are expected to probe the causes of rising infection rates in nearly half the states and Trump’s comment on Saturday that he had asked his team to slow virus testing because it was a “double-edged sword” when reported U.S. infections climb. Trump’s spokespeople later said the president was joking.

 

Testifying today in person before the House Energy and Commerce Committee will be members of the president’s White House coronavirus task force, whose public advice moved out of West Wing this month and into news media interviews and appearances on Capitol Hill as the president shifted his attention from the pandemic to reopening the economy.

 

The Associated Press: Surging U.S. virus cases raise fear that progress is slipping.

 

The Associated Press: Fauci testimony comes at a fraught time for U.S. pandemic response.

 

Anticipating questions about coronavirus testing, the president’s advisers will assure lawmakers that “the identification and expansion of public and private sector testing infrastructure has been, and continues to be, a priority.” The administration reports that 400,000 to 500,000 coronavirus tests were performed each day as of two weeks ago and that “this number will continue to increase.”

 

Testifying today will be Anthony Fauci, a virologist and director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases; Robert Redfield, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Stephen Hahn, an oncologist and the Food and Drug Administration commissioner; and Assistant Secretary for Health Brett Giroir, a pediatrician.

 

In prepared testimony to be delivered by the four physicians, the administration concedes COVID-19 will likely be a public health risk “for some time,” although the duration of the global pandemic “remains unclear.”

 

New cases per day climbed past 30,000 over the weekend, despite assurances from the administration that COVID-19 is sufficiently under control to end stay-at-home orders to and resume work, school and travel (The Hill).

 

On Monday, citing the District of Columbia’s shift this week to phase two in reopening, the White House opted to curtail mandatory temperature checks for staff and visitors, used for weeks as COVID-19 screening precautions (The Hill). People who come in close contact with the president and Vice President Pence must still have their temperatures checked and are questioned about symptoms of illness (NBC News).

 

Coronavirus trends to watch: In some states, COVID-19 is infecting younger people, which is dangerous for the many older people with whom they come in contact (CNN). … A Chinese study raises new questions about the duration of any human immunity against the novel coronavirus. Levels of an antibody found in recovered COVID-19 patients fell sharply in two to three months after infection for both symptomatic and asymptomatic patients, according to researchers (Reuters).

 

© Getty Images

 

IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
INTERNATIONAL: The World Health Organization (WHO) said Monday that the planet just recorded more than 183,000 new cases of COVID-19, the largest single-day total since the outbreak started. “Some of that increase may be attributed to increased testing … and certainly countries like India are testing more. But we do not believe that this is a testing phenomenon,” said Mike Ryan, WHO’s top emergencies expert. The coronavirus is hitting large countries particularly hard, including Brazil (Reuters).

 

© Getty Images

 

 

> South Korea said on Monday that the country is now seeing a second wave of infections from the coronavirus, stemming from a holiday weekend in May as young people went to bars and nightclubs. The virus remains relatively contained, though, as there were only 17 new confirmed cases on Monday, down from 48 and 67 in the previous days, according to South Korean health authorities (Reuters).

 

> Top European Union officials on Monday pushed China to step back from imposing a new security law in Hong Kong and called on its leaders to open markets further to European companies during a video call (The Associated Press).

OPINION
Eviction bans are ending — a massive eviction crisis looms, by Samantha Batko and Mychal Cohen, opinion contributors, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3136d5v

 

Biden still has a Hispanic voter problem, but does it matter? by Jessica Tarlov, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2AZobey

SPONSORED CONTENT — FACEBOOK
How Facebook is preparing for the US 2020 election

 

— Tripled safety and security teams to 35,000 people
— Implemented 5-step political ad verification
— Providing greater political ad transparency
— Launching new Voting Information Center

 

Learn about these efforts and more.

WHERE AND WHEN
The House will meet on Wednesday at 2 p.m. for a pro forma session and resume legislative work on Thursday. Today, the House Energy and Commerce Committee will question administration officials who are members of the White House coronavirus task force during an oversight hearing at 11 a.m. Livestream HERE.

 

The Senate will reconvene at 10 a.m. and resume consideration of the nomination of Cory Wilson to serve as a judge with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit.

 

The president will fly to Arizona to participate in a roundtable discussion about border security and commemorate 200 miles of wall at the U.S. southern border with Mexico in Yuma. As part of his reelection campaign, Trump will head to Phoenix to address a group of young supporters and return to Washington this evening.

 

Pence travels to Milwaukee to participate in a school choice roundtable at Waukesha STEM Academy with Education Secretary Betsy DeVos. Pence will give a speech at a Faith in America event and then return to Washington.

 

The Washington Post Live hosts a virtual interview at 1 p.m. with John Bolton about his memoir, “The Room Where it Happened.” Information/registration HERE.

 

The Hill’s Coronavirus Report has updates and exclusive video interviews with policymakers emailed each day. Sign up HERE!

 

📺 Hill.TV’s “Rising” program features news and interviews at http://thehill.com/hilltv or on YouTube at 10:30 a.m. ET at Rising on YouTube.

ELSEWHERE
Supreme Court: Justices for a second time on Monday declined to hear a challenge to Trump’s 25 percent tariffs on foreign steel. The case was brought by the American Institute for International Steel, which tried to argue that the legal tool used by the president to impose the tariffs, known as Section 232, was unconstitutional (CNN). … The Supreme Court also declined to hear a challenge to corporate tax regulations, siding with the IRS and costing some tech companies billions of dollars. The justices on Monday left intact a lower court ruling that upheld 2003 requirements (The Wall Street Journal). … On Monday, the Supreme Court also ruled 8-1 that the Securities and Exchange Commission may move to seize illegal profits from fraudulent companies (The Hill).

 

➔ Protests: In Washington, D.C., demonstrators on Monday night sought to pull down a statue near the White House of former President Andrew Jackson until police intervened with pepper spray and raised batons. Trump tweeted his support for the statue of the seventh president, whose portrait hangs in the Oval Office. Jackson, while a populist politician, owned Mississippi slaves and in the interest of growing cotton, forcibly removed Native Americans from their territory in Southern states, resulting in a “trail of tears and death” (The Washington Post). … Activists on Monday in South Carolina halted street demonstrations seeking racial equality and policing reforms after participants tested positive for COVID-19 (The Washington Post).… Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan (D) moved on Monday to dismantle a blocks-long protest zone of city streets taken over two weeks ago by demonstrators. Trump and administration officials are calling urban protesters “anarchists” (The Associated Press).

 

© Getty Images

 

 

Tech: Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) on Monday unveiled updates to the software that runs the iPhone, iPad, Mac and Apple Watch, using a virtual event featuring CEO Tim Cook and other Apple executives, who spoke to app developers without the usual in-person audience and wild applause. Hardware is Apple’s primary revenue stream, but the company did not announce any new hardware at the conference. Upgrades announced by the company on Monday included iOS14, the new operating system for iPhones (The Washington Post and CNET). The app marketplace was worth about $50 billion in revenues to Apple last year. . … Apple’s App Store, an important feature of the annual WWDC on Monday, is under increased antitrust scrutiny from lawmakers, regulators and competitors. Companies must be approved by Apple to get their apps onto iPhones, giving Apple substantial and lucrative power over smaller developers (The Hill).

 

➔ The show must go on (with some humor): The Hollywood Foreign Press Association announced that despite the coronavirus pandemic, the Golden Globes will go ahead on Feb. 28 on NBC, with Tina Fey and Amy Poehler returning as hosts for a fourth time. The annual awards show had been delayed but jumped on the date after the Academy Awards were postponed until April 25. Key details TBD: Exactly which movies and TV shows will be eligible for honors remains to be seen, given the virus-caused delay in production and long pause for movie theater screenings (The Associated Press).

THE CLOSER
And finally … We’re putting this in bold typeface this morning: The hangman’s noose found in an Alabama race car garage was a message sent, and roundly, emotionally rejected on Monday. 

 

In an extraordinary act of solidarity with NASCAR’s only African American full-time driver, dozens of drivers pushed the car belonging to Bubba Wallace to the front of the field before Monday’s race at Talladega Superspeedway in Alabama, one day after a noose was found in his garage stall.

 

Wallace was surrounded by all 39 other drivers in the moments before the race, and they were joined by their crews in a march down pit road as they pushed his No. 43 to the front of the line. Wallace climbed out of his car and wept.

 

Authorities said Monday that the FBI is investigating the Sunday discovery of the noose, and Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey (R) condemned the act against Wallace (ESPN).

 

© Getty Images

 

The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!
To view past editions of The Hill’s Morning Report CLICK HERE
To receive The Hill’s Morning Report in your inbox SIGN UP HERE
Facebook Twitter Linkedin Email
The Hill

 

View in your browser

ROLL CALL

Image

Morning Headlines

ImageRacial justice is not usually in the front of lawmakers’ minds as they write the annual defense authorization bill. But this year is not every year. Recent protests sparked by police killings of African Americans have forced into the defense budget debate some heated conversations about racism in the military ranks. Read More…

ImageThe House and Senate will take up competing partisan policing overhaul bills this week, but there are no signs of a bipartisan deal coming together that could get to President Donald Trump’s desk. Read More…

If Congress can’t pass police reform now, we just don’t need a Congress

 

ImageOPINION — The only good news in our terrible reality is that weeks of protests in every state in the nation and years of legislative work behind the scenes have combined to bring both Democrats and Republicans to a point where they will all act on police reform measures this week. Please, Congress, be the solution, not another problem. Read More…

Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.

Interior watchdog to probe Park Police clash with demonstrators

 

ImageMore than two weeks after the U.S. Park Police and other federal law officers forcefully cleared Lafayette Square of protesters, the agency is under scrutiny from the Interior Department’s inspector general, Congress and the public over its tactics. Read More…

Long lines at the polling place? This group sends pizza

 

ImageThey tried burritos, but it just wasn’t the same. So it’s back to pizza for Pizza to the Polls. The mission of the group is exactly what it sounds like — send pizza to polling places, specifically when lines get long and start to wind around the block. Read More…

As bookshops reopen, John Bolton fatigue sets in

 

“Lacerating yet tiresome” is how Publishers Weekly describes the experience of reading John Bolton’s book. The same may go for selling it. Bookstores in Washington are reopening, just in time for the Tuesday publication of “The Room Where It Happened,” the much-hyped account from President Donald Trump’s onetime national security adviser. Read More…

White House extends immigration restrictions to include H-1B, other visas

 

ImageThe White House on Monday extended existing immigration restrictions through the end of December and expanded them to include foreign workers frequently hired by tech companies and other large U.S.-based employers.  Read More…

CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2020 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.

 

1201 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Suite 600
Washington, DC 20004

POLITICO PLAYBOOK

Doug Jones’ new ad, and Dems readying to block police reform

Presented by

DRIVING THE DAY

NEW … PLAYBOOK SNEAK PEEK: Sen. DOUG JONES (D-Ala.) is going up on statewide television with his first TV ad: a new 30-second, straight-to-camera TV spot about racial justice. JONES’ most recent polling has him in a tight race with TOMMY TUBERVILLE, the likely GOP candidate.

— SCRIPT: “As he lay dying, George Floyd cried for his mama and pleaded for his life: ‘I can’t breathe.’ As we witnessed his death together, the world changed. Across Alabama, folks are struggling with seeing this injustice and inequality and wanting to see that end. We cannot let this moment pass. The road to racial justice has taken far too long — but it’s a journey that we must make, and we must make it together. Come join me. I’m Doug Jones and I approve this message.” The spot

DEMS GETTING READY TO BLOCK POLICE OVERHAUL … THE QUESTION LINGERING for the past week was whether Senate Minority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER would agree to allow a debate on the GOP police reform bill, authored by Sen. TIM SCOTT (R-S.C.). DEMOCRATS don’t much like the bill, but SCHUMER has left open the possibility that he may allow for a debate and amendment process in the hopes of getting a deal. Speaker NANCY PELOSI signaled she wanted the Senate to take it up, so the two chambers could enter into formal negotiations.

— BUT NOW, Democrats’ body language indicates they are going to block debate, which, in Republicans’ view, hands them a talking point on a silver platter.

— BURGESS EVERETT reported Monday night that Senate Democrats were “strongly signaling they will filibuster Republicans’ police reform bill later this week absent more concessions from Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.”

— SEVERAL SENATE DEMOCRATS flagged Monday evening that the NAACP Legal Defense Fund urged Dems to oppose the bill Wednesday.

— ON MONDAY AT AROUND 6 P.M., SEN. DICK DURBIN (D-Ill.), the party’s whip, told a small clutch of us reporters in the Capitol that “there’s no clarity” on what MCCONNELL is offering — in other words, Democrats want a commitment on how many amendments they would get to offer if they did agree to debate, and they are not getting it.

— DURBIN said he has faced “similar offers” from MCCONNELL in the past, most notably when Democrats voted against debating the CARES Act — the large-scale Covid-19 stimulus bill. “The best thing that happened was we didn’t accept his offer, we demanded a bipartisan approach to it,” DURBIN said, referring to the negotiations between the White House and Senate Democrats.

— BUT, BUT, BUT … POLICE REFORM isn’t the CARES Act. The White House and Senate Republicans are not inclined to jump into a bipartisan negotiation with Democrats if they block this bill from debate. The administration privately says it feels confident in its position on police reform, especially after the executive order it issued. So if Democrats block debate, this process probably comes to a screeching halt.

— REPUBLICANS in the administration and on the Hill are ready to scream from the hilltops that it was Democrats who blocked police reform on the Senate floor. EXPECT MCCONNELL to use his post-GOP lunch news conference to wallop Democrats for blocking this. Expect DEMS to say MCCONNELL is offering them a take-it-or-leave-it proposition that they cannot accept, and they should sit down to negotiate a compromise.

— THE HOUSE will vote Thursday on its police overhaul, and Republicans say they believe as many as a dozen of their lawmakers may vote with Democrats to pass the bill. TRUMP opposes the House bill, and the Senate will have nothing to do with it. Sure, it’s better for the GOP to stand unified against the Dem legislation, but it would seem laughably nonsensical for Republicans to expend any effort to whip their troops against it. (In fact, there’s an argument that it’s helpful for some moderate Republicans to have something to vote on.)

WHAT SENATE REPUBLICANS WILL HAVE TO ANSWER FOR TODAY … TRUMP accused former President BARACK OBAMA of “treason” in an interview with CBN’s DAVID BRODY. 1:49 clip

FRONTS: NYT, with this headline the day TRUMP flies to Arizona: “Flip Arizona? Biden Backers See a Chance,” by Jennifer Medina in Phoenix N.Y. POST WSJ

DRIVING TODAY … SPLIT SCREEN between the White House’s reality, which has THE PRESIDENT in Arizona, visiting the border and a church in Phoenix. … ON THE HILL, officials will talk the coronavirus: HOUSE ENERGY AND COMMERCE has ANTHONY FAUCI, HHS’ BRETT GIROIR, FDA’s STEPHEN HAHN and CDC’s ROBERT REDFIELD at 11 a.m. Testimony packet

— NEW YORK and KENTUCKY are holding primaries today. Nine things to watch

Good Tuesday morning. MLB OWNERS voted to impose a season after talks with the players union broke down. ESPN on what you need to know

ICYMI — We held a virtual Playbook Interview on Monday morning with BURGESS and HEATHER CAYGLE to talk about covering Congress during a pandemic, the latest on police reform and the outlook for a coronavirus relief package. Watch

FOX NEWS’ SEAN HANNITY will hold a one-hour town hall with TRUMP on Thursday at 9 p.m. at the Green Bay Austin Straubel International Airport in Green Bay, Wis.

ARIZONA REPUBLIC: “Expect crowd to wear masks at Trump speech at Dream City Church in Phoenix, organizer says,” by Andrew Oxford, Ronald Hansen and Maria Polletta: “Organizers said they expect President Donald Trump’s speech Tuesday in Phoenix to draw more than 3,000 mostly young attendees who will comply with the city’s new mask ordinance.

“The visit will be the president’s third trip to Arizona in five months, as he seeks a return to normal for a presidential campaign overshadowed by crises in recent months. But that is a task complicated by the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, particularly in a state where the number of people hospitalized with the disease has reached new highs in recent days and public health authorities are urging the public to avoid large gatherings.

“Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, will be on hand for Trump’s appearance in Phoenix and also will participate in an earlier event in Southern Arizona, according to the Governor’s Office.”

KYLE CHENEY: “House Judiciary panel preparing to subpoena Barr”: “The House Judiciary Committee is preparing a subpoena to obtain Attorney General William Barr’s testimony July 2, Chairman Jerrold Nadler said Monday night. ‘We have begun the process to issue that subpoena,’ Nadler said on MSNBC, confirming an Axios report that a subpoena was being teed up.

“It’s a reversal for the panel after Nadler (D-N.Y.) indicated earlier this month that a subpoena — which Barr is sure to contest — would not be worth the House’s time. ‘I am not going to spend months litigating a subpoena with an Attorney General who has already spent years resisting the courts and legitimate congressional oversight,’ Nadler said June 2.

“Barr has yet to testify before the House Judiciary Committee since taking his post early last year. … Nadler (D-N.Y.) and Speaker Nancy Pelosi discussed the idea over the weekend and decided ‘to be ready’ in case Barr declined to show up to testify before the panel, according to Democratic sources familiar with their conversation. Pelosi informed her leadership team Monday night, saying on a private call that Nadler’s panel was ‘starting down the path’ of subpoenaing Barr if necessary, according to Democratic sources. Nadler later confirmed the news.” POLITICO

CORONAVIRUS RAGING …

— NYT, A1: “Bars, Strip Clubs and Churches: U.S. Virus Outbreaks Enter Unwieldy Phase,” by Sarah Mervosh in Pittsburgh, Mitch Smith in Chicago and Lucy Tompkins: “After months of lockdown in which outbreaks of the coronavirus often centered in nursing homes, prisons and meatpacking plants, the nation is entering a new and uncertain phase of the pandemic. New Covid-19 clusters have been found in a Pentecostal church in Oregon, a strip club in Wisconsin and in every imaginable place in between.

“In Baton Rouge, La., at least 100 people tested positive for the virus after visiting bars in the Tigerland nightlife district, popular among Louisiana State University students. At a Christian summer camp near Colorado Springs, at least 11 employees fell ill just before the season’s opening, leading the camp to cancel overnight stays for the first time in 63 years.

“And in Las Vegas, just weeks after casinos reopened, a handful of employees from casinos, restaurants and hotels have tested positive, and frightened workers on Monday begged guests to wear masks in a news conference conducted over video.

“The newly emerging clusters — which vary in size from a handful of cases to hundreds and have cropped up in large cities as well as small towns — reflect the unpredictable course of the coronavirus. They also underscore risks that experts say are likely to persist as long as states try to reopen economies and Americans venture back into public without a vaccine.”

— IN FLORIDA: “‘Government itself can’t solve this problem’: Florida officials alarmed as virus rages,” by Arek Sarkissian in Tallahassee and Caitlin Oprysko: “Top Republican politicians and the state official leading Florida’s response to the pandemic urged businesses and residents — particularly young people — to stay vigilant about social distancing, leaving the fight in the hands of some of the same people who helped fuel the latest uptick in cases.

“‘If we don’t step up and take responsibility, government itself can’t solve this problem,’ Jared Moskowitz, the state Division of Emergency Management director, said in an interview.” POLITICO

WATCH THIS SPACE — “Trump aides consider a CDC overhaul as virus cases surge,” by Nancy Cook and Adam Cancryn: “White House officials are putting a target on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, positioning the agency as a coronavirus scapegoat as cases surge in many states and the U.S. falls behind other nations that are taming the pandemic.

“Trump administration aides in recent weeks have seriously discussed launching an in-depth evaluation of the agency to chart what they view as its missteps in responding to the pandemic including an early failure to deploy working test kits, according to four senior administration officials. Part of that audit would include examining more closely the state-by-state death toll to tally only the Americans who died directly of Covid-19 rather than other factors. About 120,000 people in the U.S. have died of the coronavirus so far, according to the CDC’s official count.

“Aides have also discussed narrowing the mission of the agency or trying to embed more political appointees within it, according to interviews with 10 current and former senior administration officials and Republicans close to the White House. One official said the overall goal would be to make the CDC nimble and more responsive.” POLITICO

BIG PRIMARY DAY … THE LEFT’S REVENGE? — “Bernie flexes muscle in Tuesday’s primaries,” by Holly Otterbein: “Bernie Sanders has raised more than $750,000 for congressional and local candidates in Tuesday’s primaries, his aides told POLITICO. The Vermont senator’s team also texted more than 120,000 of his supporters to promote the progressives he endorsed in races in New York and Kentucky. His staffers said videos boosting the contenders have received more than 1 million views on social media.”

— “Booker’s late surge imperils McGrath in unpredictable Kentucky Senate race,” by James Arkin: “Charles Booker’s late surge in Kentucky is threatening to prematurely end the campaign of one of the Democratic Party’s top recruits on Tuesday: former fighter pilot Amy McGrath. But he’s still an underdog to pull the major upset.

“Booker’s burst in the final stretch of the primary came after McGrath spent nearly a year running what essentially amounted to a general election campaign against Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, blanketing the state with advertisements and raising record sums of money from small-dollar donors eager to topple the GOP leader. She has both outraised and outspent McConnell so far and has the national party’s support, a superior campaign infrastructure and almost bottomless war chest to help fend Booker off.

“If McGrath wins — most Democrats tracking the race closely think she remains the favorite — it will be another bitter defeat for the left wing of the party, which is also seeking victories in several House primaries Tuesday. Progressives failed to mount serious challenges to the party establishment in most Senate races in recent cycles and lost in the party’s presidential primary. If Booker manages to pull it off, it would be the first primary defeat for a candidate backed by the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee in a decade.” POLITICO

“Left looks to build bloc of AOCs in New York primary,” by Zach Montellaro, Sarah Ferris and Ally Mutnick

DETROIT FREE PRESS: “Sources: U-M to withdraw from hosting October presidential debate”

TRUMP’S MIND IS ON HIS MIND, via WAPO’S ASHLEY PARKER and JOSH DAWSEY: “The early June meeting in the Cabinet Room was intended as a general update on President Trump’s reelection campaign, but the president had other topics on his mind.

“Trump had taken a cognitive screening test as part of his 2018 physical, and now, more than two years later, he brought up the 10-minute exam. He waxed on about how he’d dazzled the proctors with his stellar performance, according to two people familiar with his comments. He walked the room of about two dozen White House and reelection officials through some of the questions he said he’d aced, such as being able to repeat five words in order.

“At the time, the Montreal Cognitive Assessment — which includes animal pictures and other simple queries aimed at detecting mild cognitive impairment such as dementia — was intended to quell questions about Trump’s mental fitness. But in recalling it, Trump said he thought presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden would never be able to pass it and suggested challenging him to take the test, said the people familiar with Trump’s comments, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share private details.”

TRUMP’S TUESDAY — The president will leave the White House at 9 a.m. en route to Yuma, Ariz. He will arrive at 10:55 a.m. MST and depart for the U.S. Border Patrol Yuma Station. Trump will participate in a border security roundtable briefing at 11:20 a.m. He will depart at 12:10 p.m. en route to San Luis, Ariz. Trump will commemorate the 200th mile of the new border wall at 12:40 p.m.

TRUMP WILL DEPART at 1:15 p.m. and travel to Phoenix. Trump will travel to the Dream City Church and deliver an address to young Americans at 3:40 p.m. Afterward, he will travel back to Washington, arriving at the White House at 12:25 a.m.

PLAYBOOK READS

OH BOY — “Barring a landslide, what’s probably not coming on Nov. 3? A result in the race for the White House,” by WaPo’s Amy Gardner: “If voters remain reluctant to cast ballots in person, November is likely to bring an even more massive wave of voting by mail than what has swept across the country during primary season. That, in turn, means that a close race between President Trump and former vice president Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee, in a pivotal state could take days, even weeks, to resolve, election officials across the country are warning.”

PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION — “Police thwart attempt by protesters to topple statue of Andrew Jackson near White House,” by WaPo’s Fredrick Kunkle, Susan Svrluga and Justin Jouvenal: “Protesters attempted to topple a bronze statue of former president Andrew Jackson in a park next to the White House on Monday night but were thwarted when police intervened.

“The scene unfolded dramatically as hundreds of demonstrators protesting police brutality locked arms around the statue in Lafayette Square shortly before 8 p.m., while chanting, ‘Hey, hey, ho, ho, Andrew Jackson’s got to go.’ Inside the metal pickets surrounding the statue, a smaller group — some clad in black with goggles, helmets and gas masks — scaled the statue and draped ropes around the seventh president astride a horse. Someone scrawled ‘killer’ in black on the pedestal below.

“But then, U.S. Park Police officers in riot gear approached from the west and clashed with the protesters, swinging batons and releasing pepper spray as they moved the protesters back.” WaPo

BEYOND THE BELTWAY — “Seattle will move to dismantle protest zone, mayor says,” by AP’s Gene Johnson in Seattle: “Faced with growing pressure to crack down on an ‘occupied’ protest zone following two weekend shootings, Seattle’s mayor said Monday that officials will move to wind down the blocks-long span of city streets taken over two weeks ago that President Donald Trump asserted is run by ‘anarchists.’

“Mayor Jenny Durkan said the violence was distracting from changes sought by thousands of peaceful protesters opposing racial inequity and police brutality. She said at a news conference that the city is working with the community to bring the ‘Capitol Hill Occupied Protest’ zone, or CHOP, to an end and that police soon would move back into a precinct building they had largely abandoned in the area.”

SPY GAMES — “The C.I.A.’s Business Is Secrets, but It Is Recruiting Spies in the Open,” by NYT’s Julian Barnes: “The C.I.A. has recruited at Ivy League schools, through Hollywood-produced television programs and even by judging school science fairs. But the current era needs a modern recruiting drive, and on Monday, the C.I.A. unveiled its first television advertisement, which is aimed at streaming platforms like Hulu. The slick, advertising-agency-produced spot has the feel of clips from the television program ‘Homeland’ — with a dollop of patriotism.

“By some measures, the C.I.A. has little need for recruiting drives. Every year, thousands of applicants compete for hundreds of spots, according to current and former officials. In 2019, the agency had its best recruiting year in a decade. And traditionally it has been easier for the government to recruit during recessions.

“But Gina Haspel, the C.I.A. director, has made recruitment a priority for her secretive agency, which has to compete against Silicon Valley for the sharpest minds as it increasingly focuses on hacking and other digital spying tools. And the agency still must work at bringing in recruiting classes that reflect the diversity of the United States.” NYT

IN MEMORIAM — L.A. TIMES: “Steve Bing, philanthropist and film producer, dies after fall from building,” by Anousha Sakoui and Richard Winton: “Steve Bing, philanthropist, film producer and prominent Democratic political donor whose producing credits include ‘The Polar Express’ and ‘Get Carter,’ died Monday. Bing, 55, fell to his death from a high-rise building in Century City, according to a law enforcement source who was not authorized to comment. Foul play is not suspected.”

PLAYBOOKERS

Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Rachel Winer is now SVP of digital at ROKK Solutions. She previously led the digital paid media practice for Ketchum North America.

TRANSITION — Stephanie Sutton is now director of external affairs at Global Ties U.S. She previously was an SVP at Edelman and is a State Department alum.

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Lydia Mulvany, an editor at Bloomberg News, and Riccardo Reati, VP of digital transformation at Zurich North America, on Thursday welcomed Ludovica Reati, who came in at 8 lbs, 5 oz and joins big sister Valentina. Pic

— Michelle Strucke, senior policy manager for aid and development finance at Oxfam, and Zaki Barzinji, director of state and local government affairs at HPE and an Obama White House alum, on Thursday welcomed Amedeo Azadi Barzinji, who joins big sister Zoon. Pic Another pic

BIRTHWEEK (was Thursday): National security adviser Robert O’Brien turned 54

BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Steven Cheung, senior comms adviser for the Trump reelect. A trend he thinks doesn’t get enough attention: “The flattening of technological advancement, especially with hardware like transistors on computer chips. Engineers are getting closer to a real-world limit of how small transistors can be made, and there will be a point where it’s physically impossible to make them smaller, faster and more efficient.” Playbook Q&A

BIRTHDAYS: Justice Clarence Thomas is 72 … Sylvia Burwell, president of AU, is 55 … Chasten Buttigieg is 31 … WaPo’s Philip Bump (h/t David Graham) … Adam Boehler, CEO of the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation … Suzanne Clark, president of the U.S. Chamber … Kaelan Dorr, senior adviser for public affairs at Treasury … Aaron Cutler, partner at Hogan Lovells … Paul Tewes … Greg Hale is 45 (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Facebook’s Amber Moon … Robert Palladino … J.P. Fielder … Jeremy Katz, president and COO of D1 Capital Partners … Robert Kaplan, CNAS senior fellow and senior adviser at Eurasia Group … Judy Lemons … POLITICO Europe’s Kate Day, Etienne Bauvir and Ali Walker …

… Louisa Tavlas Atkinson, VP of comms at the Niskanen Center … Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg … POLITICO’s Ryan Kohl … former Rep. Baron Hill (D-Ind.) is 67 … former Rep. Bob Dold (R-Ill.) is 51 … former Rep. Cresent Hardy (R-Nev.) is 63 … Nick Weinstein … Atanu Chakravarty … Adam Lerner … Bradley Engle … Rick Reynolds … Steven Stombres, partner at Harbinger Strategies … Ryan Woodbury … political consultant Joe Duffy … Emma Whitestone of Blueprint Interactive … Sivan Ya’ari is 42 … Jerry Speyer is 8-0 … Patrick Morris … Brian Pomper is 31 … Caitlin Dorman … Marc Leder … Bronagh Finnegan … Tom Frechette … Tina Karalekas … Robin Strongin … Andrew Roos … Tom Blair … Chris Spanos (h/t Jon Haber)

Follow us on Twitter

AMERICAN MINUTE

CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS

 

Connect: Facebook Twitter YouTube
“Whoever has my commandments and keeps them, he it is who loves me. And he who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I will love him and manifest myself to him,” (John‬ ‭14:21,‬ ‭ESV‬‬).

Vander Hart: Him We Proclaim

By Shane Vander Hart on Jun 22, 2020 02:01 am
The first chapter of Colossians is one of my favorite chapters in the entire Bible. In it, God reveals through the Apostle Paul who Jesus Christ is, what He has done for His church, and who His followers are in Christ.

The Apostle Paul ends the chapter with these words, “Him we proclaim, warning everyone and teaching everyone with all wisdom, that we may present everyone mature in Christ. For this I toil, struggling with all his energy that he powerfully works within me,” (Colossians 1:28-29, ESV).

The statement above is Paul’s mission statement. It defines his purpose. It’s not just his purpose, but ours as well. We, too, should want to warn everyone, teach everyone with all wisdom, so we also may present everyone mature in Christ.

It starts with proclamation. “Him we proclaim.”

Who are we to proclaim? The Lord Jesus Christ who, as we see in Colossians 1:15-20, is:

  • The image of the invisible God
  • The firstborn of all creation
  • Creator of all things in heaven and earth both visible and invisible
  • He is the reason for creation (all things were created “through him and for him”)
  • He comes before his creation.
  • He holds together creation.
  • He is the head of the church.
  • He is the beginning.
  • He is the firstborn of the dead. (His resurrection guarantees ours.)
  • He is preeminent in everything.
  • He has the fullness of God dwelling within himself.
  • He is the one who reconciles to himself all things making peace by his blood on the cross.

And what has God done for those who follow him? We see looking back in Colossians 1:

  • He has qualified us to share in the inheritance.
  • He has delivered from the domain of darkness.
  • He has transferred us to the kingdom of His beloved Son.
  • In Christ, God redeems us and forgives our sins.
  • In Christ, we are reconciled to God.
  • He presents us, who were alienated from God and hostile in mind to God, doing evil things, holy and blameless, and above reproach.
  • We now have Christ in us, which is the hope of glory.

It is this Savior, Deliverer, Creator, Redeemer, and Peacemaker we are to proclaim to a watching world but do we? How can we not?

Read in browser »
share on Twitter Like Vander Hart: Him We Proclaim on Facebook

Recent Articles:

King: Celebrating Juneteenth National Freedom Day
(Video) Joni Ernst Discusses Juneteenth with Senate Chaplain Barry Black
Friday Five Items of Good News (Vol. 8)
State of Iowa Announces Three Additional Test Iowa Sites
Reynolds Shifts Iowa Toward Economic Growth Post-COVID-19

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.

Donate
Caffeinated Thoughts
P.O. Box 57184
Des Moines, IA 50317
(515) 321-5077
Editor, Shane Vander Hart
Connect: FacebookTwitterInstagram, and YouTube.
Share
Tweet
Share
Forward
Copyright © 2020 Caffeinated Thoughts, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

 

CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS

 

CDN’s Daily News Blast delivers the day’s news first!
View this email in your browser

CDN Daily News Blast

06/23/2020

Excerpts:

President Donald Trump’s Schedule for Tuesday, June 23, 2020

By R. Mitchell –

President Donald Trump will travel to Yuma, Arizona where he will participate in a roundtable on border security. The president will then travel to San Luis, Arizona, to commemorate the 200th mile of new border wall. President Trump will then travel to Phoenix, Arizona, to deliver an Address to young …

President Donald Trump’s Schedule for Tuesday, June 23, 2020 is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Circular References – Al Goodwyn Cartoon

By Al Goodwyn –

Circular References – Al Goodwyn Cartoon is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Trump Rally In Tulsa A Huge Success Despite AOC’s Sabotaging Teens

By Jim Clayton –

President Trump held his first rally in many months in Tulsa Oklahoma on Sunday. Thousands attended in spite of Dems and other pundants warning about the virus outbreak which they didn’t warn about during the demonstrations and riots recently. AOC joins hundreds of Twitter users claiming teens on TikTok and …

Trump Rally In Tulsa A Huge Success Despite AOC’s Sabotaging Teens is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

China’s Great Wall Of Murder – Ben Garrison Cartoon

By Ben Garrison –

Many years ago I had a conversation with a man from China who had relocated to the United States. He was a talented artist who became the art director at a company that hired me to do commercial art on a contract basis. He was smart and spoke English well. …

China’s Great Wall Of Murder – Ben Garrison Cartoon is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

‘Arrogant And Selfish’: Sarah Sanders’ Upcoming Book Calls Bolton ‘Drunk On Power’

By Mary Rose Corkery –

Former White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders described former National Security Advisor John Bolton as “arrogant and selfish” and “drunk on power” in excerpts from her upcoming book. Sanders and other White House staff members were pulled over by the U.K police to wait for Bolton’s motorcade during a …

‘Arrogant And Selfish’: Sarah Sanders’ Upcoming Book Calls Bolton ‘Drunk On Power’ is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

The Media & First Amendment Protection: Abuse of Power

By Frank Salvato –

LISTEN TO THE PODCAST In the beginning, back when the Framers were first debating the ground rules for the great American experiment, they concluded that a free media was important to society in that it would serve as a balance; an oversight body to government. It was believed then that …

The Media & First Amendment Protection: Abuse of Power is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

South Korea Says Bolton Book ‘Substantially Distorts Facts’

By Mary Margaret Olohan –

South Korea’s National Security Advisor says that former U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton’s new book “substantially distorts facts.” “The Room Where It Happens,” is scheduled to release Tuesday — a book filled with criticisms of President Donald Trump. The Justice Department sued Bolton Tuesday to delay the release of …

South Korea Says Bolton Book ‘Substantially Distorts Facts’ is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

‘They Don’t Know What They’re Talking About’: Trump Campaign Manager Addresses Allegations Trump Rally Was Trolled

By Thomas Catenacci –

The Trump campaign rejected a claim alleging that President Donald Trump’s Saturday rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma was trolled by an army of TikTok users. Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale denied the allegation in a statement Sunday and attacked the media for pushing the story, according to Politico. “Leftists and online …

‘They Don’t Know What They’re Talking About’: Trump Campaign Manager Addresses Allegations Trump Rally Was Trolled is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Americans Deserve Answers from Speaker Pelosi, Not President Trump

By The Thoughtful Conservative –

President Trump officially started off his campaign with a triumphant return to the stage on Saturday night in Tulsa, Oklahoma. During the nearly two-hour long speech, President Trump made a comment that was obviously made in gest and intended as a joke. Specifically, while discussing the coronavirus, Trump indicated that …

Americans Deserve Answers from Speaker Pelosi, Not President Trump is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

ANALYSIS: DOJ Investigators Involved In Antitrust Probe Don’t Appear To Be Scrutinizing Claims Of Bias In Google’s Search

By Peter Hasson And Chris White –

Goolag - A.F. Branco Cartoon

Investigators with the Department of Justice involved in an antitrust probe targeting Google do not appear to be scrutinizing claims that the company manipulates its search feature, leaks of the investigation and a source with knowledge indicate.   Researchers and critics argue Google’s search feature is subject to manipulation and …

ANALYSIS: DOJ Investigators Involved In Antitrust Probe Don’t Appear To Be Scrutinizing Claims Of Bias In Google’s Search is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Hide and Seek – A.F. Branco Cartoon

By A.F. Branco –

Joe Biden continues to keep hiding in his basement away from the public and his ability to gaff. Political cartoon by A.F. Branco ©2020

Hide and Seek – A.F. Branco Cartoon is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Seattle’s CHOP Worse Than The ‘Complete And Total Anarchy’ Of Occupy Wall Street, NY Police Union Exec Says

By Jake Dima –

Vice president of Sergeants Benevolent Association Vincent Vallelong compared the Occupy Wall Street protests of 2011 to the present-day Seattle occupation known as CHOP. He fears the Seattle occupation is far more grave than what he saw in 2011 in Manhattan and suggests Seattle PD is being stymied by local …

Seattle’s CHOP Worse Than The ‘Complete And Total Anarchy’ Of Occupy Wall Street, NY Police Union Exec Says is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Watch: White House Press Briefing with Kayleigh McEnany – 6/22/20

By R. Mitchell –

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany holds a briefing Monday to update the nation on recent developments. The briefing is scheduled to begin at 1:00 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit …

Watch: White House Press Briefing with Kayleigh McEnany – 6/22/20 is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Their Real Motive is to Cancel America

By Karen Kataline –

Why is there still an Auschwitz in Germany? Shouldn’t Jews have demanded that it be erased from history?  Of course not. Those most directly affected by the Holocaust want it to remain as evidence–as proof that those atrocities happened. Yet, “activists” want to erase our history so generations to come …

Their Real Motive is to Cancel America is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

See all breaking news, conservative commentary, political cartoons and more posted to CDN at our Home Page.
Follow on Twitter
Friend on Facebook
Add on Google Plus
Copyright © 2020 Conservative Daily News, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

 

PJ MEDIA

The Morning Briefing: Biden Agrees to Leave the Basement for 3 Debates With Trump and I Might Die From #Popcorn

(AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Biden Is Back…Or Is He?

IT’S ON LIKE DONKEY KONG.

I’ve just been waiting to write that for a while.

As we discussed here a couple of weeks ago, what Trump really needed was to hit the road again and begin to goad Joe Biden’s handlers to into letting him out of the basement so the public could see just how bad things have gotten.

Christmas showed up in June this year and Team Biden announced on Monday that it is willing to go ahead with the debate schedule that was agreed upon pre-pandemic. This is a gift horse with its mouth WIDE open and I probably shouldn’t peek into it but I am curious.

As we are all aware, Biden has been thriving during his pandemic time out of the live public eye. He has these train-wreck scripted video appearances that are very selectively edited by the MSM before they’re sent a-traveling down the memory hole. His minimal exposure to the public has greatly contributed to the ridiculous polling we are currently seeing.

I was convinced that Team Biden was going to lobby every which way to keep him not only off of the campaign trail, but especially off of a debate stage with President Trump. I truly thought that they would play the COVID card just to keep Biden as far away from the spotlight as possible.

My bad.

Honestly, I don’t get the Biden campaign’s calculation here. True, they probably couldn’t have kept him sequestered forever, but to agree to the full slate of debates seems unnecessary.

Biden

AP Photo/Susan Walsh

I mean, have they not seen any of Biden’s basement videos?

On his best days right now, Joe Biden is barely there. Many people don’t want to touch on this because they believe it’s all about a rapid cognitive decline. I truly believe that Biden has always been like this and people didn’t notice it because he wasn’t about to waltz into the Oval Office.

Two things are unequivocally true about these upcoming debates:

1: Trump is absolutely going to crush the drooling idiot in the Joe Biden suit.

2: The MSM will say that the opposite happened.

Point 2 is the only reason I can see Biden’s camp going forward with this. Biden has been so awful with the tightly scripted stuff these past few months that they cannot possibly be comfortable with him getting out in public and speaking extemporaneously. I can only think that they are so cocky about how the MSM will spin Biden’s performances that they’re willing to risk it.

Other than the first Democratic primary debate when Kamala Harris had her fifteen minutes in the spotlight and went after him, Biden was largely given the kid gloves treatment from the MSM after that. He was never good in any of the debates. If they’re willing to play make-believe like that in the primaries, there is no doubt they’ll spin themselves dizzy for Biden when he’s debating Trump.

Biden

(AP Photo, File)

You know what? Let them. Trump and Biden head-to-head in a debate is the palate cleanser this plague campaign needs. This election will turn on a few discerning voters in flyover country. They’ll get to see Joe Biden for what he is this way.

Oh.
PJM Linktank

Protesters Try to Establish Autonomous Zone Outside White House. Police Aren’t Having It—for Now.

Tom Cotton Reveals the True Threat of the ‘1619 Riots’

Let the exodus begin: Seattle’s CHOP Just Cost The City A Billion Dollar Company

VIDEO: Young Venezuelan Woman Warns America Where Destroying Statues Leads 

Thousands Sign Petition to Rename Columbus, Ohio the Most Absurd Name

EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Austin Demonstrators Who Raised Transgender Flag Jeer as Police Raise American Flag

UN: Calling Antifa ‘Domestic Terrorists’ Undermines ‘Peaceful Assembly’

Seattle’s CHOP Antifastan Turns Bloody Again: Second Shooting in Less Than 48 Hours

Toppling of Grant Statue Shows the Vandals’ True Agenda

Improving?!? She told us nothing was wrong in the first place. Even After Weekend of Extreme Violence at ‘CHOP,’ Clueless Seattle Mayor Says Things There Are ‘Improving’

Former Atlanta Officer Garrett Rolfe’s Stepmother Speaks Out About Her Firing

Andy Ngo DEMOLISHES WaPo’s Anti-Trump ‘Fact-Check’ Claiming No Antifa-Led Violence in the Riots.

VodkaPundit: SHOCK CLAIM: Chinese Troops in ‘Panic Mode’ After Border Clash with India

VodkaPundit, Part Deux: Obsessed: California Democrats Want Another $20 Million to Enforce Gig Job-Killer AB5

Is This Proof That John Bolton’s Book Is Full of Lies?

Bill Barr Scorcher: Effort to Push Trump From Office Closest Thing to Coup Since Lincoln Assassination

John Kerry Warns of Revolution in November if Trump Wins While He Lays the Foundation for It

Muslims Say It, We Get Blamed for It

Exalting Race Rejects American Civil Rights Gospel

Hey, Black Lives Matter: Do You Really Want China to Run the World?

Whatever Happened to What’s-His-Name?

CPAC Leader Warns ‘Statues of Jesus Are Next.’ Leftists Immediately Confirm His Concerns

VIP

Top Five Statues We Should Tear Down Next

It’s Always Liberals Getting Caught in Blackface

VodkaPundit, Part Trois: Escape from New York: Giuliani’s NYC Is All But Dead, Dems Killed It

VIP Gold

Mayor Pushes Removal of ‘Offensive’ Word from Government Job Titles

NYC Gun Licensing Laws Should Be Part Of De Blasio’s Policing Reforms

From the Mothership and Beyond

‘Jurassic Park’ Roars To No. 1 Again At Weekend Box Office, 27 Years After Original Release

Not weird at all…Apple Watch Can Now Tell If You’re Washing Your Hands

How Riots Made One Man Buy His First Firearm  

Meet The Police Chief Forced To Step Down After Expressing Support For The 2A

Anti-Cop Protestors Crash Gun Rights Rally In MI

FL Mass Shooting Averted Thanks To One Man’s Bravery

How a Conservative Commentator Turned the Left’s Cancel Culture Campaign Against Itself

Black Prison Guards Blow the Whistle on Segregation Surrounding Derek Chauvin

SCOTUS Delivered a Blow to the Gun Rights Community Last Week But There’s Still Hope

Gov. Whitmer Declines to Answer Rep. Scalise’s Questions on Devastating Nursing Home Policy

Everybody was Kung Flu fighting…Popcorn: Kayleigh McEnany Faced a Liberal Media Meltdown Over Trump Saying ‘Kung Flu’

Joni Ernst Met With ‘Sexist’ Insult After Challenging Dem Opponent to Debates

They just stepped in it. Biden Campaign Agrees to Three Presidential Debates

‘Against Socialism and on the Side of Freedom:’ McEnany Clarifies Administration’s Support for Juan Guaidó

Watch MSNBC Contradict Its Own Reporting on the Trump Rally

Gov. Desantis Rips Cuomo for Suggesting He’d Quarantine Floridian Visitors

Food Network Host Hits Barron Trump in Despicable Attempt to Revile His Father

Authors Protest J.K. Rowling’s ‘Sex is Real’ Stance: Unless ‘Structural Inequalities’ Change, Freedom of Speech Can’t Be Upheld

AOC Guns for Chuck Schumer’s Seat, and Trump Is There With a Whoopee Cushion

Murder Rates Skyrocket as Police Are Pulled Back; the Numbers Are Stunning

History, You’re History: Prominent Prep School Jilts George Washington for Not Being ‘Relevant’

Kira: Hollywood Hires Private Investigators To Root Out Racist Past Posts From Celebrity Newcomers

Married CA Dem Asm. Phil Ting Used Woman He Met on “Sugar Daddy” Site to Testify for His Legislation

Jake Tapper Gets Inconvenient Reminder About CNN Colleagues After Chiding Trump Official for ‘Light Moment’

Trump’s New Tulsa Ratings are In and They’re Massive

Sarah Huckabee Sanders Shares a Revealing (and Amusing!) Story About John Bolton From Her New Book

Chicago Weekend: 104 Shot, 14 Killed Including 5 Children

Archaeologists Discover Circle Of Ancient Pits Near Stonehenge

Lies, Damned Lies, And Statistics: Politico’s Argument For Reducing Police Spending Is … Something Else

McWhorter is brilliant. John McWhorter: This Far-Left Ideology We’re Seeing Is A Religion

What Happens When The Police Say “Enough Is Enough?”

Knives Out: Jared And Ivanka Reportedly Mad At Brad Parscale For Trump’s Rally Fiasco

WWII monument in North Carolina vandalized with praise for communism

Scott, DeSantis: Florida’s New COVID-19 Spike Not Just Related To Testing

Watch as woke white protester singles out black police officer for verbal abuse in DC

Atlantic writer declares Trump Tulsa rally to be ‘explicitly white supremacist speech’ except he is lacking one thing – any proof

When narratives COLLIDE! Sharyl Attkisson’s mockery of media’s reporting on size of Trump’s rally HILARIOUSLY spot-on

‘Because he’s guilty’: Janice Dean lets Andrew Cuomo have it after he blamed federal gov’t and ‘Republican politics’ instead of his disastrous COVID-19 nursing home policy

Youngest surviving preemie ever, born at 21 weeks weighing 13 ounces, is going home

Opinion: A word about the grown toddlers attacking inanimate statues

Catholic Charities steps in as NYC loosens eviction restrictions

ARM-based Japanese supercomputer is now the fastest in the world 

Google workers demand company stop selling tech to police

Smells Like Onion

The Onion

@TheOnion

Facebook Announces Plan To Break Up U.S. Government Before It Becomes Too Powerful https://bit.ly/3ep3NSp 

View image on Twitter
2,200 people are talking about this
The Kruiser Kabana

Perfectly Timed Pics@PicsPerfectly

The Great Cover Up

View image on Twitter
645 people are talking about this

Ed McMahon once said in an interview that Carson hinted beforehand that this line was going to kill. He didn’t tell him what it was. McMahon also said that this is the most popular Carnac line ever. I’ve got one I like better and I’m still looking for it.

OK, here’s Ed’s story about it.

None of this is real. Except for the part where all of it is.

___

Kruiser Twitter
Kruiser Facebook
PJ Media Senior Columnist and Associate Editor Stephen Kruiser is the author of “Don’t Let the Hippies Shower” and “Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage,” both of which address serious subjects in a humorous way. Monday through Friday he edits PJ Media’s “Morning Briefing.” His columns appear twice a week.

THE DISPATCH

The Morning Dispatch: Is Trump Sowing Seeds of Electoral Doubt?

Plus, analyzing the president’s comments about doing ‘too good a job’ on coronavirus testing.

Happy Tuesday! We are reserving judgment on the news that Major League Baseball will kick off a 60-game season around July 24 until it becomes clear whether the commissioner is—through a cheap, backdoor maneuver—foisting the monstrosity that is the designated hitter upon the sanctity of the National League.

A reminder: This is the version of TMD available to non-paying readers. We’re happy you’ve made The Dispatch part of your morning routine, and we hope you’re enjoying The Morning Dispatch and the rest of our free editorial offerings. If you do, we hope you’ll consider joining us as a paying member. In addition to the full version of TMD each day, you’ll get extra editions of French Press, the G-FileVital Interests, and our other paid products. And members can engage with the authors and with one another in the discussion threads at the end of each of our articles and newsletters. If this appeals to you, we hope you’ll please join now.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • As of Monday night, 2,311,997 cases of COVID-19 have been reported in the United States (an increase of 32,122 from yesterday) and 120,402 deaths have been attributed to the virus (an increase of 433 from yesterday), according to the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, leading to a mortality rate among confirmed cases of 5.2 percent (the true mortality rate is likely much lower, between 0.4 percent and 1.4 percent, but it’s impossible to determine precisely due to incomplete testing regimens). Of 27,553,581 coronavirus tests conducted in the United States (468,681 conducted since yesterday), 8.4 percent have come back positive.

  • President Trump signed an executive order extending the suspension of certain worker visas through the end of 2020. The order includes a temporary ban on H-1B and H-2B visas, but exempts workers with a “nexus to the food-supply chain.”
  • The Trump administration has designated four Chinese media organizations operating in the United States as “foreign missions,” with State Department officials saying the move is intended to emphasize to Americans that the sources operate as arms of the Chinese Communist Party. The action comes on the heels of the administration’s February designation of five other Chinese media companies as state-run operations.
  • President Trump clarified his stance toward Venezuela on Monday, tweeting that the only context in which he would meet with the country’s dictator Nicolas Maduro would be “to discuss one thing: a peaceful exit from power.” Trump told Axios last week he would “maybe think about” meeting with Maduro, and expressed some doubt about his previous decision to recognize Juan Guaidó as the legitimate Venezuelan president.
  • Ethan Melzer, a 22-year-old U.S. Army soldier, has been charged with conspiring to “orchestrate a murderous ambush on his own unit by unlawfully revealing its location, strength and armaments to a neo-Nazi, anarchist, white supremacist group,” according to a press release from Acting U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss. Melzer is alleged to be a member of the Order of Nine Angles (09A), a violent Satanic neo-Nazi organization.
  • Citing coronavirus concerns, the University of Michigan reportedly pulled out of hosting a Trump-Biden debate that was scheduled to take place on its Ann Arbor campus in October. The debate will be moved to Miami, per the New York Times.

Is Team Trump Trying to Sow Seeds of Electoral Doubt?

The last time President Trump took to Twitter to make unsubstantiated claims about voter fraud, the tech platform slapped a fact-check tag on the post and it sparked a several-day news cycle about online moderation and internet liability. On Monday morning, he went back to the well.

Twitter held off this time around, but experts have routinely debunked claims like the president’s, that mail-in ballots increase voter fraud. Some even argue distributing paper ballots through the mail could help ensure more accurate election results.

“Those concerned about fraud affecting the legitimacy of elections have a real worry that is being directed at the wrong target. The greatest problem, in terms of sheer numbers that could affect electoral outcomes, is electronic meddling by hackers that could affect thousands or tens of thousands of voter rolls or ballots,” Rachel Kleinfeld—a founding CEO of the Truman National Security Project and senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace—told The Dispatch. “Improved software and paper ballots are the best cures, and mail-in voting necessarily provides paper ballots, so it actually decreases mass fraud.”

With COVID Surging, Trump Insists ‘We’ve Done Too Good a Job’

The early response to the pandemic in the United States was defined by a shortage of testing. Now that testing has vastly increased, here’s a question that’s worth revisiting: What exactly is coronavirus testing for?

Among the most important answers, of course, is the public health purpose: Accurate knowledge of the location of current coronavirus cases is critical for everything from contact tracing to economic reopening timelines. But tests are also important politically: In a sense, they function as COVID report cards, giving us benchmarks by which to assess the policy response of our elected leaders.

Worth Your Time

  • The Washington Post has a profile of New York City paramedic Anthony Almojera that offers a grim portrait of the life of New York EMTs in the midst of the ongoing pandemic. “I woke up this morning to about 60 new text messages from paramedics who are barely holding it together,” he says. “Some are still sick with the virus. At one point we had 25 percent of EMTs in the city out sick. Others are living in their cars so they don’t risk bringing it home to their families. They’re depressed. They’re emotionally exhausted.”
  • We wrote last week about recent shakeups at the U.S. Agency for Global Media. Anne Applebaum’s latest piece for The Atlantic will take you even deeper. Voice of America—a U.S. government-funded media organization that broadcasts news all over the world—has long enjoyed editorial independence from the particular presidential administration in power at any given moment. But a Trump loyalist’s recent overhaul of the organization raises a number of concerns, which Applebaum explores at length in the article. “Successive White Houses tried to shape the broadcasters in various ways, and sometimes became annoyed by the output of one network or another,” she writes. “Until this week, however, no U.S. administration had actually set out to destroy America’s international broadcasters or remove their independence. But now, finally, one has.”
  • Dan McLaughlin’s Father’s Day essay in National Review is titled: What I Learned from My Dad, the Cop. “He loved the cops and the job, but he was also cynical about bureaucracy and realistic about people,” McLaughlin writes. “He’d tell me something along the lines of ‘the NYPD is 25,000 of the best men you’ll ever meet, but there are 35,000 cops.’ By which he didn’t mean all the rest were necessarily jackbooted villains; some were lazy, some were on the take, some were just bad coworkers or bosses who knew how to play the system. Just like anywhere else.” It’s about police, yes, but it’s also just a lovely story of a son’s love for his father.

Something Moving

NASCAR announced Sunday that a noose was found in the garage stall of Bubba Wallace, the sport’s only black driver. It happened days after NASCAR banned the Confederate flag from its events, and Wallace painted “Black Lives Matter” on his car.

Yesterday, this happened:

Toeing the Company Line

  • Check out the latest episode of Advisory Opinionsfor an extended discussion of the nuances of presidential rally crowd sizes, Bill Barr’s controversial firing of a U.S. Attorney in New York, the Trump administration’s lawsuit regarding John Bolton’s book, and a recap of last week’s Supreme Court cases.
  • We’ve been hearing its juiciest details for almost a week now, but today is the day that John Bolton’s memoir, The Room Where It Happened, officially hits bookstores. Steve reviews it and says the “power of the book lies less in attention-grabbing disclosure than in the relentless, almost mundane stupidity and recklessness of it all.”
  • The Trump administration might have failed in its legal battle to keep Bolton’s book from being sold, but Jack Goldsmith writes that the administration actually actually won a lot from its request.
  • There is a great deal of uncertainty about what school will look like in the fall, but Frederick M. Hess and Matthew Rice make an important argument that there are legitimate risks in not reopening our nation’s schools.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Sarah Isgur (@whignewtons), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Nate Hochman (@njhochman), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).

See all

LEGAL INSURRECTION

Share This

Bust of George Washington Toppled at George Washington University

Music Workshops at U. Illinois to Focus on Black Lives Matter and White Supremacy

Jewish Student at UMass Was Called a Nazi for Being a Conservative Trump Supporter

 

  • William Jacobson: “TAKING CARE OF BUSINESS — Had to finish up some unfinished business in Florida. Planes (SW) were full with middle seats empty. Terminal (PVD) not so full.”
  • Kemberlee Kaye: Cancel cancel culture.'”
  • Mary Chastain: “Cancel Culture backlash – The family of one of the women who portrayed Aunt Jemima is ticked about Quaker Oats erasing her brand. Vera Harris, the family historian, had excellent points in her argument. She mentioned her relative Lillian Richard is a local hero and Quaker Oats gave her a steady job, which was not an easy thing during that time period! Plus this: “I wish we would take a breath and not just get rid of everything because good or bad, it is our history. Removing that wipes away a part of me. A part of each of us.”
  • Stacey Matthews: “Good news, per Twitchy: ‘J.K. Rowling’s literary agency lets clients leave rather that meet their demand to ‘re-educate’ their staff’ on transgender equality.”
  • David Gerstman: “Mary Chastain blogged about a crazy conspiracy theory pushed by a newly crowned Pulitzer Prize winner at the New York Times, that firecrackers being blasted as July 4 approaches “is part of a coordinated attack on the Black and brown communities by government forces; an attack meant to disorient and destabilize the #BlackLivesMatter movement.” This is insane. I remember being in school in upper Manhattan or visiting friends in Flatbush in late June and early July: exploding firecrackers were everywhere. Biggest lesson from this is how seriously to accept the New York Times and Pulitzer Prize: not at all.”
  • Vijeta Uniyal: “Migrant mobs turned the German city of Stuttgart into a “war zone” as they attacked police and went on a looting spree on Sunday, German media reports. Rioters injured nineteen police officers as they yelled “Allahu Akbar” and pelted stones and smashed police vehicles.”
Legal Insurrection Foundation is a Rhode Island tax-exempt corporation established exclusively for charitable purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to educate and inform the public on legal, historical, economic, academic, and cultural issues related to the Constitution, liberty, and world events.

For more information about the Foundation, CLICK HERE.

Legal Insurrection Foundation
18 Maple Avenue #280 ​ Barrington, Rhode Island 02806
info@legalinsurrection.com

Follow Us

Having trouble viewing this email? View it in your web browser
Unsubscribe

THE DAILY WIRE

DESERET NEWS

 

View this email in your browser
Tuesday, June 23, 2020

The Black population is less than 2% in 7 states, including Utah. Here’s what it’s like to be a Black person there

What’s driving the surge of COVID-19 cases in Utah?

An Arizona mom searches for answers when her 7-year-old comes down with COVID-19

Utah GOP voter registrations up, Democrats and other parties down for primary

Utah Jazz players reassemble in market in order to prepare for NBA season restart

Utah Inland Port Authority approves five-year plan, 10% cut to budget

MORE NEWS
Like receiving news in your inbox? Sign up for another free Deseret News newsletter.
Want to see your company or product advertised in our newsletters? Click here.
Twitter
Facebook
Website
Pinterest
Email
Instagram
Copyright © 2020 Deseret News, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp

BRIGHT

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

The New Urban Flight
Between rioting, movements to dispose of police forces, absurdly high taxes under progressive mayors, and a nation-wide lockdown, cities are becoming an increasingly undesirable place to live. The Wall Street Journal Editorial Board explored this pattern of departure, writing:“A new analysis by the American Enterprise Institute’s Ed Pinto and Tobias Peter also shows that the pandemic and riots appear to be driving more Americans to the suburbs. Over the last four weeks, home purchases (as measured by interest-rate mortgage application locks) in non-urban areas have increased by a third more than in urban areas compared to the same period last year. Home purchases in the least dense ZIP codes of metropolitan areas increased twice as much year-over-year as in the most dense. There was less variation in Miami, Orlando, Atlanta and Dallas, which coincidentally or not had fewer violent protests.”Under lockdown, most who could fled from the city, be it to vacation homes or extended stays at parents’ houses. Now, increased violence makes city-living even less desirable. However, the issues started long before the current crisis, as high taxes and failing leftist governments have left their cities in ruins. The Wall Street Journal wrote:“Big-city progressive politicians have long treated businesses and taxpayers like ATMs to finance their public-union machines. But the pandemic has shown companies and employees that they can prosper working remotely. If this new urban exodus continues, cities like San Francisco, New York and Chicago are in for a rude fiscal awakening.”Cancel Culture Comes for All
Around Twitter and Instagram, a phrase has been going around which sounds normal and even somewhat obvious on paper: normalize changing your opinion when presented with new information. While this call to allow people to grow up and be forgiven for past mistakes, the group propagating these posts are young progressives, who are most excited in their endeavors to ruin anyone for not being ‘woke’ enough, regardless of how long ago the transgression occurred, or how minor or normal the opinion or action is.

But it’s not just old tweets, such as the 2012 poor-taste jokes which got Hartley Sawyer fired from The Flash, or politically unpopular opinions, such as Terry Crews not saying the proper things in support of Black Lives matter, that can cause issues. Just being related to the wrong person can cost someone their jobs. Garrett Rolffe is being tried for felony murder in the death of Rayshard Brooks, but his family is facing scrutiny purely due to association. His stepmother was fired from her job.  Tucker Carlson put it best, when he said:

“This is where the country’s going. It’s becoming a place where you can be punished for the supposed misdeeds of your relatives. You don’t want to be that country. All of us should put on the brakes immediately.”

What to Watch – Joel Schumacher
Director Joel Schumacher died yesterday, at age 80. With a decades-long career, Schumacher has made many iconic and fantastic films, entertaining and inspiring generations.

St. Elmo’s Fire is one of the most mature of the ‘brat-pack’ films, focusing on a group of recent Georgetown graduates as they attempt to navigate life after college in the 1980s. The fantastic young cast, including Rob Lowe, Emilio Estevez, Ally Sheedy, Andrew McCarthy, Demi Moore, Judd Nelson, and Mare Winningham, are excellent under Schumacher’s direction, demonstrating the strained closeness of the group, and their stunted adolescence, with complexity and humanity.

John Grisham’s novels have adapted beautifully to screen, but none have been as powerful as A Time to KillThe film follows the murder trial of Carl Lee (Samuel L Jackson), who killed the men who raped his 10-year-old daughter, for fear that in Mississippi, two white men who raped a black girl would not be convicted. Matthew McConaughey portrays Carl Lee’s attorney in his first outing as a leading man, leading an all-star cast. The compelling story and excellent actors are all heightened by atmospheric and intense direction.

Despite its complicated critical reception, I’ve always harbored a deep affection for the 2004 film adaptation of Phantom of the Opera, starring Gerard Butler, Emmy Rossum, and Patrick Wilson. Schumacher’s talent for filming incredible visual spectacles has never been better on display than in this musical movie about a masked composer stalking a beautiful soprano in the Paris Opera House. However, style does not overpower substance, as the heart of the long-running musical translates beautifully to screen.

BRIGHT is brought to you by The Federalist.
Today’s BRIGHT Editor

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
Twitter
Facebook
Website
Email
Instagram
Copyright © BRIGHT, All rights reserved.

www.GetBRIGHTemail.com

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

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.

AMERICAN THINKER

 

View this email in your browser

Recent Articles

The Political Genius of Donald Trump

Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
The roots of Trump’s political genius lie in his highly unorthodox approach to public life. Trump has a genius for getting people to under-estimate him.  And he is still doing it. Read More…


No, America Is Not Plagued with ‘Systemic Racism’

Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
One must have lived through systemic racism to know that what we have today is not it, but is rather a sinister, malevolent plan to destroy America as founded. Read More…


BLM — What About a Multiracial Family?

Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
Can my black grandchildren now demand an apology for the systemic racism that BLM considers inherent in their white brothers?   Read More…


Democrats Hope COVID-19 Will Carry Joe Biden

Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
Anyone who is paying attention knows full well that Joe Biden cannot defeat President Donald Trump in any traditional way. Read More…


America’s Faithful Are Better Prepared for the Coming Anti-Government Rage

Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
Religious Americans are far better equipped than others to weather the hard times to come.  Read More…


Gorsuch the Pharisee and Textualist Tomfoolery

Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
Justice Neil Gorsuch, long ago made clear that he operates from false premises. One of these is what’s called “textualism,” which is not at all the same as originalism. Read More…


Let’s Have a National Forgiveness Day

Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
Our glorious national politics, especially during this historic Wokey Reign of Cancel, is about everything except forgiveness. Read More…


Recent Blog Posts

Democrats and fellow leftists are snatching defeat from the jaws of victory
Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
With their increasingly outrageous displays of racism, violence, and anti-Americanism, leftists are squandering their post-George Floyd goodwill.  Read more…


A retired physician’s take on epidemiologists
Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
Over my medical career, I’ve had some contact with epidemiology. I’ll be blunt here: I came away unimpressed with that field.  Read more…


Democrats create a workaround to advance voter fraud
Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
The con job is playing out in real-time in Minnesota.  Read more…


Black Lives Matter grifter Shaun King declares war on Christian imagery
Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
As the mob gets louder, people like King, who rely on racial disharmony to make a living, have to create ever more outrageous statements and demands.  Read more…


Twilight Zone: ‘Logic is an enemy and truth is a menace.’
Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
Watching the Twilight Zone is a stark reminder of the lunacy that now prevails from leftist America.  Read more…


Stop pandering to the Left’s systemic racism ‘big lie’
Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
“Systemic racism” is a big lie to keep blacks voting for Democrats who have been promising to fix it for over 50 years.  Read more…


Appetite for Destruction: Lincoln, Grant, Churchill statues coming down, Lenin going up
Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
None of these statues being toppled had anything to do with George Floyd. So what really is going on?  Read more…


Democrats’ fear-based strategy to win in November
Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
They’re pulling out all the stops now.  Read more…


Maybe they didn’t tear down enough statues in Chicago
Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
Chicago slides further down the chute.  Read more…


Let’s welcome Equity Prime Mortgage LLC of Atlanta Georgia to the Karma Café
Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
The Karma Café has plenty of tables with no reservations needed for businesses and individuals that harm other people’s livelihoods.  Read more…


Dancing with Beethoven
Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
“Tempestuous” was not the word for the divine Ludwig van.  Read more…


How the Supreme Court failed
Jun 23, 2020 01:00 am
The Supreme Court may indeed continue to arrogantly legislate, but ultimately it will face a losing battle.  Read more…


Claims of punking to the contrary, the Tulsa rally is a net benefit for Trump
Jun 22, 2020 01:00 am
Leftists and NeverTrumps claim victory because they think they depressed rally attendance through a TikTok teen scam. They’re wrong.  Read more…


The Supreme Court is out of control
Jun 22, 2020 01:00 am
There is a constitutional way that Trump can rein it in.  Read more…


So much for Seattle’s ‘summer of love’
Jun 22, 2020 01:00 am
The place has descended into a hellhole with armed warlords loaded for bear and deaths piling up. Naturally, the cops are being blamed.  Read more…


View this email in your browser
American Thinker is a daily internet publication devoted to the thoughtful exploration of issues of importance to Americans.

 

This email was sent to rickbulow1974@gmail.com
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
AmericanThinker · 3060 El Cerrito Plaza, #306 · El Cerrito, CA 94530 · USA

LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL

THE BLAZE

THE FEDERALIST

06/23/2020
Read: Hillsdale Grad’s Viral Response To BLM Petition
Tori Hope Peterson
‘I look at my acceptance letter and diploma as symbols of the institution seeking justice and equality for those who represent me, and that is: former foster youth, underprivileged, undereducated, pregnant student, white, black, woman, and person.’
Scenes From The ‘Autonomous Zone’ Outside The White House, After Protestors’ Failed Toppling Of Jackson Statue
Emily Jashinsky
Outside the White House Monday night, agitators lingered near the police line, using their proximity to verbally berate the officers.
Everywhere Statues Are Torn Down By The Mob, History Promises People Are Next
Christopher Bedford
The promise of bloodshed coming alongside or following shortly after, however, is an historic certainty. The symbols of a people never satisfy: People themselves must always come next.
Conservatives Shouldn’t Accept The Left’s Corrupt View Of American History
John Daniel Davidson
Rarified conservative arguments that we should remove Confederate monuments is tantamount to accepting the left’s vision of America as irredeemably racist.
Celebs Call To Abolish The Police While Hiding Behind Private Security
Libby Emmons
A group of wealthy celebrities requesting the abolition of something they don’t even need is disingenuous at best, callous at worst.
Trump Was Right In 2017 When He Said Statue Destroyers Wouldn’t Stop With Confederate Figures
Mollie Hemingway
What media figures assured the public was absurd when President Trump said it in 2017 is now coming to fruition in cities across the country.
Shutdowns And Riots Are Sending New York City Into A Death Spiral
Buck Sexton
COVID-19, riots, and Democrats’ policies have finally combined to create a death spiral for New York City, one from which it may never fully recover.
Loyola Professor Faces Dueling Petitions As Woke Students Demand Firing
Tristan Justice
Economics Professor Walter Block at Loyola University of New Orleans faces dueling petitions as students try to oust the self-described libertarian academic.
‘Top Chef’ Winner Gets A Pass From Woke Mobs Because She’s Not A White Man
Casey Chalk
The ‘Top Chef’ producers constantly find themselves trapped in a dilemma: how to appear to be a thrilling, objective competition while appealing to woke sensibilities.
Why Brett Favre Is Crazy To Equate Pat Tillman And Colin Kaepernick’s Patriotism
Ian Haworth
Pat Tillman gave his life for his beliefs. Colin Kaepernick has become a millionaire for his. Tillman is a hero. Kaepernick is not.
Dutch Doctor Exonerated After Euthanizing An Unwilling Patient
Georgi Boorman
If being unhappy is ‘unbearable suffering,’ then the precedent for vulnerable people, particularly the elderly and sick, is clear: Smile and don’t complain, or risk lethal injection.
AOC Faces Twitter Backlash After Claiming ‘Latinos Are Black’
Evita Duffy
Last year, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez told MSNBC she wasn’t black. Things have changed.
Lionel Shriver On Modern Day Religions Of Cancel Culture And Fitness
The Federalist Staff
Lionel Shriver uses her new novel to explore an emerging religious aspect to fitness, and that one’s physique is now the ultimate measure of their success and ability.
Shaun King Calls For Destroying Statues Of Jesus, Smashing Stained Glass
Jonah Gottschalk
Shaun King, a prominent left-wing fundraiser and activist, endorsed the destruction of religious icons and statues in which Jesus appeared “white.” He described the artwork, which Read More Read More
Ben Domenech: Small Groups Have Power To Weaponize Big Tech Against People They Don’t Like
Allison Schuster
“What we’re really seeing here is the power that small groups have to weaponize these large internet entities against people that they don’t like,” he said.
Marsha Blackburn Pushes DOJ To Examine Google’s Power Over Free Speech
Tristan Justice
GOP Sen. Marsha Blackburn penned a letter to Attorney General William Barr urging the DOJ to examine Google’s power over the 21st century public square.
John Bolton Is The Perfect Washington Man
Ben Domenech
Bolton is a thin-skinned and snarky figure who succeeded in convincing a surprising number of smart people in Washington that he is somehow serious and statesmanlike.
A New York Times Writer Is Spreading Insane Anti-Government Lies
David Marcus
Pulitzer Prize winner Nikole Hannah-Jones is now peddling ridiculous conspiracy theories.
Black Lives Matter Needs To Care About All Black Lives, Not Just The Few Ended By Police
Lipton Matthews
If BLM leaders care about black lives, they ought to focus on what can improve the quality of life for black Americans — starting with stronger families.
5 Baseball Movies To Watch If You’re Missing America’s Pastime
Joshua Lawson
An Iowan farmer, a duo of bargain hunters, and a modern Arthurian legend star in some of the best movies to watch this summer if you’re pining for baseball.
Lionel Shriver On Modern Day Religions Of Cancel Culture And Fitness
Lionel Shriver joins host Ben Domenech to discuss the popularity of fitness and how it cultivates…
SIGN UP FOR A FREE TRIAL HERE.

The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.

“You must read The Transom. With brilliant political analysis and insight into the news that matters most, it is essential to understanding this incredible moment in history. I read it every day!” – Newt Gingrich

 

 

NOQ REPORT

NOQ Report Daily

Link to NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes

Yes, the fireworks are part of the evil plan to destroy America

Posted: 23 Jun 2020 06:11 AM PDT

2020 is going to turn me into a conspiracy theorist. The difference between me and your standard flat-earther is that I’m a skeptic at heart who doesn’t see conspiracies driving everything. At least I didn’t until this year. Now, my mind has essentially been changed. There are major conspiracies afoot that are causing the chaos and anarchy rampant across this nation. And yes, the recent string of massive illegal fireworks “randomly” popping up in over a dozen cities at the same time is part of it.

A Twitter “event” titled “Reports of a fireworks surge in several cities prompt various theories” could have been a classic CIA coverup campaign if the CIA was behind all of this, but they’re not. At least I assume it’s not the CIA, but whoever it is has a similar level of sophistication and funding, so who knows? One thing is certain: The narrative handed out conveniently to multiple mainstream media outlets only make sense on the surface. Just a little digging reveals how ludicrous it all is. I’ll discuss what I found a bit below, but the full commentary on the plan is on the latest episode of the NOQ Report Podcast.

They’re saying that the combination of coronavirus cancellations of Independence Day festivities and super-low prices for professional-grade fireworks is behind this seemingly coordinated effort. You can read or hear about this excuse on multiple outlets, but one thing is distinctly missing from all of them. They didn’t actually look at prices or check to see how hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of fireworks were allegedly purchased simultaneously by multiple Black Lives Matter and Antifa groups around the country. We looked at the prices and compared them to past years using archive.org. Nope, the pricing isn’t different. It’s actually quite conspicuous how little the prices have changed.

For example, we looked at Superior Fireworks, one of the largest wholesale distributors online. We compared their website today to how it was on archive.org one year ago. The prices were exactly the same. Below are screenshots from the two homepages, the first from right now and the second from this time in 2019.

Fireworks 2020 Fireworks 2019

There has been a 4000% increase in fireworks noise complaints year-over-year in New York City alone. These are happening overnight, of course, and all starting over the last couple of weeks across multiple cities. This is not random. This is unambiguously coordinated.

Most notably, these aren’t cheap fireworks. Even if there are local outlets in dozens of cities discounting them greatly, we’re talking about serious fireworks here. Discounted, they would still be worth tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars per night, per city. And yet, it seems to be “kids” doing it, kids who happen to be suspiciously similar in appearance and groupings to Antifa and Black Lives Matter.

@deray @SonofBaldwin @_pem_pem Major uptick in fireworks near Lake Merritt in Oakland since Memorial Day. Non-stop from 8 pm to 2 am on Friday (see video). Same on Saturday. It’s 10 pm on Sunday and they’re going off right now. Much better and louder than ordinary consumer stuff. pic.twitter.com/XHhaa93Dzg

— Dave Seropian (@daveseropian) June 22, 2020

Nonstop for hours, night after night. How can anyone afford THIS MANY professional grade fireworks. This is suspect af! #oakland #oaklandprotest #FireworksTrauma pic.twitter.com/LTeqlxxu4d

— Nora (@Californora) June 22, 2020

shooting fireworks nonstop (this is what I see from the window when I go to bed)… pic.twitter.com/JsdwXNNESY

— Anna Bressanin (@AnBress) June 22, 2020

So, what’s the plan? If this is a coordinated effort by the elite Cultural Marxists I talked about the other day, then why are they doing this? At the very least, this contributes to the general anger spreading across the nation. Taking people who are already on-edge and depriving them of sleep is a formula for continued unrest. If that’s the only aspect of the plan, then we’re lucky. Sadly, I don’t think we’re lucky.

We’ve already seen instances of fireworks being used as weapons. Reports are being stifled about injuries and property damage, but we’ve seen multiple instances on social media of people being attacked by these fireworks.

Hey @BilldeBlasio, get a handle on this or get the heck out of the way. Your city was once proud, a beacon of patriotism and American values. Rudy and yes, even Bloomberg, had NYC humming as the greatest city on earth.

You’ve failed. Move out of the way so someone can fix this. https://t.co/CMHk6uitdO

— JD Rucker (@JDRucker) June 23, 2020

The part that concerns me the most is the conditioning this is doing to both citizens and law enforcement ahead of potential real attacks planned. I speculated a couple of weeks ago that bombings may be part of the next stage for the anarcho-communists and Cultural Marxists trying to destroy this nation. If the bombings are preceded by extended, constant, and ubiquitous fireworks, it will add dramatically to the turmoil domestic terrorist bombings would have on this nation.

We must take this seriously, folks. The mainstream media narrative is demonstrably false. This is coordinated and well-funded. We need to recognize the plan and act against the fireworks as well as whatever the fireworks are preceding.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Lindsey Graham is more wrong than usual, this time about worker visas

Posted: 23 Jun 2020 02:36 AM PDT

Senator Lindsey Graham has spent the better part of the last three years bouncing back and forth between being an establishment hack and a strong conservative. This may make some people laugh and wonder, “When has Graham ever been a strong conservative,” but in reality he has had his moments. They’re few and far between, but his latest complaint against President Trump’s policies should eliminate any minuscule idea that he may not be a total RINO hack.

As our EIC, JD Rucker, noted in the latest “Rucker Report,” Graham’s stance on foreign worker visas is miles away from reality. He’s making a play to appeal to the benefits of worker visas without taking into consideration that his arguments are designed for times of financial strength. When in recovery mode, as we find ourselves in today as a result of the coronavirus lockdowns, there are plenty of American citizens to fill any and all jobs that come available.

Legal immigration is a positive for the American economy, and visa programs allowing American companies to secure qualified, legal labor throughout the world have benefitted economic growth in the United States.

— Lindsey Graham (@LindseyGrahamSC) June 22, 2020

Work visas for temporary and seasonal jobs covering industries like hospitality, forestry, and many economic sectors can only be issued AFTER American workers have had a chance to fill the job position.

— Lindsey Graham (@LindseyGrahamSC) June 22, 2020

Unfortunately, I fear the President’s decision today to temporarily shut down these programs will create a drag on our economic recovery.

— Lindsey Graham (@LindseyGrahamSC) June 22, 2020

Like all Americans, I want to recreate the strong economy we had before coronavirus. The policies which created that economy should be utilized today.

— Lindsey Graham (@LindseyGrahamSC) June 22, 2020

This decision, in my view, will have a chilling effect on our economic recovery at a time we should be doing all we can to restore the economy.

— Lindsey Graham (@LindseyGrahamSC) June 22, 2020

The Senator was dragged so hard in the comments, there’s no need to post replies here. You can probably imagine that everyone from conservatives to far-left Democrats were after him for his mixed message of defeatism. One thing is certain: He won’t be able to sell this view to anyone who believes in America first regardless of whether we’re in an economic recovery period or not.

Occasionally, Lindsey Graham does things that put himself in positive lights with conservatives. We must remember that he’s just a slicker version of a standard neoconservative RINO. His stance on foreign visas is idiotic.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The Chick-Fil-A downgrade explained

Posted: 23 Jun 2020 02:21 AM PDT

The cringy and racist video of Dan Cathy is just the icing on the cake of a downgrade that has been going on for years. Chick-Fil-A was once a merger between Christian values and corporate America, a bond that elevated the company to its prominence. But over the last several years, CFA has abandoned its Christian values in a most dishonest and cowardly fashion.

My original article on Dan Cathy’s capitulation focused more on the dividing line the Babylon Bee drew between the sheep and the goats by messing with their beloved Social Justice Gospel.

I created this video to focus more on the history of Chick-Fil-A’s downgrade, how it started in 2012 and became obvious in 2019. The downgrade is in line with many other once trusted institutions, including those founded by Billy Graham. Cultural Marxism has infiltrated the church in America, and the larger western world as a whole. And it sickens myself as a believer for Chick-Fil-A to claim the mantle as a Christian brand when they have sold out the faith years ago. And Dan Cathy is 100% responsible.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Trump’s Tulsa rally may have been the biggest ever

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 10:57 PM PDT

TikTok. For those of you unfamiliar with it, consider yourself lucky. Same thing with Kpop. Though my daughter listens to the music, the “stans” of the Kpop world are a strange group. The two got together to own the Tulsa Trump rally and, for at least a day, they seemed to be successful. The campaign bragged about nearly a million people signing up for the event even though an estimated 7K actually attended.

But despite the narrative from leftist mainstream media that it was a failure, the actual viewership numbers told a completely different story. As our EIC noted in the latest episode of Conservative News Briefs, the actual number of people who watched the event was astounding. Digital numbers are still coming in with some reports showing upward around five million live viewers and untold replays. Then, Fox News announced yesterday that the event brought in the biggest Saturday night audience in the network’s history.

WOW! The Trump Rally gives @FoxNews the “LARGEST SATURDAY NIGHT AUDIENCE IN ITS HUSTORY”. Isn’t it amazing that virtually nobody in the Lamestream Media is reporting this rather major feat!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 22, 2020

Don’t listen to the clowns in mainstream media talking about the attendance at the Trump Tulsa rally. These are the same people who tell you to stay at home perpetually. Look at the viewership and this was an historic rally.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Trump campaign launches ‘Barely There Biden’ highlighting DEMOCRATS concerned about their nominee

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 08:16 PM PDT

The 800-lb gorilla trapped in the DNC’s basement is the universal concern over whether former Vice President Joe Biden still possesses the mental acuity to be President of the United States. Some would have questioned his cognitive abilities before his declining intellectual capacities became apparent in recent months, but now it’s almost impossible to avoid. In fact, the only thing many believe to be keeping his campaign afloat is the string of newsworthy events that started with the coronavirus and continued on through the anarchy presenting itself in the name of Black Lives Matter today.

The Trump campaign is making an effort to highlight the presumptive Democratic nominee’s examples that demonstrate the potential onset of dementia by launching a new website, “Barely There Biden.” But this isn’t just a satirical site. It shows how even many Democrats are concerned that they guy chose to take on President Trump may not be fit for the position.

“Anyone who watches Joe Biden speak for more than a minute can tell that he is barely there,” said Tim Murtaugh, Trump 2020 communications director. “As the President says, ‘Joe has lost his fastball.’ It’s important for voters to see the difference between the vibrant, quick-witted leadership of President Trump and the sleepy, meandering confusion of Joe Biden.”

Here are some of the highlights on the site:

One of the reasons Donald Trump won so easily in 2016 is because Hillary Clinton had many weaknesses. But compared to Joe Biden, Clinton now seemed like a good candidate. Biden has lost it and the Trump campaign will continue to hammer that fact home.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Why aren’t statue mobs being arrested?

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 07:19 PM PDT

The statue mobs are coming to a statue near you. If you live in the United States, especially if you live in a city run by Democrats, there’s a good chance some statue is in the city that the radical progressive Cultural Marxists are going to try to take down. Will the police stop them? Judging by what’s happening across the nation, probably not.

Why? I’m old enough to remember when this type of mob rule was frowned upon. I’m old enough to remember when someone with spray paint could get arrested for vandalizing a wall. Now, they’re out there committing aggressive crimes against monuments and the surrounding areas, and there aren’t any police around to stop them.

In this episode of the NOQ Report Podcast, Tammy and I do not blame law enforcement. They’re having an extremely hard time just handling modern America on a day-to-day basis. If they’re being told to stand down and let the mobs rule, that’s not on them. However, they should be banding together and calling for the leftists to allow them to do their jobs. Is it dangerous? Yes. Is it necessary? Absolutely.

It isn’t just the monuments. Mobs are being allowed to hurt people in New York City. They’re forming “autonomous zones” in Seattle where people are being killed. They’re doing things that are unambiguously illegal and Democrats are sitting back, letting it happen.

As long as lawlessness is manifesting in mob rule, this nation will not be able to heal. Letting the criminals tear down monuments without repercussions is not deescalating anything. We need law and order restored immediately.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Intersectional privilege hits the jackpot as gay Muslim doctor avoids punishment for child sexual assault

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 04:59 PM PDT

Intersectionality wins out every time, it seems, regardless of the circumstances surrounding the “oppressed” and “misunderstood” person. That’s the takeaway from a story in Canada in which a gay Muslim doctor will not face professional punishment after pleading guilty to sexually assaulting a 16-year-old. The reason: He was “struggling to express his identity” as a gay man.

As Faith Goldy noted, Canada has become unrecognizable. The same can be said about the United States.

Canada has become unrecognizable:

“Toronto” doctor Farooq Khan gets NO professional penalty for sex assault on 16-year-old boy after panel finds he was ‘struggling to express’ gay identity…

Poor boy. Sick country. https://t.co/kM4qS7STQo

— Faith Goldy (@FaithGoldy) June 22, 2020

What makes this situation even more infuriating is that both the college’s attorneys and the attorneys for Khan himself recommended he receive a 12-month suspension and pay $20,550 in costs. Yes, the man who sexually assaulted a 16-year-old negotiated his own punishment, and the college’s disciplinary panel said no!

According to The Star:

A discipline panel at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario ruled in a rare split decision last month that Dr. Farooq Khan should receive no penalty and not have to pay any costs for his discipline proceedings.

In doing so, the majority of the panel rejected a joint submission from both the college’s and Khan’s lawyers that said the doctor should receive a 12-month suspension and pay $20,550 in costs.

Khan had admitted before the panel to an allegation of “having been found guilty of an offence that is relevant to his suitability to practise” — related to the fact that he pleaded guilty in court in 2015 to a criminal charge of sexual assault.

He received an absolute discharge in court, meaning he didn’t get a criminal record as a result of the guilty plea and didn’t have to serve a sentence.

This is a huge win for social justice warriors and Cultural Marxists around the world as a man who admitted he sexually assaulted a minor received zero punishment based on his protected status. The world is unrecognizable indeed.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
A letter to Texas A&M: Don’t tear down Sully’s statue

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 04:32 PM PDT

Dear Mr. Young:

I suppose it should come as no surprise that the fervor to remove statues that is sweeping the country has not spared Texas A&M University.  After all, we live in turbulent times—and even though the vast majority of us would just as soon live in peace and accord our fellow Americans the same courtesy, the forces pushing for radical change are not content to simply leave us be.  Instead, we are all being made to ally ourselves on one side of the cultural divide or the other, where keeping your opinion to yourself is to be accused of taking part in some great injustice.  Perhaps that’s just as well.  As Edmund Burke once remarked, “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.”  And doing nothing, it seems, is no longer even an option.

Which brings me to the controversy over the statue of Lawrence Sullivan Ross which stands upon the grounds of the Texas A&M campus.  I regard the word controversy here with some disbelief and more than a little anger, as it should be self-evident that a figure so pivotal to the development of our beloved university and the guidance of the state of Texas itself to prominence should be deserving of such an honor.

Alas, that distinction is now being called into question by those who, lacking any perspective on history and possessing little interest in discovering any, wish to strip Ross of his honor for the crime of not observing the cultural mores of today.  I don’t need to debate the immorality of the Confederacy for which Ross once served as a soldier, any more than I need to debate the selfless and monumental contributions he made during his subsequent career and life;  suffice it to say, he truly lived as a man in full, and his work left the country a much better place than when he found it.

To deprive future generations of Aggies from learning of those accomplishments by erasing them from history would not only do a disservice to Ross’s memory, it would also rob those generations of learning from his example.  And made no mistake—this act of removing a statue is a brazen attempt to demolish the past, leaving only a void into which the self-proclaimed defenders of social justice will pour their approved notions of what our history really means, against which they will broker no dissent.

If Texas A&M allows this to happen, you can rest assured it will not stop with Ross.  What will happen when another Aggie icon is discovered to have had problematic views, as viewed through the perpetually aggrieved prism of today’s social justice warriors?  Will the university start to rename buildings?  Will it take down portraits and remove all mention of those people from conversation, like some dirty secret?  Is Texas A&M prepared to remove a Medal of Honor from the Memorial Student Center if some unsavory details of its recipient are “surfaced” by an activist looking to take a scalp?  These are serious questions that need to be considered, because if the university continues down this path, it will be confronted by them—and sooner than you might think.

As a freshman, I quickly came to know Texas A&M as more than a place to learn.  It’s also an institution committed to tradition, derived from a pride in its history and heritage—values which have made the university unique among all others, and allowed students and alumni to share in its greatness.  To abandon those traditions by abandoning our history to the passions of the moment would not only be shortsighted, it would effectively destroy what it means to be an Aggie.  It would hollow us out from within—for even if all the buildings remain standing, everything we stand for would be lost.

I urge you not to let this happen on your watch.

Best Regards,
Marc D. Giller
Class of 1990


Photo source: TAMU Traditions

Lawrence Sullivan Ross was a pivotal figure who almost single-handedly saved Texas A&M University, in addition to leading the way on founding Prairie View A&M University, a historically black college, and serving as governor of the state of Texas.  There is now an effort to remove his statue from the Texas A&M campus, because Ross served as a solider in the Confederate army.  This is a letter I wrote to Michael Young, president of the university, as an alum concerned about the erasing of our school’s history.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Figures don’t lie, but liars can figure

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 04:21 PM PDT

My Dad used that little saying to warn me that I had to be careful when listening to people, because not everyone is telling the truth. As an illustration he’d say that if one ship could cross the ocean in six days, six ships could cross it in one.

Right.

The math on that example actually works. But even a child can see it doesn’t make any kind of sense. But many of the numbers thrown around about COVID-19 aren’t so intuitively obvious. Take, for example, the “spike in new coronavirus cases.” Our benevolent dictators would like us to believe that “cases equals deaths,” and we aren’t doing very well, so they show this graphic (red line is USA).

Covid Deaths Log Scale

If you don’t look for the little “log” indicator in the upper left corner, it seems like we’re still having lots of people die every day, so this works as a “little white lie” to promote the lockdown scenario. But our minds don’t work in logarithmic scales very well, so let’s look at the same data on a linear scale.

Daily Covid Deathes linear

Presented this way, it’s easy to see that we are having about one fifth as many deaths daily as we had at the peak. What about cases? On a linear scale, there is an increase.

Daily COVID Cases Log

In this case, the log scale would hide the increase. In either case, even with an increasing case load, we aren’t seeing more people die. This means that, whatever the reason for more cases, we’re getting better at treating them. As a doctor reading the literature every day, I see lots of indications that this disease isn’t nearly as lethal as it seemed to be in the beginning.

But the new cases present a problem. What does this data mean? I can have lots of true numbers, but unless I properly tease out meaningful information, it’s just noise. And that noise lets unscrupulous people tell lies with a straight face. Let’s look at a simple example.

You are driving at 45 miles per hour. If you are in a 45 zone, this is utterly unremarkable. If you’re in a school zone, you are careless and reckless as you’re speeding. On an interstate highway, you might be slowing for construction or an exit ramp. Those are again normal. But if you’re in the left lane and not in rush hour, you are almost certainly obstructing traffic, and a citation is likely. It’s all about context.

The same applies to COVID-19 numbers. When Orange County Florida Mayor Jerry Demings went on TV to announce a mask mandate because we had 316 new cases in one day, he completely ignored context. He and Dr. Pino, his medical advisor, were treating COVID-19 like Medusa. One look and you will turn to stone. That’s utter nonsense. With 1.35 million people in Orange County, that number of cases every day for two and a half years would only infect twenty percent of the population. Such an emergency!

If you’re under age 60, and aren’t already sick with some chronic condition like Type II diabetes, your risk of dying is one fifth of the risk for all comers. That’s because COVID-19 is really nasty for people who have chronic diseases or are older than 80. Over 80, your risk is eight times more than in the general population. You are part of the key group we have to protect. We don’t need to protect the young healthy group. But the Quixotic Quislings of Quarantine are obsessed with keeping you under their collective thumbs. So they make the numbers sound scary.

In fact, if we take those same numbers, it turns out that the young healthy person has a COVID-19 mortality risk one-fortieth as big as the elderly and infirm. Peter Attia MD has taken CDC data and to create a slightly different table.

Attia COVID risk table

In this arrangement, simply being under age 50 has a risk twenty-six times lower than being over age 65. Now we can make the first step in creating context so we won’t be lied to with numbers pulled out of the air. For younger people, there’s no appreciable risk of dying from COVID-19. But let’s dig a bit deeper.

So far, we haven’t looked at where the increased number of cases are coming from. It turns out that there are at least two sources, neither of which should get us excited. When the virus first hit, testing was reserved for really sick people. As we’ve ramped up testing, a lot of other people are getting in the queue. That’s going to bump up the numbers without any actual increase in the number of infected people. You heard that right. The increased numbers aren’t meaningful. We’re just finding people with minor illness or no symptoms at all. The people with no symptoms don’t expose others to a significant viral load, so they are a minimal risk to the population. In fact, we can argue that their viral shedding is essential to the process of creating herd immunity.

As society opens up, we may also be seeing some small real increase in cases. But the group that’s getting the bug is a very low risk demographic, 18-35 years old. In other words, we’re seeing young healthy people get sick with something that looks like just another one of the dozens of afflictions that hit for a while and go away. The occasional unfortunate partyer gets laid out for a few days, just like he would with the flu. Then he recovers and resumes life. Remember, we’ve had 62 million cases of flu this season. Wuhan Flu is up to a staggering 2.2 million.

An increase in this age group fits perfectly with the increase in cases, but without an increase in deaths. And this age group, once infected and recovered, becomes part of community resistance to spread. If they’re immune, they can’t get sick and pass it on.

Taken in context, there is no “spike” in cases. Most are cases we simply hadn’t counted before because we didn’t know about them. There are a handful of new ones. But these present little or no risk to society. They may actually be part of the solution, rather than part of the problem.

We need to re-open America… yesterday. Our elderly and infirm can be protected without squandering all our wealth on useless measures such as universal masks and social distancing. All those do is create a false sense of security for the uninformed, and an aura of authority for ignorant governmental figures. We are just as able to assess our risk as they are. And we should be free to assume responsibility for ourselves.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
It’s not a protest if there’s rioting and looting

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 03:31 PM PDT

Dustin Faulkner joins this episode of Freedom One-On-One with Jeff Dornik to discuss the Black Lives Matter protests and riots in response to the George Floyd tragedy.

The media keeps reporting on the Black Lives Matter “Protests”, claiming that they are specifically about raising awareness for the violence that the black community experiences at the hands of the police on a daily basis. Using the case of George Floyd as the latest example, these “protests” have sprung up across America.

While we all agree that George Floyd should not have died, the question becomes: What is Black Lives Matter calling for? They are continually chanting, “No Justice, No Peace!” However, justice is being served in that case, as the police officer was arrested and is being charged with Second Degree Murder. So what’s the point of these protests?

Dustin Faulkner, who is the host of the show Battlefront: SouthGate on The GK Podcast Network, comes on Freedom One-On-One with Jeff Dornik to discuss these “protests”. Dustin makes the point that these “protests” are, in fact, riots and are actually criminal. It’s not a protest if there’s rioting and looting. The Open Up America rallies were actually protests. They were peaceful and no crime occurred. During these riots, we are seeing violence, looting and pure anarchy.

It’s not a protest if there’s rioting and looting. This rampant criminal behavior that needs to be shut down immediately.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
You are subscribed to email updates from NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes.
To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
Email delivery powered by Google
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States

ARRA NEWS SERVICE

ARRA News Service (in this message: 20 new items)

Link to ARRA News Service

Tulsa Spin Reaches News Heights

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 09:22 PM PDT

by Tony Perkins: If only the weather were as easy to predict as the media. Heading into Saturday’s Trump rally in Tulsa, Americans didn’t have to wonder what the storylines would be. If it was a massive crowd, then the president is an irresponsible narcissist exposing thousands to coronavirus. If there was even a single empty seat, then the country despises him, his base has abandoned him, and the campaign is dead in the water. These days, it’s not about the news — it’s about the desired narrative. And the liberal media has had theirs fixed since day one.

“You can see it coming a mile away,” the Federalist’s John Daniel Davidson told me on Thursday. Like us, he’d been tracking the big outlet’s build up. Days before Air Force One even touched down in Oklahoma, the media was seeding the ground with spin. “You’ve already seen outlets like the New York Times run articles with headlines like ‘Could Trump’s Rally in Tulsa Be a Super Spreader Event for the Coronavirus?’ They didn’t write any headlines like that about these Black Lives Matter protests. In fact, just the opposite. They played up the fact that [these] ‘experts’ had come out saying… ‘These rallies are necessary for public health.'” The double standard is crazy, Davidson said. The president is dangerous and reckless. But mass riots with tens of thousands of people are okay. The hypocrisy of social distancing is alive and well.

And if it wasn’t enough that the president had the spin to contend with, he also had the desperate forces of the Left — who are so terrified by Trump’s popularity that they tried to snatch up all the tickets. Their ringleader, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez (D-N.Y.), didn’t even mind bragging about it — not realizing that her admissions made the cheating side look weak. “They’re not even embarrassed about trying to [interfere],” RedState’s Nick Arama points out. “In fact, they think they’re clever.” But in the end, “That just reveals how empty they feel their own candidate, Joe Biden, is.”

But there was other sabotage too. The blocking of metal detectors, the mayor’s coincidental “curfew,” and the threats from anti-Trump radicals made some people think twice — including the campaign, who canceled all of its outdoor activities. When reporters seized on the slightly lower turnout, Trump campaign manage Brad Parscale fired back, “The fact is that a week’s worth of the fake news media warning people away from the rally because of COVID and protestors, coupled with recent images of American cities on fire, had a real impact on people bringing their families and children to the rally.” Why, he wondered out loud, do we even “bother credentialing media for events when they don’t do their full jobs as professionals?”

If they had, the rest of America would know: the Bank of Oklahoma Center wasn’t “empty.” In the age of a global pandemic and waves of unrest, any suggestion that the bottom has fallen out of the president’s support is just wishful thinking. “The arena wasn’t completely full,” Arama agrees, but “it was still a big crowd, about three-quarters full [despite 10,000 new cases of coronavirus in the state], with people waiting days to get inside and millions watching on YouTube.” And yet, if you listened to liberal media, you’d think there wasn’t a soul there. “Joe Biden has trouble even filling a room and has to have ‘private speeches,’ so [that] no one can talk about the lack of enthusiasm for him.”

So if you’re wondering why the media is in the basement of people’s trust, it’s simple: they’ve earned it. The liberal press isn’t just the “fourth estate” reporting the news and holding power accountable. They see themselves as the active resistance to Donald Trump. “And we’ve seen this throughout the Trump presidency,” Davidson shakes his head, “starting from the general election campaign in the fall of 2016, immediately with Trump Russia collusion, the Mueller probe, the horrible treatment of Justice Kavanaugh, the impeachment farce, then to the coronavirus coverage, and now to the Black Lives Matter rallies and the double standards. [It’s] a pattern of dishonesty, disingenuousness and in some cases, outright deception… and it undermines their credibility at every turn.”

———————–
Tony Perkins (@tperkins) is President of the Family Research Council . Article on Tony Perkins’ Washington Update and written with the aid of FRC senior writers.


Tags: Tony Perkins, Family Research Center, FRC, Family Research Council, Tulsa Spin, Reaches News Heights To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

The Federal Reserve is Getting Desperate

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 09:09 PM PDT

Dr. Ron Paul

by Dr. Ron Paul: In a sign that the Federal Reserve is growing increasingly desperate to jump-start the economy, the Fed’s Secondary Market Credit Facility has begun purchasing individual corporate bonds. The Secondary Market Credit Facility was created by Congress as part of a coronavirus stimulus bill to purchase as much as 750 billion dollars of corporate credit. Until last week, the Secondary Market Credit Facility had limited its purchases to exchange-traded funds, which are bundled groups of stocks or bonds.

The bond purchasing initiative, like all Fed initiatives, will fail to produce long-term prosperity. These purchases distort the economy by increasing the money supply and thus lowering interest rates, which are the price of money. In this case, the Fed’s purchase of individual corporate bonds enables select corporations to pursue projects for which they could not otherwise have obtained funding. This distorts signals sent by the market, making these companies seem like better investments than they actually are and thus allowing these companies to attract more private investment. This will cause these companies to experience a Fed-created bubble. Like all Fed-created bubbles, the corporate bond bubble will eventually burst, causing businesses to collapse, investors to lose their money (unless they receive a government bailout), and workers to lose their jobs.

Under the law creating the lending facilities, the Fed does not have to reveal the purchases made by the new facilities. Instead of allowing the Fed to hide this information, Congress should immediately pass the Audit the Fed bill so people can know whether a company is flush with cash because private investors determined it is a sound investment or because the Fed chose to “invest” in its bonds.

The Fed could, and likely will, use this bond buying program to advance political goals. The Fed could fulfill Chairman Jerome Powell’s stated desire to do something about climate change by supporting “green energy” companies. The Fed could also use its power to reward businesses that, for example, support politically correct causes, refuse to sell guns, require their employees and customers to wear masks, or promote unquestioning obedience to the warfare state.

Another of the new lending facilities is charged with purchasing the bonds of cash-strapped state and local governments. This could allow the Fed to influence the policies of these governments. It is not wise to reward spendthrift politicians with a federal bailout — whether through Congress or through the Fed.

With lending facilities providing to the Federal Reserve the ability to give money directly to businesses and governments, the Fed is now just one step away from implementing Ben Bernanke’s infamous suggestion that, if all else fails, the Fed can drop money from a helicopter. These interventions will not save the economy. Instead, they will make the inevitable crash more painful. The next crash can bring about the end of the fiat monetary system. The question is not if the current monetary system ends, but when. The only way Congress can avoid the Fed causing another great depression is to begin transitioning to a free-market monetary system by auditing, then ending, the Fed.
—————————————
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, Federal Reserve, Getting Desperate To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Shocking Shooting Spree, Dividing America, Vintage Trump

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 09:03 PM PDT

Gary Bauer

by Gary Bauer, Contributing Author: Shocking Shooting Spree
The carnage on America’s big city streets this weekend was shocking. In Chicago, at least 101 people were shot. Fourteen people, including five children, were killed. The vast majority of the victims were black and the vast majority of the shooters were black. There will be no protests calling attention to the plight of any of these victims.

Instead of celebrating fathers, what happened in Chicago this weekend was in part the result of years of fatherlessness. And there’s nothing but a collective yawn from the media. Do black lives matter in Chicago?

Meanwhile, the progressive left, which claims it wants to bring us all together, spent the weekend tearing down more American memorials and statues.

As we reported, New York City recently disbanded its undercover crime unit. Last week was the first week without that unit patrolling the Big Apple. Over the weekend, at least 19 people were shot and one man was killed.

In the apple of the left’s eye, the Seattle “Utopia” known as CHAZ/CHOP, three people were shot this weekend, and one person was killed. When police arrived to provide assistance, they were pelted with bricks and bottles.

You may recall that the mayor of Seattle wasn’t concerned about CHAZ, calling it the site of “a summer of love.”

Who could have guessed that if you call police officers “racists,” fire and suspend them without due process and harass their families, you would end up with mass retirements and unsafe streets?

Meanwhile, I have not heard one leading Democrat condemn the violence that is plaguing some of our urban centers.

More Monuments Attacked
The progressive barbarians continued their onslaught against America’s historic memorials over the weekend. Far too many American politicians are too cowardly to stand up against them. Here’s the latest.

  • Statues of President Ulysses Grant, perhaps the Union Army’s most famous general, and Francis Scott Key, author of the Star Spangled Banner, were torn down in San Francisco over the weekend.
  • Now a statue of Theodore Roosevelt outside of New York City’s Museum of Natural History is being removed by officials who apparently believe if you can’t beat a mob, join them.

Once again, we see that the left isn’t going to stop at taking down statues of Confederate generals. All of the things being done by the “deface, defund, destroy” progressives and the cowardly politicians who enable them are guaranteed to drive Americans apart.

There is a real danger, I believe, that some good people will think, “If only we get Trump out of the White House, all of this unrest will calm down.” It is the exact opposite, my friends. Appeasing the mob never works.

A Trump loss would only whet the left’s appetite. As I’ve written many times, this isn’t really about Trump; it’s about you. The left won’t stop until your values are destroyed.

The only reason the riots ended in the big cities is because every left-wing governor knew that if they didn’t get a grip on it, President Trump would. In many cases, he is the only public figure standing up in defense of our history, our law enforcement personnel, our monuments and our country.

If the left succeeds in defeating Donald Trump, does anybody really think that Joe Biden, Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi are going to defend America against leftist mobs?

Dividing America
While there is violence in the streets and attacks on American monuments, some elements of the left insist that all this chaos is Donald Trump’s fault, and “We just want to unite the country,” they claim.

Well what is the evidence that the progressive movement wants to bring us together?

The number one tactic that they have embraced, popularized by Colin Kaepernick, was taking a knee during the national anthem. Can anyone explain how disrespecting the flag and national anthem is a strategy that brings us together? It is guaranteed to be deeply offensive to veterans, their families and every patriot.

Our flag and national anthem are unifying symbols. But Colin Kaepernick was very clear that unity was the furthest thing from his mind when he said, “I am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color.”

Martin Luther King understood that his enemy was not America. He never attacked our country. He never attacked the founding fathers. He never attacked our founding documents. In fact, he pointed to them as the source of his argument for equality.

If you want to bring Americans together, why would you insist that whole swaths of America kneel or kiss the boots of the radicals attacking American history and its most sacred symbols? How does that bring America together?

How does the idea of reparations, taking money from people who had nothing to do with slavery and giving it to people who have never been held in slavery, bring us together? In what world does using the force of government to mandate such a massive transfer of wealth bring us together?

Bolton’s Book
Watching John Bolton set himself on fire as a cap to his career by fattening his bank account with a tell-all book full of lies is one of the most disturbing things I have seen in all my years in Washington.

Multiple people, including ike Pomepo, Peter Navarro and Mick Mulvaney, have stepped forward to say, “I was also in the room and these events didn’t happen.” Even the South Korean government is objecting to Bolton’s “distortions” and “violations of trust.”

This is not just an example of what this city and Trump Derangement Syndrome can do to someone. Bolton is doing real damage to our country and the presidency. Every president deserves to have a reasonable expectation that the people around him, at sensitive points in history, will follow rules of decency and respect.

A former national security adviser should not be peddling gossip. Bolton is doing serious damage to the time-honored traditions of executive privilege and confidentiality. He should be ashamed of himself.

By the way, while the media are celebrating a judge’s decision not to issue an injunction against publishing the book, the judge warned that Bolton had “gambled with national security” and was risking criminal prosecution. If I were John Bolton, I would not be celebrating the judge’s decision.

Vintage Trump
President Trump delivered a full-throated defense of America and our ideals at his Tulsa rally Saturday. If you missed it, you can watch the president’s remarks here.


The left tried everything it could to prevent Americans from gathering together to hear a speech from our president. The protesters pulling down statues and marching in four-lane highways say they are protected by the Constitution. Yet those same people tried to prevent the president from giving a speech.

We were told that Trump walking to a church represented a threat to the Constitution because protesters were blocking the way. Those same people went into the courts to block the president’s speech. They also blocked entrances to the stadium where he spoke. They harassed attendees when they left.

The Constitution is under siege, my friends, but from the radical left, not President Trump.

In spite of the left’s efforts, 11 million Americans watched President Trump’s speech this weekend on various online platforms.

Biden’s Blunder
Over the weekend, Joe Biden wrote that climate change was endangering unborn babies in the womb. No word on whether he dropped by Planned Parenthood after issuing that statement to pick up another check for his campaign.
——————-
Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer)  is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families


Tags: Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Yes, Senator, Parents Can Educate Their Own Kids

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 08:40 PM PDT

Elected officials should applaud educational choices available to families
and help empower parents to make choices that are right for their children.

by Nicole Russell: High school-educated, working-class parents aren’t capable of overseeing their own child’s education, a state lawmaker said last week.

New Hampshire state Sen. Jeanne Dietsch, D-Peterborough, made the comment at a committee hearing last Tuesday while promoting a bill that would stop the state Board of Education from creating a new way of allocating high school graduation credits.

“This idea of parental choice, that’s great if the parent is well-educated. There are some families that’s perfect for. But to make it available to everyone? No. I think you’re asking for a huge amount of trouble,” Dietsch said.

Dietsch’s remarks represent a growing trend among leftist politicians to belittle, even vilify, a parent’s role. The trend stems from an ideology that insists the nanny state is superior to parents.

Dietsch’s political commentary was a full-on attack on parental rights and education in America, with a side of elitism to boot.

A fellow legislator, state Rep. Glenn Cordelli, R-Tuftonboro, asked the obvious question of Dietsch.

“Is it your belief that only well-educated parents can make proper decisions for what’s in the best interest of their children?” he asked.

Dietsch went on to explain that her views on what makes a parent qualified are based on her personal history, which seems like a biased way to examine a legislative proposal:

In a democracy, and particularly in the United States, public education has been the means for people to move up to greater opportunities, for each generation to be able to succeed more than their parents have. My father didn’t graduate from high school, so it was really important that I went to college.The presumption that a state senator would know what is best for families across the state of New Hampshire reeks of hubris. It shows a misunderstanding of the role of family, not to mention demonstrates an elevated, starry-eyed view of public education.

For starters, plenty of Americans without a college education are intelligent problem-solvers and successful people. Often, they own their own businesses or are in blue-collar trades such as plumbing, electrical work, construction, and the like.

Of course, additional education—particularly in professions such as medicine and law, or certain businesses—can be necessary, but it’s not vital for every industry.

Not everyone is wired for a vocation that requires a Ph.D. To presume a parent couldn’t teach his child what is necessary to go to college or to thrive in a blue-collar field—jobs that are disappearing and in high demand—smacks of the sort of self-righteousness we have come to expect from too many politicians on the East Coast.

Although state public education is ideal for many families, it does not work for everyone. For some families, including those who travel a lot or are in the military—or, heck, look at kids in Hollywood—homeschooling is best.

I once knew of a family who homeschooled because their child wanted to be a professional surfer—so he preferred to do school online Monday through Thursday and surf the rest of the days.

Elected officials should applaud the many educational choices available to families today and help families become empowered to make the choices that are right for their children.

Dietsch’s comments are typical of leftist politicians who want to subvert the role of parents and replace them with the all-knowing state. One hallmark of progressive ideology that Democrats such as Dietsch clearly subscribe to is the view that the state is superior to the family—including, and especially, when it comes to education.

State officials, politicians, even law enforcement, know best and many moms and dads are just ignorant rubes who can barely feed and clothe their kids, let alone teach them. This mentality reminds me of the kind of socialism that caused the collapse of nations before our eyes: Both of our major political parties should reject it.

A basic tenet of America’s founding principles is that “we the people” wield the power, make decisions, and hold elected officials accountable for their roles, not the other way around. The state doesn’t exist to squelch the family, but to empower the family.

Particularly today, when blue-collar jobs are necessary to fill in obvious gaps, parents with a high school education who want to encourage their children to take a similar path should do so, and with confidence.

State lawmakers should encourage families to choose an educational path that’s right for them and leave their own elitist opinions out of the debate.
———————
Nicole Russell (@russell_nm) is a contributor to The Daily Signal.


Tags: Nicole Russell, The Daily Signal, Yes, Senator, Parents Can Educate, Their Own Kids To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Blackometer Needed

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 08:22 PM PDT

by Tom Balek, Contributing Author: I am not a racist. I am not a racist. I am NOT a racist!

No matter how many times a news pundit or protester or politician says I am a racist, I deny it – only God knows what’s in my heart. I subscribe to MLK’s wisdom: judge a man not by the color of his skin, but by the content of his character.

I don’t deny that racism in America did exist, or that it still does exist (with bias by somebody of every race against somebody of every race). But our nation has made great progress in overcoming bias in my lifetime. I just don’t see much real racism on a daily basis, and I live in the South!

So I have a hard time understanding the Black Lives Matter movement and demands for reparations and charges of white privilege that are in the news every five minutes. These serve two purposes: to create conflict and profitable ratings for the liberal news media, and to promote violent anarchy, Marxism and one-world government for George Soros and the other evil rich guys.

I see mostly white liberals protesting, and I suspect these are the real racists. Liberals want to categorize everybody by pigment, gender, and any other subgroup they can use to divide and conquer. And if they, the white liberals, have misgivings and guilt about racism, then they think all white people must be racists, too, and must be made to feel guilty. Why do liberals automatically assume every unpleasant incident is racially motivated? Some people are just a**holes to everybody, regardless of pigment. But most Americans have no axes to grind, and don’t care about skin color any more.

I just can’t understand how BLM (Black Lives Matter, not the Bureau of Land Management) plans to distribute their proceeds and their punishment based on race. How is “blackness” defined, anyway? Do you use a color chart from Home Depot? Should really-really black people be paid more reparations than “coffee-with-cream” people? Do their lives matter more?

Or is there a test that precisely determines the percentage of African Slave ancestry a person has in their DNA? What about the millions of black immigrants from Africa who arrived in the USA in recent decades with no slavery in their family histories – are they entitled to the same reparations as an American black whose great-grandfather was a slave in Alabama? What about Asian and Middle-Eastern people who are descendants of slaves – do they get reparations and preferences, too, even if they are not black?

What about mixed-race people? Barack Obama had a black father and a white mother. Is he only oppressed 12 hours per day, or six months per year, as opposed to LeBron James, who is oppressed all the time? Do these guys both get reparations even though one was elected president by white voters and one makes a gazillion dollars selling his shoes to white kids?

Same thing with white privilege. How snow-white does one have to be, and how rich, to have privilege? There are employment cases all over America indicating that white job applicants (especially males) face insurmountable discrimination in many companies and governments against minorities. Their lives don’t matter.

If you can’t define a problem, you can’t solve it. So until we come up with some math and technology to measure “blackness” and “whiteness” BLM will have to go back to the drawing board. There will have to be a functional “blackometer” and maybe even a “whiteometer” for this BLM and white privilege stuff to work.

Maybe Joe Biden and his Chinese buddies already have this technology. After all, he determined in a split second that if an African American didn’t vote for him, “He ain’t black!”
—————
Tom Balek (@TomBalek) is a fellow conservative activist, blogger, musician and contributes to the ARRA News Service. Tom resides in South Carolina and seeks to educate those too busy with their work and families to notice how close to the precipice our economy has come. He blogs at Rockin’ On the Right Side


Tags: Tom Balek, Rockin’ On The Right Side, Blackometer Needed To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Trump and Bolton – This is when I knew it wasn’t going to end well

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 08:13 PM PDT

KT McFarland

by KT McFarland: On Election Day 2016 I was in the green room at Fox News in midtown Manhattan waiting to go on the air, as was Ambassador John Bolton.

I asked John if he had already voted, to which he replied, “Yes, for Trump. He’s an idiot, but anybody is better than Hillary Clinton.

That’s why I had my doubts when Bolton lobbied so aggressively for and became President Trump’s national security adviser less than two years later.

I figured it would be a rocky ride for them both and predicted it wouldn’t end well.

First, they had very different approaches to foreign policy. Trump’s first priority was to rebuild the economy, then use it as leverage to renegotiate trade deals. He would use the bully pulpit to get our security allies to increase their contributions to our mutual defense.

What he would not do was get us bogged down in more forever wars. Trump was an outspoken critic of Bush’s Iraq war, Bolton one of its architects. I once asked Bolton whether his child had considered military service. He looked at me dismissively and said, “No, of course not.” So, it was all right for other people’s children to fight in his forever wars, just not his own.

Bolton and Trump clashed from the beginning – not just over policy, but in style and temperament. Bolton pushed for preemptive military action against Iran, Syria, Venezuela and North Korea. When the president took a different course, Bolton took to the phone. He became the “anonymous source” for reporters, dishing out tales of White House chaos and presidential incompetence.

Bolton was so convinced of his superior intelligence that he was condescending to everyone, including the president. He was increasingly isolated within the West Wing; cabinet officers ignored him and went behind his back directly to the president. He even avoided contact with his own National Security Council staff.

What John Bolton has done is shred executive privilege for future presidents. There will no longer be such a thing as an off-the-record conversation between a president and his advisers.

I heard from several of my former NSC colleagues who remained at the White House after I left that Bolton spent most of his time – when he wasn’t in the Oval Office – sitting in his office behind closed doors. His staff wasn’t sure what he did for those hours on end. Now we know – he was, in all likelihood, turning his copious notes into a manuscript, presumably in anticipation of getting a lucrative book deal, and rushing it into print quickly when the inevitable happened and he was fired.

Bolton’s book has “rocked Washington.” The headlines put out by his PR team are incendiary. But on more careful reading, most of Bolton’s complaints are about what President Trump said in the Oval Office, what he mused about doing when he was letting off steam or fantasizing about settling scores with fake news or the deep state. That’s classic Trump.

President Trump uses those meetings as brainstorming sessions. He is not a passive recipient of information; he immediately takes charge of a briefing and takes it in the direction he wants. He tosses out ideas, the more out-of-the-box the better, and expects others to do the same. These meetings are free-for-all, with everybody weighing in.

If you argue with President Trump, he may grumble and argue back, but that is what his advisers are for: to lay out the flaws in his arguments and warn him if what he’s proposing is illegal or out of bounds. That is why presidents have “executive privilege,” which is the right to keep discussions with top aides confidential.

What John Bolton has done is shred executive privilege for future presidents. There will no longer be such a thing as an off-the-record conversation between a president and his advisers. Everything, every speculation, every offhand remark will be fair game for the next kiss-and-tell book.

One thing I have learned in working for President Trump is to watch what he does, not necessarily what he says. Professional politicians have smoothed off their rough edges; they measure their words, in public and in private.

Donald Trump is no professional politician; he revels in his political incorrectness. He says a lot of things, he tweets a lot of things, he changes his mind, he cajoles one minute and criticizes the next, he rants.

According to Bolton, President Trump wanted to cut off aid to Ukraine unless they investigated Biden’s ties to corruption. But did President Trump do it? No. He threatened to pull out of NATO unless our partners ponied up for their fair share. But did he do it? No.

Some of the most serious accusations Bolton makes are that President Trump tried to enlist Chinese support to help him get reelected. Yet, Bolton himself wasn’t in those meetings, and those who were have since come forward to say Bolton is lying.

Furthermore, Bolton’s claims don’t make sense. Trump is the first American president ever to stand up to the Chinese. Why would President Xi Jinping want him to be reelected? Surely his interests lie in a President Joe Biden, who just a few months ago scoffed at the suggestion China posed a threat to our interests.

One cannot help but wonder why John Bolton, who came to believe President Trump was “unfit for office,” refused to come forward during impeachment. He offered some flim-flam excuses, but perhaps his motivation was financial. Testifying publicly before Congress before his book was on sale would have undercut its shock value – and his profits.
—————————
K.T. McFarland was President Trump’s first deputy national security adviser and helped formulate his maximum pressure campaigns. She is the author of the book “Revolution: Trump, Washington and ‘We the People.”  H/T McIntosh Enterprises.


Tags: K.T. McFarland, Revolution: Trump, Washington and ‘We the People, Donald Trump, John Bolton. This is when I knew. it wasn’t going to end well To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

What Happens When the Madness Ends?

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 07:51 PM PDT

. . . Today’s corporate revolutionary enthusiasts had better prepare for the inevitable turn.

by Victor Davis Hanson: When something cannot go on, it certainly will not go on. But what are the symptoms of what cannot go on and when?

There are two historic red lines and our revolution is getting close to both.

When Normal People Grow Weary
One is when “average” people, both white and nonwhite, who identify neither with Left nor Right, woke nor unwoke, become frightened or appalled by the violence and the anarchy—and thus finally move to dismantle the guillotine as the razor increasingly starts haircutting friends, idols, and compatriots.

Their verdict can be known either by demonstrating themselves, boycotting, voting, or massive civil disobedience. At some point, tonight’s hero on YouTube torching Wendy’s or kicking a downed policeman on CNN, becomes tomorrow’s commonplace, unnoticed felon—with a new warrant issued out on his head, and about whose fate and lengthy CV no one other than his parents much cares.

Governors and mayors can demand masks and all sorts of social distancing measures. But once they declared that only those not demonstrating—the non-looting and nonviolent—were subject to their rules, while millions both peacefully protesting and violently looting were exempt, then their words meant nothing. It will be impossible for them ever to be seen as credible again. Virus or no virus, crowded freeways, and busy malls will soon be referenda on the bond of governors like Gavin Newsom and Gretchen Whitmer.

In a few weeks, we are promised that multimillionaire NFL players and coaches in unison will not deign to stand up for the National Anthem. Promises, promises.

TV play-by-play announcers will praise them—or else likely lose their jobs. But millions of Americans simply will decouple from the NFL. Their silent disappearance will make the prior Kaepernick drop-off in attendance and viewership seem like child’s play. The same will be true perhaps of the more canny NBA, if they foolishly emulate the NFL. Millions will surmise that billionaire basketball players can far better make their billions in China and should—an NBA deity whose dictatorship players and coaches fear and worship while criticizing their own democracy.

Recently, there was murder in the CHAZ/CHOP-shop summer of love, and more random violence. Soon average Seattle citizens will want their city’s core back if only to reclaim their full 911 response. When the police begin not showing up for assaults, thefts, and break-ins, and criminals do what criminals do without consequences, the proverbial victims and vulnerable will have had enough and either move away or organize.

Governor Cuomo and Mayor de Blasio vie for televised braggadocio. But when the cameras leave, and they will soon, both will be left with billions of dollars in damage, lost commerce, bankrupt budgets, and urban flight. And their whiny appeals to American deplorables for financial assistance, their attempts at shaming clingers for a bailout, will likely be the stuff of comedy. What will California’s multimillionaire Governor Gavin Newsom do when his silly press conferences end, but his 13.3 percent income tax rate and 47-cent gas tax still don’t come close to closing his $50 billion annual deficit? Give more adolescent lectures about how the virus and lockdown are “reimagining a progressive era as it pertains to capitalism”?

When Important People Find Themselves Out of Luck
Second, when important people start to suffer the concrete consequences of their own abstract ideology, then the revolution sputters—in the manner that #MeToo Tara Reid got nowhere in accusing Joe Biden of a brutal sexual assault. Suddenly, handsy and heavily breathing Joe who once swore “women must be believed” appealed to statutes of limitations, presumptions of innocence, and the right to cross-examination as if he were Robespierre suddenly deploring the promiscuous use of the guillotine.

When hysteria fades, so too the current Antifa/BLM movement will go dormant to go enjoy the millions that they garnered from terrified virtue-signaling corporatists. When pistol-packing, AR-15 toting Raz Simone declares himself exempt from his own past homophobia and repulsive N-word vocabulary, and struts armed to the teeth at the head of his posse while blocking the police from aiding those shot and dying, then there is no society left. And those who want society back at some point will act, whether silently or visibly. Either Raz will be arrested—or bought off by a social justice Seattle billionaire and retired to a gifted lakeside home. Either way, he will go soon.

For all the conservatives who virtue signaled that Confederate statues had to come down now, the logical trajectory of their acquiesce was the toppling of Ulysses S. Grant, Columbus, and Father Junipero Serra, and the defacements of Lincoln, Jefferson, and Washington.

And it won’t do to deplore the mob’s insanity when it turns on abolitionists, Cervantes, and black Civil War veterans. After all, from the time of the dismemberment of Cinna the Roman poet, that’s precisely what mobs do when appeased: turn on the innocent without apology.

Declaring that Confederate statutes must fall, but only through pro forma deliberation is fine and good. But prejudging that such democratic deliberations will reach the proper end results, sends the signal to the mob of “Well, why wait for a slowcoach vote that will only confirm our violence?” If a sober and judicious observer declares that all Confederate generals are the same and all their stone and bronze images are illegitimately on public display, and all their removals must result from and be confirmed by majority votes, then why have majority votes unless one believes in the legitimacy of the old Soviet Duma or Saddam’s Iraqi parliament?

Both liberals and conservatives have red lines, for without them there is no civilization in which liberals and conservatives can disagree without tribal and ritual violence. When would-be looters and defacers turned toward liberal Beverly Hills, they were met by politically incorrect tear gas. And behold, not a single former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff or retired military grandee was to be found to tweet out that America ended on that very day when those in the uniform tear-gassed civilians.

Nocturnally decapitating Robert E. Lee’s head in an obscure city park is one thing, marching in daylight on Stone Mountain with dynamite to erase the locus classicus of Confederate commemoration is quite another. Were that to happen, even Fort Bragg, California is not safe and the Wilson School at Princeton would be next in line for the guillotine.

Academics are now bombarded in their campus emails with lists of BLM demands and administrative acquiescence to them. But when the smoke clears and the flames subside, Hadley, Connor, and Palmer will have to give up their legacy spots at Stanford and Yale to meet demands for mandated increases in the size of the African-American student body. Will the edgy radical professor in his elbow patched tweed still virtue-signal from the lounge, when his kid’s 800 English SAT and straight-A prep school grades no longer are considered required admission data, and his salary in no way will match the donor heft of rival Silicon Valley tech parents?

When the frenzy subsides, what will universities themselves say after charging jacked up tuition and room and board costs for indebted students to take their classes on zoom from their parents’ basements? Will they cite “overhead” or praise the new “digital learning,” or institute “givebacks” of student payments, or claim new diversity coordinators and administrators to combat white privilege necessitate budgetary constraints?

What about the Chick-Fil-A CEO—worried about corporate losses from vandalized stores and past bad PR from gay boycotts—who urged that whites wash the feet of black people? What will he do when it is again against the law to loot and deface, and when few of any racial lineage would enjoy such groveling hands on their feet?

The Thermador Reaction Is Coming
If a revolution is based on the untruth that blacks are daily violently terrorized by whites, what happens when data reveal facts contrary to that narrative? What happens when people come to understand that in those relatively rare interracial crimes, blacks are far more likely than whites to commit interracial violence? Or when people discover that more than 7,000 blacks are murdered per year by other blacks?

When the hysteria fades, such data reasserts the truth that there is not currently a white racial war against blacks.

Now is the hour of the virtue tweeting has-been celebrity, who wishes to avoid the fate of Jimmies Fallon and Kimmel. Did the latter two, now on forced sabbaticals, think they are any more important to American entertainment than the beheaded Danton and Hébert were to the revolution of Robespierre and Saint-Just? In a cultural revolution, radicalism is a fluid and relative state, and no exemption from the violence that one advocates for others.

Just as reformers wanted King Louis XVI to give up some power but not to lose his head, so too peaceful protestors sought to institutionalize accountability for rogue cops. But also, just as a constitutional parliament was forgotten by the time of the Reign of Terror, so too the legitimate protests over George Floyd’s horrific death are now light-years distant from torching Santa Monica and defacing the World War II monument.

Instead, this is the unhinged age of the sexagenarian general mysteriously awakening from his politically incorrect slumber to publicly announce that he threw his suddenly despised framed picture of Robert E. Lee against his wall—as a good business hedge, or to rediscover mysteriously in his seventh decade that his lifelong association with Fort Bragg could be a liability in the suddenly petrified world of corporate clientage.

The Reign of Terror will end and the Thermidor reaction is on the horizon.

Today’s opportunist virtue-signaler will be tomorrow’s gullible fool.

Tonight’s brave looter and edgy arsonist will be tomorrow’s matter-of-fact felon.

This morning’s memo-writing social justice executive and administrator will be seen as tomorrow’s rank abettor of McCarthyite persecutions.

And the coveted and esteemed racial arsonist of the moment soon will become the ostracized segregationist.

Americans believe there is one thing more regrettable than a falsifier—and that is an opportunistic and careerist falsifier.
————————
Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where many of his articles are found; his focus is classics and military history. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush. H/T McIntosh Enterprises.


Tags: What Happens, When the Madness Ends, Victor Davis Hanson, McIntosh Enterprises To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

John Bolton used to defend executive privilege … ‘for the benefit of the republic,’ . . .

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 07:36 PM PDT

. . . now he wants to publish classified information!

by Robert Romano: John Bolton has got to be the worst National Security Advisor in U.S. history.

During Bolton’s tenure, which ended in Sept. 2019, not one but two conversations with foreign heads of state leaked out of the National Security Council that he led. The first was President Donald Trump’s July 29, 2019 conversation with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky that led to Trump’s impeachment by the House and then acquittal by the U.S. Senate earlier this year.

In that trial, Bolton was begging to testify, and now we know why. Because he wanted to discuss what he knew about the talks with Zelensky, and perhaps even to leak another conversation by Trump with a foreign head of state, this time Trump’s June 29, 2019 high level trade talks with Chinese President Xi Zinping.

In a column in the Wall Street Journal publishing excerpts of his new book — that has not been cleared by the Justice Department because it contains classified information — Bolton alleges, “In their meeting in Osaka on June 29, [2019] Xi told Trump that the U.S.-China relationship was the most important in the world. He said that some (unnamed) American political figures were making erroneous judgments by calling for a new cold war with China… Trump then, stunningly, turned the conversation to the coming U.S. presidential election, alluding to China’s economic capability and pleading with Xi to ensure he’d win. He stressed the importance of farmers and increased Chinese purchases of soybeans and wheat in the electoral outcome. I would print Trump’s exact words, but the government’s prepublication review process has decided otherwise.”

Even if this is true — U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer says it “never happened” and he was in the room — this is a nothing burger. Here, Trump is alleged to have noted that China’s moves against U.S. farmers by halting purchases of soybeans in fact has domestic political implications. So what?

The context Bolton leaves out is that China was taking out 4-page ads in the Des Moines Register in Iowa in 2018 to try and turn farm states that tend to vote Republican against President Trump in its bid to beat the U.S. in the trade negotiations. China was clearly using the trade conflict to interfere in U.S. elections and domestic politics. Here, Trump is responding to it.

On the same day the talks occurred, June 29, 2019, Trump at a press conference in Osaka noted the progress of the trade talks and advocating on behalf of farmers and U.S. agricultural interests, mentioning “farmers” and “farms” no less than 20 times.

Publicly, Trump said, “I think our farmers are going to end up being the great beneficiary. And what I did with the farmers — because they did lose a certain amount of money — I went to Sonny Perdue, who is our Secretary of Agriculture. I said, ‘Sonny, how much money — in the best year — did China spend on our farms, in our farms, buying?’ He said, ‘The best year, about $16 billion.’ I said, ‘Okay, well, we’re taking in much more than that now every year in tariffs.’ And I took $16 billion out of those tariffs, and — essentially out of those tariffs — and we’re distributing it among farmers who have been hurt because they have been used as a pawn so that China could get a good deal.”

Trump added, “I’ve made up for the fact that China was, you know, targeting our farmers. Because they know the farmers like me, and I like them. I love them. And they sort of love me, I guess, when you get right down to it. And it was $16 billion — billion. That’s a lot of money. But I took it out the tariff money essentially, and we are in the process of distributing it.”

Here, for emphasis, Trump is saying publicly that China was “targeting our farmers… [b]ecause they know the farmers like me, and I like them.” Agricultural states largely voted for Trump in 2016. Those are his constituents. This is publicly available information. So what if Trump pointed that out in a high level trade discussion?

What Bolton is alleging Trump said privately is not much different from what he says publicly. In this case, that the farmers were being targeted by China, and the President was there to advocate for them because they voted for him.

Of course President Trump is concerned about his constituents. We live in a democratic republic. Telling a foreign leader, “You’re hurting my constituents” is not a high crime and misdemeanor, it’s what presidents are supposed to do, even if Trump speaks casually and informally about these topics. It’s called straight talk.

I for one am now interested to see the transcript and what the context of Trump’s remark really was rather than Bolton’s spin. It sounds like he was fighting for American farmers. Both his public remarks the same day and the trade deal later agreed to bear this out.

That is why it is simply beyond belief that Bolton would seek to make this highly sensitive information public.

The National Security Advisor has one very important job, and that is to provide candid advice to the President to make historic decisions, not merely for the President’s benefit, but for the benefit of future presidents and the country as a whole.

In 1986, as Assistant Attorney General, Bolton testified to the Senate Judiciary Committee in the William Rehnquist nomination hearings that then-President Ronald Reagan was invoking executive privilege over internal memos Rehnquist wrote when he was in the Justice Department during the Nixon administration.

Bolton quoted the famous Nixon v. Administrator of General Services decision outlining the rationale for executive privilege as a means of preserving the executive decision-making process: “Human experience teaches that those who expect public dissemination of their remarks may well temper candor with a concern for appearances… to the detriment of the decision-making process… The privilege is not for the benefit of the President as an individual, but for the benefit of the Republic.”

Therefore, a move to violate that very privilege by publishing a book that contains privileged and classified information, by definition, would be to the detriment of the Republic. Suddenly, now presidents can no longer have advisors in the room at top-level talks because those discussions are monitored by ambitious would-be turncoats.

Given Bolton’s eagerness to testify in the impeachment trial, and now his reckless push to publish his memoirs, one has to call into question why he wanted to be Trump’s National Security Advisor in the first place. Certainly not to help the President achieve the agenda he was elected on—including the Trump trade agenda to put America first. No, it was to take notes.
—————-
Robert Romano (@LimitGovt) is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.


Tags: Robert Romano, Americans For Limited Government, John Bolton, used to defend executive privilege, for the benefit, of the republic,’ To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Protesters Topple Statues of St. Serra

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 07:08 PM PDT

by Bill Donohue: Smashing statues of American icons is all the rage among urban barbarians. Ignorant of history, they are destroying statues of those who were among the most enlightened persons of their time. This includes Father Junípero Serra. The 18th century missionary fought hard for the rights of Indians, and was rightfully canonized by Pope Francis in 2015.

A statue of Saint Serra was toppled in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park on June 19, and the next day another statue of the legendary priest was torn down at Placita Olvera in Los Angeles. Archbishop José Gomez of Los Angeles, who is also president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, singled out Saint Serra for his compassion and his effort to establish rights for Indians and women.

In 2015, I published a booklet, “The Noble Legacy of Father Serra,” that detailed his many accomplishments. In light of the attacks on him, it is worth recalling some of his heroics.

Serra got along well with the Indians. His goal, and that of the Franciscan missionaries whom he led, was not to conquer the Indians—it was to make them good Christians. The missionaries granted the Indians rights and respected their human dignity, quite unlike the condition of black slaves. The Indians appreciated their efforts, drawing a distinction between the missionaries and the Spanish crown: the former treated the natives with justice; the latter did not. The civil authorities were the problem, not the priests.

Contrary to the conventional wisdom, the missionaries did not eradicate Indian culture. Indeed, they learned the native language of the Indians and employed Indians as teachers. Some cultural modification was inevitable, given that the missionaries taught the Indians how to be masons, carpenters, blacksmiths, and painters. The Indians were also taught how to sell and buy animals, and were allowed to keep their bounty. Women were taught spinning, knitting, and sewing.

Archbishop Gomez is right to point out that Serra fought for the rights of women, as well. It was the missionaries who sought to protect Indian women from the Spanish colonizers. The Friars segregated the population on the basis of sex and age, hoping to safeguard the young girls and women from being sexually exploited. When such offenses occurred, Serra and his fellow priests quickly condemned them.

A total of 21 missions were established by the Franciscans, nine of them under the tenure of Serra; he personally founded six missions. He baptized more than 6,000 Indians, and confirmed over 5,000; some 100,000 were baptized overall during the mission period.

If the truth were told about Saint Serra, he would be heralded as a friend of the Indians, not as their enemy. But truth matters little to those whose hearts are full of hatred and whose minds are closed to reality.
———————–
Bill Donohue (@CatholicLeague) is a sociologist and president of the Catholic League.


Tags: Bill Donohue, protesters, topple Statue, St. Serra, Junípero Serra To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

COVID-19: The Nursing Home Disease

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 06:47 PM PDT

Phil Kerpen

by Phil Kerpen: I recently testified before the House Select Coronavirus Subcommittee on the meltdown in nursing homes, which excluding New York (which deliberately underreports) now account for over 55 percent of deaths with COVID. The House Democrats’ goal was to blame these high death rates on President Trump – but the blame should belong squarely to the handful of governors who presided over these disasters.

More than 60 percent of both nursing home deaths and total COVID-19 deaths occurred in just seven blue states with about 20 percent of the U.S. population: New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Illinois, and Michigan. The governors in each of these states ignored federal guidelines and pursued some version of the policy of admitting infectious patients to nursing homes as soon as they were clinically stable.

Nationally about 2 percent of the long-term care population has died with COVID-19 – but over 12 percent in Connecticut, 10 percent in New Jersey, 9 percent in Massachusetts, and about 4 percent in Illinois. Even New York’s dishonest underreported number is 4.4 percent of the state’s long-term care population.

Carnegie Mellon and University of Pittsburgh mathematicians showed back in March that efforts to shelter everyone would lead to a far higher death total than efforts focused on the elderly, but the liberal governors chose to ignore that reality – even as we’ve seen over 80 percent of COVID deaths among seniors.

New York’s policy was implemented via a March 25 advisory that said: “No resident shall be denied re-admission or admission to the NH solely based on a confirmed or suspected diagnosis of COVID-19. NHs are prohibited from requiring a hospitalized resident who is determined medically stable to be tested for COVID-19 prior to admission or readmission.”

AMDA – The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine warned in response: “Unsafe transfers will increase the risk of transmission in post-acute and long-term care facilities which will ultimately only serve to increase the return flow back to hospitals, overwhelming capacity, endangering more healthcare personnel, and escalating the death rate.”

This caution was ignored and the policy stayed in effect until May 10. New York presently reports 6,413 deaths physically in long-term care facilities. Adding hospital deaths, which the state refuses to report, would likely double or triple that number.

Similar policies in New Jersey, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Illinois, Michigan, and Pennsylvania – where the state health secretary moved his own mother out of a nursing home while sending infectious patients in – produced similar outcomes.

As Dr. Anish Koka, described it: “Two weeks into the lockdown, Philadelphia hospitals had been emptied waiting for a New York-style surge that never came… But nursing home patients were treated like patients from the community who were too well to be admitted to the hospital – they were sent home. The consequences of keeping these patients at the nursing home meant the health system had to eventually deal with the entire nursing home being infected.”

Pennsylvania now reports 4,345 long-term care resident deaths; all others are 2,054.

It isn’t just state size. California nearly adopted substantially the same policymarkedly different policy in place, including sending COVID-negative nursing home residents out of Los Angeles area facilities to the USN Mercy hospital ship to establish COVID-only facilities, the state so far has lost only 1.1 percent of its long-term care population, fewer total deaths in this cohort than little Connecticut.

By prohibiting readmission without effective infection control and deploying the national guard, adequate testing, and PPE, Florida reported long-term care COVID deaths at 1,664 as of June 21 – a quarter of New Jersey’s, and 1.1 percent of the state’s large long-term care population. Texas has fared even better, with less than half its COVID-19 deaths in long-term care and presently at only 0.6 percent of that population.

Most states are now finally making serious efforts to test their entire long-term care population. That’s great, but if the CDC does not fix its definition counting any death in the presence of the coronavirus, nursing home residents with mild or asymptomatic infections will still show up in the count when they die of other causes. The median nursing home stay before death is just five months. If this definitional problem isn’t fixed, deceptive counts will add to the problem of misperceived public fear.

We need honest reporting and counting to understand the risk of serious illness or death with COVID, and we need policies targeted to protect the vulnerable – not to scare the public. And the governors who presided over the carnage need to be held to account.
——————
Phil Kerpen is president of American Commitment and the Committee to Unleash Prosperity. Follow him at (@kerpen) and on Facebook. He is a contributing author at the ARRA News Service.


Tags: Phil Kerpen, American Commitment, COVID-19, The Nursing Home Disease To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Supreme Court’s Inaction Frustrates Second Amendment Supporters, Emboldens Anti-gun Activists

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 06:32 PM PDT

by NRA-ILA: Gun owners are by now used to being disappointed with the U.S. Supreme Court’s refusal to uphold their rights or even to defend its own Second Amendment precedents. But the court’s neglect reached a new low last Monday, with its sweeping decision to deny review of the many Second Amendment cases pending on its docket.

At issue were 10 petitions that offered the court opportunities to clarify the most important and contentious issues in the modern Second Amendment landscape, controversies that in some cases have led to radically different approaches by public officials and the lower courts.

The high court, however, passed on all of them. The Supreme Court’s most recent “punt” prompted outrage not only from pro-gun activists, but by members of the court itself who remain committed to upholding Second Amendment rights.

Justice Clarence Thomas, who has long criticized his colleagues’ neglect of the Second Amendment, chose the NRA-backed case of Rogers v. Grewal to renew his objections to what he characterized as “the Court simply look[ing] the other way” on infringements of the right to keep and bear arms.

The Rogers petition asked the Supreme Court to review a decision from the Third Circuit that upheld New Jersey’s “may-issue” concealed carry regime, effectively allowing New Jersey officials to deny ordinary citizens the right to bear arms in public for self-defense.

In a 19-page dissent from the court’s refusal to hear the case, Thomas argued that the court should have granted review, that the Second Amendment protects a right to bear arms in public for self-defense, and that New Jersey’s “may-issue” regime violates that right. Trump appointee Justice Brett Kavanaugh joined Thomas in dissent.

Thomas wrote that “many courts have resisted our decisions in Heller and McDonald” by ignoring its analytical approach and substituting a “made up” test with no basis in the Second Amendment or the Supreme Court’s precedents on that provision. Moreover, he stated, the lower courts’ application of that test “has yielded analyses that are entirely inconsistent with Heller,” which “cautioned that ‘[a] constitutional guarantee subject to future judges’ assessments of its usefulness is no constitutional guarantee at all’”.

“[W]e explicitly rejected the invitation to evaluate Second Amendment challenges under an ‘interest-balancing inquiry, with the interests protected by the Second Amendment on one side and the governmental public-safety concerns on the other,’” Thomas reminded the court. “But the application of the test adopted by the courts of appeals has devolved into just that,” he said.

While bystanders can only speculate on the reason the court continues to “look the other way” on the Second Amendment, at least two clear implications for gun owners emerge from this latest development.

One, they must continue to support President Trump’s unprecedented efforts to seat fearless and unapologetic constitutionalists to all levels of the federal courts.

Second, they must redouble their activism in the political sphere to ensure that if the courts too often won’t respect their rights, their elected officials will.

As always, your NRA will be at the forefront of these and other efforts to protect the right to keep and bear arms.
——————-
NRA-ILA @NRA


Tags: NRA, ILA, Supreme Court’s Inaction, Frustrates, Second Amendment Supporters, Emboldens Anti-gun Activists To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Hide and Seek . . .

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 06:24 PM PDT

. . . Joe Biden continues to keep hiding in his basement away from the public and his ability to gaff.

Editorial Cartoon by AF “Tony” Branco

Tags: Editorial cartoon, AF Branco, Hide and Seek, Joe Biden, continues hiding, in his basement To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Twitter Gulag?

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 06:18 PM PDT

by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: An old Soviet-phrase — “ne chital, no osuzhdayu” (“didn’t read, but disapprove”) — seems as apt now as ever. Why? Because Americans today have revived the “Soviet mentality,” according to Izabella Tabarovsky, writing at Tablet.

Ms. Tabarovsky, a researcher with the Kennan Institute at the Wilson Center, explains that “[c]ollective demonizations of prominent cultural figures were an integral part of the Soviet culture of denunciation that pervaded every workplace and apartment building.”

Jobs lost, careers ruined, people socially disgraced — for “social media gaffes or old teenage behavior” — this is not just a Soviet mania, for Twitter mobs are on the rampage against those they deem “to be deplorable and unforgivable.”

The difference between current mobbing and Soviet experience, though, is stark: the government does not seem to be in charge, and there are no real gulags to be sent to — as of yet.

Today’s mobbing behavior, on and off Twitter, appears spontaneous and “systemic,” not organizational — more Crucible-like than 1984-ish.

Nevertheless, this is dangerous stuff. “The practice of collective condemnation feels like an assertion of a culture that ultimately tramples on the individual and creates an oppressive society,” Tabarovsky concludes, insisting that “the failure of institutions and individuals to stand up to mob rule is no longer an option we can afford.”

She’s right. Twitter-mobbing may be ugly, but it is more than that: it is obviously backed by force — witness the current riots; look at the policy agendas of the “politically correct” — and, unless stopped culturally it will have to be stopped in the realm of (ugh) politics and government.

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, Twitter Gulag? To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Three Reasons Trump Gave The Speech Of His Life In Tulsa

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 05:52 PM PDT

by Mario Murillo Ministries: Last night in Tulsa, the most improbable tables were turned. Never has a man stood up to speak, who had more going against him. Even the most casual observer would have to admit that Trump faced a juggernaut, in order to even hold this rally. Only God knows what he had to overcome, in order to finally gather people together.

The nation desperately needed to see the excitement coming from the people who love her. America needed to feel, yet again, the atmosphere that only a Trump rally can create. Donald Trump did not just give a speech—he threw down a gauntlet before his enemies that will damage them for months.
Above all, there are three reasons why this was the speech of his life.

1. It forces Biden to start campaigning. Oh no! He has to come out of his basement. Biden must campaign or die. Trump raised too many questions—scored too many hits—subjected too many of Biden’s deranged ideas to the jackhammer of logic. And then the President laid outrage after outrage at the doorstep of the Democrat Party.

You could feel a national collective cringe when many Americans found out for the first time that Beto O’Rourke would advise Biden on taking away your guns, Alexandra Ocasio Cortez would be in charge of his environmental policies, and Ilhan Omar would be in charge of, er, um, whatever…

As horrible as Biden is in front of people, as diminished as he will seem in a debate debating, well, anyone…tonight has forced his hand. Trump’s speech did the impossible—it made ‘not campaigning’ actually worse than campaigning.

2. It broke the digital iron curtain. Google, Facebook, Twitter and NBC have freely censored thousands of tweets, posts, videos and blogs. Tonight, that digital iron curtain was shattered, giving millions of Americans the opportunity to hear the other side of the story. We heard how we got this pandemic. How Biden and Pelosi were against shutting down flights from China in January. We heard a leader challenge the Orwellian thought-police, and we heard Trump tell the truth about our churches being persecuted, small businesses being deliberately destroyed, and we heard about all of the Democrat lies, lies, and more lies.

At one point, Trump looked right at us, like a fiery preacher, and delivered a devastating warning. He painted an indelible picture of what America would be like, under Biden. How Sleepy Joe would totally capitulate to radicals and utterly, and permanently, ruin our nation. A chill went down the spine of America—and it will not soon be forgotten.

3. Trump forced the Democrat Party to take ownership of their lunacy. They own the riots, the looting, the hatred of law and the police, and the terrible divisions they have caused that are tearing us apart. Democrats are running the cities that were burned and destroyed. Trump landed blow after blow on the full litany of leftist excuses. He left no room for doubt about who was inciting and encouraging the mobs, and who was making it possible for them to continue, unopposed.

Most of all, he nailed the Democrat double-standard. Democrats called for vast crowds to demonstrate, standing shoulder to shoulder, during a pandemic. No one missed the point. No one walked away unaware that churchgoers—who were likely to vote for Trump—were forced to stay home, while demonstrators, looters, and rioters were free to run wild, destroying property and innocent people’s lives.

Tonight, Trump reassured his base that the warrior was alive and well, and ready to battle to keep America strong and free. Democrats were branded, and rightly so. The whole discombobulated, dysfunctional glob, which is held together—not by morals, ideals, convictions or values—but by a mindless, irrational, hatred for Donald Trump, was held up for all to see.

Of course, the fake news and the Socialist social-media giants’ information mill will no doubt be running full bore for the next week, trying to rebut the damage President Trump caused to their plans tonight. Sadly, many of the uncommitted will have that moment of recognition, when they realize they are being manipulated. But it will pass, and soon, they will return to the fold.

Abraham Lincoln explained it when he said, “You can fool all the people some of the time and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time.”

And Jesus told us, “You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.”

Never in American history has information been manipulated in such a wholesale fashion. Never have so few controlled the information of so many. That is what makes Trump’s speech such a miracle. Last night, President Trump proved that even the combined propaganda machine, composed of CNN, MSNBC, NBC, Google, Facebook, Twitter, The Washington Post, and the New York Times, cannot fool all the people all the time.
——————–
Mario Murillo is an evangelist Mario Murillo, minister, blogger.


Tags: IMario Murillo, Three Reasons, President Trump, Speech, Tulsa To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

The Jonestowning of America

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 04:18 PM PDT

Jim Jones

by Daniel Greenfield-: Dave Patrick Underwood, an African-American Federal Protective Service officer, was shot and killed at the Ronald V. Dellums Building during the radical riots in Oakland, California. A building named after Congressman Dellums is burdened with its own weight of historical complicity in leftist atrocities.

“Let me commend your pastor, Jim Jones, for the dedication he is showing to his community and surrounding areas,” Congressman Dellums once wrote. “And also for impact he makes on members of his congregation.”

At Oakland’s Evergreen Cemetery, some distance from the riots, a plaque over a mass grave reads, “In memory of the victims of the Jonestown tragedy”. The names on the plaque include that of Jim Jones.

Jones, who called cops “pigs” and posed with Huey Newton of the Black Panthers, told his mostly black followers to die horrifyingly of cyanide poisoning to resist the racism of the United States of America.

The white leftist who claimed to uphold the value of black lives killed hundreds of black people.

Radicals call for a reckoning with America’s history. But they have not reckoned with their own history that played out much more recently than 1619. 1970s Jonestown has become their model for America.

Jonestown is much more relevant to what is going on in America now than the current revisionist history of Jamestown embraced by the radicals. And there is no more obvious barometer for the lost reckoning than the plaque which lists Jones as one of the victims of a tragedy, instead of a mass murderer. Calling the socialist massacre a tragedy suggests that Jonestown, like the USSR, was a noble cause that failed.

Talk to lefties of a certain age about Jonestown and they’ll mumble about CIA mind control experiments and FBI COINTELPRO operations against activists who wanted to bring about social change. The mass grave in Oakland, like the mass graves in Cambodia, the USSR, and Communist China, are uncomfortable realities. And while mainstream media narratives don’t go that far, they erase what Jones stood for.

The mad mob scenes in Oakland and across California with the power of the Democrat establishment behind them, the viral videos of white millennials kneeling and confessing their privilege, are the People’s Temple writ large on a nation. Jones, the son of a Klansman, who was inspired by a Communist-allied cult to build a following as a Marxist preacher of interracial brotherhood, joining the California Democrat establishment before going down in flames, has once again become the future.

Jones ran a leftist cult of white leaders who called themselves black and exploited their mostly black congregation, endorsing the Black Panthers and other black nationalist terror groups, while serving as a core political organization for California Democrats, including former Governor Jerry Brown.

The stain of Jim Jones is still all over California. A generation of California Democrat leaders either allied with Jones or were mentored by Jones’ political allies like Willie Brown. That includes both Senator Kamala Harris and Governor Newsom. That’s why, decades later, California is still stuck in Jonestown.

Jim Jones is “what you should see every day when you look in the mirror”, Governor Jerry Brown gushed. It’s not what we see. But it’s what Brown saw. And what so many Democrats see.

“Revisiting Peoples Temple’s goals of apostolic socialism and racial reconciliation offer important insights for understanding the group’s legacy that can contribute insight into ways of solving ongoing social problems related to poverty and racial inequality in the United State,” David Feltmate, an associate professor of Sociology at Auburn University, has argued.

Such calls are not unique. Like lefty histories of the USSR, historians, academics, and even PBS, seek to extract Jones’ good politics from his bad ending while refusing to recognize that they are intertwined.

There are certainly insights in Jones’ methodology of fleecing and humiliating wealthy white lefties, and exploiting elderly African-Americans who thought that the Peoples Temple would take care of them for the rest of their lives, only to be killed when the apostolic socialist cult collapsed under its own abuses.

All of that could have been avoided if the media hadn’t covered it up until one of their own got killed.

The Jonestown model is also the model for the Democrat Party which, like Jones, lures in upscale whites by playing on their idealism and guilt, humiliating them to keep them from seeing that the whole thing is a scam, and using the black people it lured in with promises of a social safety net to claim moral superiority. Add in a streak of terror and thuggery to keep everyone in line, along with a dash of sexual sadism to compromise and destroy the moral integrity of core cult members, and you have utopia.

Exploiting racism was central to the appeal of the Peoples Temple as it is to the Democrats.

The Peoples Temple used the moral drama of racism to create a racial conflict, playing on the guilt of white people and the fears of black people to divide them, threatening apocalypse and offering redemption through socialism. Racism was the source of Jones’ power. It was the primal sin and fear that he held over the heads of his followers to incite them to commit horrible crimes against each other.

And to stay silent while he committed even worse atrocities.

There is no meaningful reckoning that Americans can make with 1619, but it is vitally important that there be a reckoning with the seventies as Jonestown is becoming a statewide and nationwide model.

The latter-day Joneses promise redemption through socialism and twist America around the axis of race. Using the weight of racism, they are able to justify any crime and any abolition of rights in its name.

The ultimate victims of Jonestown were largely black. That’s also true of the Democrat Party.

Jim Jones was the first to turn racism into a religion. The end of the Peoples Temple and Jonestown are instructive now that racism has become the national religion of Jones’ Democrat Party. The cult leader had told his followers that God was socialism and that a man was as godly as he embodied socialism. And Jones was the ultimate divinity because he was the embodiment of the Principle of Socialism which alone could reconcile the races and all of humanity to paradise by becoming the gods of socialism.

“God was a liar. The snake told the truth,” Jones told his followers.

God told the truth. It’s the socialist snakes who always lie. Jim Jones promised his followers utopia, but he couldn’t deliver paradise. The people ate the poisonous apples, but never became as gods. Instead they tortured and killed, engaged in sexual debauchery of every variety, blackmailed and assassinated each other, and then died in terrible pain after first poisoning the elderly and then the children.

Also known as fighting for social justice, sexual liberation, euthanasia and abortion.

The Democrats and their media are telling the nation that burning and looting cities is the path to utopia. As Attorney General Maura Healey of Massachusetts said, “America is burning, but that’s how forests grow.” Jones would beat and sexually humiliate his followers during services and tell them that they were better people for it. But the only leaders who want to beat and burn aren’t going to utopia. They are ushering in the familiar hell on earth in whose cruel flames every utopian experiment ends.

A month before the mass deaths, a Soviet diplomat visited Jonestown and listened to the men, women, and children who would soon be dead serenade him with a rendition of, “I’m a socialist today, and I’m glad.” Jonestown, like the Soviet Union, Venezuela, or Cuba, was doomed even if no outside forces had intervened. It was a failed experiment in utopianism that could only end one way.

The same is becoming increasingly true of the Democrat enclaves, including in California where Jones had the most success and enjoyed the political protection of top Democrats and every major paper.

The Jonestowning of America is an act of brutal power by the Joneses and of despair by their followers.

Like Jim Jones, the Democrats have no vision or hope to offer. Utopia has been replaced with pain and death. The screams of hate and the wrecked blocks in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and San Francisco are the nation’s Jonestowns. The country’s biggest cities have become failed experiments in social justice where the socialist cant is preached all the louder even as things only get worse.

As the end approached, Jones took refuge in paranoid delusions and apocalyptic conflicts, inventing enemies and lashing out at them to evade responsibility for his corruption and crimes. All the radicalized Democrats have to offer are apocalyptic visions of environmental armageddons and perpetual racial atonement in a country that was irredeemably evil even over a century before its birth. Hope. Change.

The arc of history points not to progress, but to Jonestown. The Joneses are torturing their followers with pandemic lockdowns, rioting, economic destruction, environmental impoverishment, and cultural collapse to sate their own sadistic impulses and to divert attention from the failures of their ideas.

All that’s left now is the grim death march through the opening of prisons, the normalization of crime, the Green New Deal, socialized medicine, and the random crises met with tyranny on the way to utopia. At the end, the men and women who had followed Jones realized that the promise of a socialist kingdom of heaven on earth was a lie. There was no food. Bibles were being torn up for toilet paper. The only escape from the misery was death. That is also the great leftist vision for western civilization.

When our civilization lies in ruin and daily life is a miserable horror, they expect us to be ready to die. Kill the elderly in the nursing homes. And then the children. Then everyone has to drink the Kool-Aid.

The progressive leaders will say that it’s an act of mercy and courageous idealism.

“There’s scientific consensus that the lives of children are going to be very difficult. And it does lead young people to have a legitimate question: Is it OK to still have children?” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wondered.

The Democrats have perfected Jones’ trick of using racial guilt to empower a white elite to carry out the socialist schemes that make them feel like gods even as they impoverish, enslave, and destroy. But, just like in Jonestown, all anyone has to do is look at the carnage and ask, “Is this progress? Where’s utopia?” Are the burning cities, the kneeling mobs, and the terrorized people really leading to utopia?

Jim Jones was the socialist son of a Klansman who exploited and killed hundreds of black people. The Democrats are the socialist party of the Klan who exploited and killed hundreds of thousands of black people. When the Democrats claim to care about black lives, they take them in horrifying numbers.
———————–
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, Sultanknish, The Jonestowning of America To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Black Lives Matter: Democrats Can’t Live With Them, and Can’t Live Without Them

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 04:15 PM PDT

by Daniel G. Jones: The folks at Black Lives Matter are really worried about black deaths. Not most black deaths, not even very many black deaths, mind you, but only that tiny fraction of a percent of blacks who have died at the hands of (presumably) white cops. Those are the only deaths that boil the blood of the folks at Black Lives Matter and spark the riotous mobs that loot and burn our Democrat-run cities.

Why Democrat cities? Because in 2015, Black Lives Matter activists tested Democrats’ resolve and found none. At a Netroots Nation Conference in Phoenix on July 18, presidential candidate Martin O’Malley uttered the unforgivable words: “Black lives matter. White lives matter. All lives matter.” Shouted off the stage, he was heard by a Guardian reporter muttering to himself: “Black lives matter, black lives matter, black lives matter.” At a Bernie Sanders event in Seattle on August 8, activists took over the stage. Sanders waved goodbye and rescheduled the event. From that point forward, the moral authority of Black Lives Matter would remain unchallenged by any Democrat politician.

“Black lives matter” sounds good, but it provides cover for a lot of bad behavior. It’s like the tuxedo that enables a thug to work his way into your party. If you’re a Democrat mayor and you notice the well-dressed thug robbing your guests, you might say “Here, take my watch and go away and I won’t call the cops.” He’ll happily take your watch, but he’ll also grab your rings and your billfold, and then he’ll demand “Where’s the safe?” and you’ll tell him and give him the combination too, right after he breaks your Ming Dynasty vase and tears up your Picasso. Finally, he’ll set fire to your house, because he despises you for your presumption in thinking that you could negotiate how much loot he should take.

There’s nothing you can say or do anymore. You applauded him when he burned Ferguson and Baltimore, and you made excuses for him when he screamed: “What do we want? Dead cops. When do we want them? Now!” He owns you and you know it. You can’t criticize him. Best to take a knee and mutter vague homilies about racial injustice. Your buddies in the newspapers and television can’t help you either. They championed the thugs every step of the way. All they can do now is report that your home is “mostly standing” and that your thug was “mostly peaceable.”

What do these people want? The rioter wants to have fun, which to him means stealing as much cool stuff as he can and destroying whatever he wants. Probably he’s a bit amazed at the topsy-turvy world he’s created. The people he used to fear — the cops — now fear him. He can see it in their eyes. And when the cops take a knee, he sees surrender. For him, these are the best of times. He knows this can’t last forever, but he also knows that whenever it does end, he’ll own lots more stuff and probably be immune from prosecution.

The leaders of the Black Lives Matter movement want political power. They’ve already acquired quite a lot of it thanks to their violent groupies, but power is addictive and they may want even more. Right now, their knee is on the Democrat throat. They can do whatever they want.

For their nominal political pals in the Democrat party, these are the worst of times. They’ve got a tiger by the tail, and they know it. Their political survival depends upon getting an overwhelming majority of the black vote, and if that majority should shrink to 85 percent or so, they’re politically dead. Black Lives Matter, or revulsion to it, could make that happen.

Black Lives Matter brings in a lot of money for the Democrats. Corporations are donating millions of dollars to the cause (just as they paid tribute to Jessie Jackson’s Rainbow Coalition years ago) and BLM sends much of it to the left-wing political action committee ActBlue. Democrats love the cash and so are loath to say a discouraging word about the mayhem.

But if the riots continue and bleed into November, Democrats will probably lose anyway. They surely wish that Black Lives Matter would just quiet things down, but they mustn’t say so. For now, all they can do is wear a happy face and some Kente cloth and talk about police reforms.

What Democrats really need is somebody who’s tougher than the rioters and who has the resolve to stop them. But he’s running against them in November.
———————
Daniel G. Jones shared via American Thinker


Tags: Daniel G. Jones, Black Lives Matter, Democrats Can’t Live With Them, Can’t Live Without Them To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

San Francisco Allows Protesters to Topple U.S. Grant, Francis Scott Key Statues

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 03:11 PM PDT

by Bryan Preston : The cultural revolution claimed yet more defenseless statues Friday night. In San Francisco, about 400 protesters pulled down three statues: U.S. Grant, Francis Scott Key, and St. Junipero Serra.

Protesters in San Francisco on Friday toppled the statue of former President Grant, who led the Union Army during the Civil War, in Golden Gate Park.San Francisco police said that approximately 400 people gathered around 8 p.m. to take down the statue, though no arrests were made, according to NBC Bay Area.

Also torn down in the park on Friday were the statues of St. Junipero Serra and Francis Scott Key, who wrote the lyrics to “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

 

Grant did briefly own one slave he freed years before the war; but as a general he smashed the Confederacy, and as president he crushed the Klan. He presided over the ratification of the 15th Amendment. People going after Grant probably just want to break things. https://t.co/rVtPOcvyAN

— Adam Serwer🍝 (@AdamSerwer) June 20, 2020

We’re well past the point of simply removing Confederate monuments or statues to slaveholders now. U.S. Grant was born into an abolitionist family. He married the daughter of a slave-holding family. That family gifted him a single slave, whom Grant freed while he himself was destitute in 1859. Grant could have sold the slave, whose name was William Jones, for a profit. He chose to set him free instead, well before the Civil War.

Once the Civil War broke out, Grant joined the Union army even while many who he had served alongside earlier in his military career joined the Confederacy. Grant eventually became the Union commander who won the war, thereby ending slavery. Had the Union lost, as practically all Democrats in the South and even many in the North wanted, slavery would have continued. After the war, President Grant put several Black Americans into positions of prominence and defended numerous others across the South as the Democrats and the KKK sought to intimidate them and drive them from office.

As for Key, and as if the complexities of history even mattered any more, he owned slaves but he later freed them. As an attorney, he both represented freedmen and represented owners of runaway slaves. As a witness to war, he penned a song that later became America’s national anthem.

St. Junipero Serra was an early Spanish missionary who later became the first saint to be canonized on U.S. soil, in 1988.

Protesters just in the past few days have toppled or vandalized statues of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and now Grant and Francis Scott Key. Even Gandhi got vandalized, in the city currently known as Washington, District of Columbia.

Cities could defend these monuments very easily. Some cities, such as San Antonio, Texas, already have and continue to. Statues and monuments are coming down in cities that are choosing not to defend them. Those cities are all run by Democrats.

Exit question: Given the Democratic Party’s heinous racial legacy (the Civil War, Jim Crow, Woodrow Wilson, etc.), why aren’t the protesters going after them?

More:

 

Of current violence and disorder, NYPost says ‘Call them the 1619 riots. America is burning.’ New York Times 1619 Project creator responds: ‘It would be an honor. Thank you.’ This is what the Times wanted. https://t.co/iJebfjs8Od

— Byron York (@ByronYork) June 20, 2020

————————–
Bryan Preston is a PJMedia writer, producer, veteran, author, Texan, and conservative strategist.


Tags: Bryan Preston, PJMedia, San Francisco, Allows Protesters, to Topple, U.S. Grant, Francis Scott Key, Statues To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

No Going Wobbly Now, Bibi

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 02:45 PM PDT

Haim Saban

by Caroline Glick: Over the past week, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has changed his mind countless times regarding how and when he will implement Israel’s sovereignty plan in Judea and Samaria in consonance with President Donald Trump’s vision for peace. Netanyahu’s vacillations are clearly a product of the immense pressure being exerted on him to cancel the plan to apply Israeli law to the Israeli communities in Judea and Samaria and to the Jordan Valley and turn his back on President Trump’s Middle East peace plan.

This is a shame. It is also absurd. When we consider the source of much of the pressure – and the reasons it is being exerted – it becomes glaringly clear that the critics and opponents must be ignored. Their actions are not being taken out of conviction so much as hostility or distress. Israel must cast aside their hectoring and pressure and implement the sovereignty plan with all due haste.

Consider one of the most talked-about recent efforts to pressure the Israeli public and Netanyahu to set aside the sovereignty plan and spurn Trump.

Last Friday, United Arab Emirates Ambassador in Washington Yousef al-Otaiba published an article in Yedioth Ahronoth. Otaiba threatened that if Israel implements its sovereignty plan in Judea and Samaria, the prospect of normalized ties with the Sunni Arab states in the Persian Gulf will fly by the wayside.

The media played up the author. But it quickly became clear that the idea of publishing the article in Hebrew in an Israeli newspaper didn’t come from Otaiba. Hours after the morning papers arrived, the media reported that it was Democratic mega-donor Haim Saban’s idea to have Otaiba publish his threatening article in Yedioth Ahronoth.
On its face, Saban’s role in the Otaiba opinion piece seems strange. The former Israeli billionaire is well-known for his support for Israel. He is a major donor to Friends of the IDF and to AIPAC. In an interview with Israel’s Channel 10 in 2010, Saban harshly attacked the Obama administration for its hostility towards Israel. Back then he said of Barack Obama and his team, “They are really left leftists, so far to the left there’s not much space left between them and the wall.”

At the time he made those remarks, Saban believed in cooperating with Republicans to advance the common goals of defending Israel and fighting anti-Semitism in the US and throughout the world. He spoke to Channel 10 at a conference of the Israeli Leadership Council in Los Angeles. The ILC, which later changed its name to the Israeli American Council was founded to provide an organizational home for the Israeli émigré community in the US It was a joint initiative by Saban and Republican megadonor (and owner of Israel Hayom) Sheldon Adelson.

In July 2015, the two men extended their cooperation to fighting the anti-Semitic boycott, divestment and sanctions campaign against Jewish students on campuses. They co-founded the Maccabees on Campus group to fight BDS groups.

So what has happened to Saban? What changed and made him want to use Otaiba as a means to spook the Israeli public and pressure Netanyahu to act in a way that would harm the sovereignty plan and through it, undermine Trump’s peace plan?

Apparently, the answer is found in the leftward lurch of his party. By 2015, Obama’s “left leftism” had become the mainstream position of the party. Today many Democratic activists revile Obama for what they view as his “conservative” positions.

To be clear, it’s not that Obama moderated his views, it’s simply that the “wall” Saban conceived in 2010 as the ideological edge of the party was blasted through long ago.

If Obama’s positions on Israel shifted at all during his presidency, they became more radical, not moderate. On Monday, a report in Israel Hayom gave a glimpse of just how hostile he was towards Israel when he left office.

According to the report, in a recent closed-door conversation, Netanyahu revealed that in the final weeks of Obama’s presidency Obama wanted to kick Israel where it really mattered. By this time, Obama had already engineered the passage of UN Security Council Resolution 2334 that defined all of Israel’s civilian presence beyond the 1949 armistice lines, (including the Western Wall) as a breach of international law. With less than a month left in office, Obama wanted a second, even harsher resolution. Netanyahu reportedly told his interlocutors that Obama wanted to pass a resolution which would require Israel to agree to withdraw to the 1949 armistice lines.

Netanyahu said that when he heard of Obama’s plan, he turned to Russian President Vladimir Putin. Netanyahu said he explained to Putin that such a resolution would massively destabilize the Middle East and asked Putin to veto the measure. Putin agreed.

According to Netanyahu, when word reached Obama that Putin would veto his resolution, Obama abandoned his plan. He realized it wouldn’t do to be exposed as more hostile to Israel than his Russian counterpart. Such exposure would out him as an enemy of Israel before the American Jewish community.

On Thursday, a Kremlin spokesman denied that Putin had made such a pledge. Obama’s ambassador to Israel, Dan Shapiro, denied that such a measure had been raised. Other US sources admitted it had been under consideration.

Considering that Obama’s views are now the mainstream views of the Democratic Party, and given the depth of his hostility towards Israel, it is self-evident that a Biden administration will begin its treatment of Israel where Obama left off. So as far as US politics go, it is clear now that Democratic opposition to the sovereignty plan is not based on a studied assessment of the situation but of visceral hostility.

Which brings us to Saban’s attempt to use the UAE ambassador to manipulate public opinion and pressure the prime minister.

The Democratic Party’s turn against Israel placed Jewish Democrats in a wretched position. For generations, the party has not simply been their political preference at the ballot box. Being Democrats has been a way of life. Their party’s rejection of Israel has had a dramatic impact on the pro-Israel Jewish Democrats’ readiness to act on behalf of Israel and against anti-Semitism.

Saban is a case in point. Just three months after he co-founded the Maccabees on Campus with Adelson and worked with Adelson to build the IAC into a national organization, Saban pulled out of both ventures. Reports at the time of his withdrawal from both groups were speculative. But all the speculation zoned in on one conclusion. The shift in his party made Saban abandon his previous willingness to work across the partisan divide. By October 2015, he was no longer willing to be associated with organizations that could in any way be viewed as out of step with the Obama administration and the Democratic Party.

This brings us to AIPAC, the pro-Israel group Saban has continued funding. Last week it was reported AIPAC told lawmakers that it won’t mind if they oppose Israel’s sovereignty plan so long as their opposition isn’t translated into efforts to curtail US military aid to the Jewish state.

Since its founding, AIPAC’s policy has always been to support the policies of the governments of Israel no matter what they were. So it was that at the outset of the Rabin government’s Oslo peace process with the PLO, AIPAC leaders ordered all of the group’s employees to support Israel’s policy even though just weeks before, AIPAC had opposed recognition of the PLO.

AIPAC lobbyists who were incapable of lobbying for US aid for the PLO or embracing Yasser Arafat as a peace partner were forced to resign. Considering AIPAC’s sudden shift towards opposing the sovereignty plan despite the fact that it enjoys the support of a large majority of Israelis and is set to be implemented as a complement to President Trump’s vision for peace, Jonathan Tobin wrote earlier this week, “If AIPAC is going to worry more about what the Democrats want rather than seeking to persuade them to back Israel’s policies, then it has for all intents and purposes become one more liberal group, and not the reliable force it has always been.”

More than a sign of hostility, AIPAC’s unprecedented position and Saban’s manipulative behavior appear to be signs of distress. Their party’s hostility towards Israel has left Jewish Democrats with no easy way forward. They have four options.

The obvious response to the party’s animosity to Jewish interests would be for Jewish Democrats to oppose and fight this animosity. They can either have the fight inside the party or leave the party and fight it. Although some groups, like J Exodus, have formed to encourage Jews to leave the Democratic party, no polling data indicates a major shift in Jewish partisan opinion. No Jewish Democratic leaders have made significant statements or staked out positions opposing what has happened in their party.

The second option is for Jewish Democrats to ignore partisan politics and just concentrate on Israel and other issues of importance to them as Jews like fighting anti-Semitism. Saban was clearly trying to adopt this posture when he joined with Adelson in establishing the Maccabees on Campuses and the IAC. The swiftness with which he abandoned the programs indicates how difficult it is to swim against the stream in the Democratic Party as presently constituted.

A third option is to adopt the party’s hostile positions on Israel. Progressive Jewish groups like J Street and the Union of Reform Judaism have done so openly, among other things by defining the party’s positions as Jewish “values.” Groups like Bend the Arc, IfNotNow and Jewish Voice for Peace are leading the party’s charge against Israel and for the anti-Semitic BDS campaigns.

The final option is to try to have it both ways. AIPAC’s passive-aggressive opposition to the sovereignty plan is clearly an attempt to remain relevant to Democrats while not losing all credibility as a pro-Israel organization. Unfortunately for AIPAC, the ship has already sailed. The Democrats do not lack for Jewish fig leaves like J Street to mask their anti-Jewish actions. The progressive megadonors that oppose Israel have far deeper pockets than AIPAC donors.

Many Republicans, for their part, stopped listening to AIPAC during the Obama years when, in the interest of securing Democratic support for all Israel-related issues in Congress, AIPAC pressured Republican lawmakers to water down their pro-Israel bills and resolutions, often to meaninglessness.

As for Saban, he too is no longer is viewed as important by anti-Israel politicians. The far-left funding networks have made Saban largely irrelevant in the party. Certainly, he lacks the financial muscle to influence its positions on Israel and the fight against contemporary anti-Semitism.

And so we return to Israel and the massive pressure being exerted on Netanyahu to scupper the sovereignty plan or water it down to nothingness. Israel doesn’t have four options. Israel only has one option. Israel’s only option is to straightforwardly advance its national interests. Today that means only one thing. Israel must fully implement its sovereignty plan with US backing as quickly as possible and without conditions or apologies.
—————
Caroline Glick is the Senior Contributing Editor of Israel Hayom and the Director of the David Horowitz Freedom Center’s Israel Security Project. For more information on Ms. Glick’s work, visit carolineglick.com.


Tags: Caroline Glick, Israel Hayom, Haim-Saban, No Going Wobbly Now, Benjamin Netanyahu To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Memory Holes, Mobs, and Speaker Pelosi

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 02:25 PM PDT

by Newt Gingrich: As I was talking yesterday with John Heubusch, the brilliant and dedicated executive director of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute, it was really driven home to me what a dangerous period we are living through.

The Reagan Institute is one of the great institutions dedicated to preserving and teaching about the past. Its library and historic collection of exhibits about President and Mrs. Reagan are enormously helpful to historians and the public. Its education program for young people teaches them interactively by using real events in the Reagan Presidency. It is a genuine national asset.

Yet, as we were talking about my new book, Trump and the American Future: Solving the Great Problems of Our Time, it hit me that the existence of this extraordinary library is potentially in peril.

The mobs which are mindlessly wandering the streets of America toppling statues and defacing monuments are reinforced by the academic mob which wants to cleanse libraries of books it deems inappropriate. One book banned by the academic mob is The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Published by Mark Twain in 1884, it is widely considered the greatest American novel. But, of course, the illiterate bigots of the left destroy greatness out of ignorance and prejudice.

The ignorant mob defaces the Lincoln Memorial. In the name of supposedly fighting racism, they routinely defame the president who fought a Civil War, issued the Emancipation Proclamation, and fought for the constitutional amendments which codified freedom for African Americans.

Those who talk loudly about Juneteenth should remember that it was a Union General, Gordon Granger, who announced the end of slavery in Texas that led to the celebration. Granger’s Order is a useful reminder of the importance of Lincoln in ending slavery. It reads: “The people of Texas are informed that in accordance with a Proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the connection therefore existing between them becomes that between employer and free laborer.”

Of course, the executive to whom Granger referred – and who he reported to as commander in chief – was Abraham Lincoln. Tragically, by Juneteenth, Lincoln had been assassinated for his role in defeating the Confederacy and ending slavery.

It is the ignorance of the mob which allows its members to smear American heroes and destroy the memory of key personalities in the rise of freedom. In Boston, the ignorant and the hateful damaged the statue dedicated to Col. Robert Gould Shaw and the men of the 54th Massachusetts. As anyone familiar with American history – or who has at least seen the amazing movie Glory – knows, Shaw organized the first regiment of African American volunteers and convinced President Lincoln to let them fight on the side of the Union. It was a courageous, radical action at the time – and incredibly controversial. On July 18,1863, Shaw was killed leading his men into battle at Fort Wagner. The flag bearer was an escaped slave named William Carney. It was this statue honoring both Shaw and the African American troops he had recruited which some ignorant barbarians trashed in Boston.

George Orwell, in his iconic novel 1984, developed the concept of a memory hole into which the government would pour all evidence that it did not like. As government policies changed, so would the material being cast into the memory hole. Most people think Orwell was writing about the Soviet Union, but in fact, 1984 takes place in Great Britain. Orwell was convinced that totalitarian methods would gradually overwhelm democracies, and freedom would be replaced by manipulated falsehoods imposed by the government.

When the Taliban blew up two gigantic Buddha statues, the world expressed outrage. Yet the barbarism of the mob in the United States is just as destructive of existing art and artifacts as the Taliban was. The left talks of changing Mount Rushmore, dynamiting Stone Mountain Georgia, eliminating the Jefferson Memorial, and renaming the Washington Monument.

The one-woman mob inside the Capitol, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, decided on her own to take down four paintings of Speakers of the House who had served the Confederacy. They will now be hidden in the Pelosi memory hole. There is talk of taking out a dozen or more supposedly inappropriate statues in the Capitol.

On the one hand, as a Republican, it would be symbolically ironic for left wing Democrats to take out statues of past Democrats (that is who the secessionists and segregationists were). After all, the four portraits Pelosi has thrown into the memory hole were three Democrats and one Whig. As the party founded to end slavery and save the Union, there were no Republicans who fit her criteria.

On the other hand, as a historian and a believer in the importance of historic artifacts, I think this whole cycle of mob behavior is dangerous to the fabric of our country.

Once ideological purity becomes the test of whether art gets to survive, the group defining purity gains immense totalitarian power. If slave owners must be banned from history, then what about those who fought to preserve segregation? If images of everyone who supported segregation must be banned from the Capitol, more than half of the Democratic leaders prior to 1960 would be gone.

President Franklin Delano Roosevelt worked with segregationists, refused to rescue Jews seeking to flee Germany, and locked up Japanese Americans in camps which later led to the United States government paying compensation for such a clear injustice. Should we remove the FDR Memorial on the Mall?

Once the memory hole game begins, and the mob tastes blood, this process of destruction can go on and on. People should study the French and Russian revolutions, the Nazi imposition of “purity,” and Mao’s Cultural revolution in China to learn just how destructive mob rule can be.

This is the summer to reject the mob and get back to civilized behavior within the rule of law. We must re-center America on liberty and justice for all – not control and vengeance by some.
———————-
Newt Gingrich (@newtgingrich) is a former Georgia Congressman and Speaker of the U.S. House. He co-authored and was the chief architect of the “Contract with America” and a major leader in the Republican victory in the 1994 congressional elections. He is noted speaker and writer. This commentary was shared via Gingrich Productions.


Tags: Newt Gingrich, Memory Holes, Mobs, and Speaker Pelosi To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Are We Racist?

Posted: 22 Jun 2020 02:14 PM PDT

Shelby Steele

by Penna Dexter: Protests over the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer are, for many participants, really about attaining a Leftist wish list. For others they are an excuse to destroy and loot property.

But the persistence of peaceful protests has some Americans wondering: Are we a racist nation? Is there such a thing as systemic racism? Shelby Steele, a veteran of the civil rights movement, best-selling author, and currently Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, rejects the concept of systemic racism. He says, “it’s a corruption because blacks have never been less oppressed than they are today.”

Appearing last week on Levin TV, Shelby Steele reminisced: “I remember growing up in the civil rights movement, everybody knew exactly what we wanted. This insurrection,” he said, “just seems sort of unclear.” He says if there’s a problem with the system, it’s that it encourages and allows minorities to be “victims who are entitled.”

The Left amplifies this and expands accusations of racism. Dr. Steele says, “It validates their claims that our America is a wretched country.”

Christians should repent when there’s racism, but should not take on false guilt. Another black leader, Southern Baptist preacher Voddie Baucham, told an audience that racism is the new “unpardonable sin.” He said, for a person to be declared guilty of racism, “somebody just needs to ‘feel like’ that’s what you meant.” And this undoes everything else that person has achieved.

He does not encourage people to attempt to be colorblind. Ethnicity and national identity are good and natural. Appreciate them.

Here’s something to pray:

“O God, you have made of one blood all the peoples of the earth and sent your blessed Son to preach peace to those who are far and to those who are near; Grant that people everywhere may seek after you and find you; bring the nations into your fold; pour out your Spirit upon all flesh… through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen! (Book of Common Prayer 2019)
———————
by Penna Dexter is an author, lecturer, visiting professor and radio host and contributor on nationally syndicated Point of View and the “Probe” radio programs.


Tags: Penna Dexter, Shelby Steele, Are We Racist? To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

You are subscribed to email updates from ARRA News Service.
To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
Email delivery powered by Google
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States

REDSTATE

 

 

AMERICAN SPECTATOR

NBC

Image

From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg

FIRST READ: Here’s how you know the U.S. isn’t winning the fight against the coronavirus

Last week, Vice President Mike Pence declared that the United States was “winning the fight” against the coronavirus.

 

And this morning, President Trump tweeted that coronavirus cases are going up only because testing has increased in the country.

 

But this recent chart – courtesy of the Washington Post and Johns Hopkins data – clearly shows how the United States has a policy failure on its hands when it comes to combating the coronavirus, especially as Trump travels today to one of the main hot spots: Arizona.

Alternate text

After a national decline in new coronavirus cases in May, the curve has once again shot up to a seven-day rolling average of 27,000 new cases as of June 21.

 

Compare that with the entire European Union – roughly the same size as the U.S. – which has seen its rolling average decline to 4,000 new cases.

 

Arizona, where Trump heads today, has seen its cases nearly double in the past 15 days, per NBC’s Vaughn Hillyard and Cyrus Farivar.

 

And in Texas, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott yesterday sounded the alarm: “COVID-19 is now spreading at an unacceptable rate in Texas, and it must be corralled.”

 

Bottom line: The Trump administration can’t say the United States is doing a good job fighting the coronavirus. (And it can’t attribute the recent spike solely due to new tests, since the POSITIVE percentage is higher in Sun Belt States than the new TESTING percentage.)

 

Otherwise, they wouldn’t be looking for a scapegoat as they’re doing right now.

 

“White House officials are putting a target on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, positioning the agency as a coronavirus scapegoat as cases surge in many states and the U.S. falls behind other nations that are taming the pandemic,” Politico writes.

Is police reform going to go down in the Senate? 

It looks like it.

 

“Senate Democrats are strongly signaling they will filibuster Republicans’ police reform bill later this week absent more concessions from Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell,” Politico writes.

 

More: “If nothing changes, I’m voting no. I need some assurances that we’re going to vote on amendments that will fix this bill. And it needs a lot of fixing,’ said Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.), a centrist whom Republicans would conceivably need to cobble together the requisite 60 votes.”

DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers that you need to know today

2,323,493: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 32,854 more cases than yesterday morning.)

 

121,043: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 408 more than yesterday morning.)

 

27.55 million: The number of coronavirus TESTS that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.

 

Two more: The number of additional members of the Trump campaign’s advance team in Tulsa who have tested positive for coronavirus, in addition to six who were found to have tested positive on Saturday.

 

$14 billion: The amount of authorized coronavirus testing and tracing funds that Democrats say the Trump administration has still failed to distribute.

 

At least 13: The number of participants in South Carolina racial justice demonstrations who have tested positive for coronavirus, leading organizers to postpone future rallies for now.

 

525,000: The number of foreign workers who could be kept out of the country under the Trump administration’s new executive order to suspend a broad array of visas and extend restrictions on green cards.

 

Three: The number of debates that Joe Biden’s campaign says it’s committed to participate in, as Trump pushes for additional debates.

TWEET OF THE DAY: United, and it feels so good

Image

2020 VISION: Previewing today’s primaries 

We’re watching primary races today in Kentucky, New York and Virginia.

 

In Kentucky, Democrats Amy McGrath and Charles Booker are the top candidates dueling to take on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in the fall. McGrath has the money and name ID; Booker has the momentum.

 

In NY-9, longtime Rep. Yvette Clarke, D-N.Y., is getting a primary challenge from a number of Democrats, including Adem Bunkeddeko, who narrowly lost to her in 2018.

 

In NY-14, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is looking to bat down a primary challenge from former CNBC reporter Michelle Caruso-Cabrera and others.

 

In NY-15, a crowded field of Democrats – including anti-abortion rights Ruben Diaz Sr. and Ritchie Torres – are vying to replace retiring Rep. Jose Serrano, D-N.Y.

 

In NY-16, House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Eliot Engel is in the fight of his political life against progressive Jamaal Bowman, a middle school principal.

 

In NY-17, there’s another crowded field of Democrats — including former Obama DOJ official Mondaire Jones, former Obama DoD official Evelyn Farkas and state Sen. David Carlucci — competing to replace retiring Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y.

 

And in VA-5, Democrats are looking to pick their nominee to face Liberty University athletics official Bob Good, who defeated GOP Rep. Denver Riggleman, R-Va., earlier this month. The top Dem contenders are Marine vets Claire Russo and R.D. Huffstetler, as well as UVA physician Cameron Webb, per the Cook Political Report.

AD WATCH from Ben Kamisar 

In today’s ad watch, we circle back to yesterday’s question in First Read about the president’s rally in Tulsa: “So now that the rally has come and gone, who is better off for it? We’d be hard-pressed to say anyone except the Democrats, who got a whole lot of new ad material.”

 

Turns out, the Democrats wasted no time cutting spots from Trump’s rally in Tulsa — Priorities USA released new television and digital ads Monday that highlight the president’s comments that he told officials to “slow the testing down, please.”

 

The administration has been spending days trying to walk the comment back, calling it a joke and offering a series of explanations for the comment. But when asked about his comments directly during an interview with Scripps, Trump didn’t directly answer the question and added that “If it did slow down, frankly I think we’re way ahead of ourselves if you want to know the truth.”

 

That’s a line that could be part of an ad down the road too.

 

A busy week on Capitol Hill

The rest of this week is sure to be a busy week in Congress, per our Hill team.

 

The Senate’s two-week recess starts on July 3rd, so here’s what to expect before then:

 

  • Today, the House Energy and Commerce Committee is holding a hearing on the coronavirus response effort with Anthony Fauci, Stephen Hahn, Robert Redfield and Brett Giroir. This comes as the president has said he thinks testing should be slowed down, and as several states that took more relaxed reopening measures (like Florida, Texas and Arizona) have all seen spikes.

 

  • On Wednesday, the Senate is expected to take a procedural vote to start debating the GOP’s police reform bill.  That vote will need 60 voters to pass – if the motion passes, the debate process will likely go into next week.

 

  • As the House Judiciary Committee begins an investigation into the firing of U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman, Republican senators are starting to weigh in. Utah Sen. Mitt Romney said it looks “pretty swampy”, Maine Sen. Susan Collins said Trump “should not have” fired Berman at this time, and Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy said that it “makes the president look bad.”

THE LID: Comeback kids?

Don’t miss the pod from Monday, when we looked at whether progressives might be making a comeback in today’s primaries in Kentucky and New York.

ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?

House Judiciary Committee chairman Rep. Jerry Nadler is preparing to subpoena AG Bill Barr for testimony early next month.

 

Late last week, now-ousted U.S. attorney Geoffrey Berman refused to sign on to a DOJ letter criticizing New York mayor Bill de Blasio’s moves on coronavirus.

 

President Trump says he’s in favor of more coronavirus-related economic stimulus, but not everyone in his party is on board.

 

The Washington Post published its investigation into those low-flying helicopters used to disperse protestors in DC earlier this month.

 

The president has focused increasingly on defending his physical and mental health — even behind closed doors.

Thanks for reading.

If you’re a fan, please forward this to a friend. They can sign up here.

 

We love hearing from our readers, so shoot us a line here with your comments and suggestions.

 

Thanks,

Chuck, Mark, Carrie and Melissa

CBS

IJR

MANHATTAN INSTITUTE

 

 June 23, 2020
Featuring the latest analysis, commentary, and research from Manhattan Institute scholars

URBAN POLICY

Photo: TonyTaylorStock/iStock

Calculating the Fiscal Savings of Ending Recycling in Major Cities

With municipal budgets across the country facing immense pressure due to the economic downturn, a new study by Howard Husock suggests that ending or adjusting recycling could offer a key source of potential savings. While recycling was once fiscally sound and in some cases profitable, it’s now become costly due mainly to changes in China’s import policy. Husock estimates the savings that five municipalities across the country—New York City, Boston, New York’s Westchester County, San Jose, and Dallas—could realize by ending recycling.

Photo: kali9/iStock

The Smart Way for Post-Coronavirus Pandemic NYC to Save Money: Stop Recycling

“By sending recyclables to safe landfills — and avoiding the cost of separate collection — the city could save nearly $200 million.”
By Howard Husock
New York Post
May 17, 2020
Based on a new report

PUBLIC SAFETY

Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Evaluating the GOP’s JUSTICE Act

It’s better than the Democrats’ proposal, but it goes too far on neck restraints and not far enough on no-knock warrants, and it fails to address qualified-immunity doctrine
By James R. Copland, Rafael A. Mangual
National Review Online
June 22, 2020

FEATURED EVENT

Eventcast RSVP: Education After COVID and the Fiscal Crisis Facing Private Schools

The Covid-19 pandemic presents immense challenges for schools in both the public and private sector. Join the Manhattan Institute this Wednesday for a conversation with experts in education on the measures policymakers should take to ensure that both public and private schools emerge strong following the pandemic.

ECONOMY & FINANCE

Photo: VAKSMANV/iStock

A Bipartisan Way to Soften Recessions and Address Soaring Debt

Automatic triggers can kick in when the economy falters — and when it booms.
By Brian Riedl
National Review Online
June 19, 2020

Photo: Pool/Getty Images 

The Time for Congress to Spend (Again) Is Now

Even as businesses are able to reopen, the damage done to household balance sheets means we’ll be facing reduced demand for years to come. Congress needs to act quickly to respond to that reality.
By Beth Akers
Economics21
June 22, 2020

Photo: P. Kijsanayothin/iStock

Share Madness

Frustrated sports gamblers may have jumped into the stock market, but it’s unlikely that they are responsible for its volatility.
By Allison Schrager
City Journal Online
June 22, 2020

HEALTH POLICY

Photo: LIgorko/iStock

Fixing Private Health Insurance

“The notion of single-payer health care, which would have seemed outlandish a few years ago, is now taken more seriously because rising costs have made the flaws in the structure of private health insurance harder to ignore.”
By Chris Pope
National Affairs
Summer 2020 Issue

IMMIGRATION

Oakland businessman Tom Henderson, whom federal prosecutors have indicted on 12 counts of fraud; they allege that he stole $110 million from EB-5 investors. (LAURA A. ODA/MEDIANEWS GROUP/EAST BAY TIMES/GETTY IMAGES)

Passport to Fraud

The federal visa program for wealthy investors is plagued by scams, influence-peddling, and national security violations.
By Steven Malanga
City Journal
Spring 2020 Issue

EDUCATION

Photo: maroke/iStock

The ‘Anti-Racist’ Drive to Turn Schools Into Woke Propaganda Mills

“School will be a very different place next academic year. Classes will be less full; desks, rigorously sterilized. And if the education establishment has its way, teachers will be aggressively woke.”
By Max Eden
New York Post
June 23, 2020
Adapted from City Journal

NEW YORK CITY & STATE

Photo: sborisov/iStock

Don’t Count Manhattan Out

The appeal of working from home wears thin, and big real estate deals promise a rebirth of the Big Apple.
By Steve Cuozzo
City Journal Online
June 22, 2020

PODCAST

Photo: David Ryder/Getty Images

CHAZ to CHOP: Seattle’s Radical Experiment

Christopher Rufo joins Brian Anderson to discuss Seattle’s activist-controlled “autonomous zone” in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of the city, established after police evacuated the local precinct building.

Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
52 Vanderbilt Ave. New York, NY 10017
(212) 599-7000
SUPPORT MI

Copyright © 2020 Manhattan Institute, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:

Manhattan Institute

52 Vanderbilt Ave.

New YorkNY 10017

Add us to your address book

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

LOUDER WITH CROWDER

TOWNHALL

FACEBOOK         TWITTER
ADVERTISEMENT
Columnists
Latest Victim to Left-Wing Mob’s Intimidation Campaign Shows How Far Their Reach Has Grown
Matt Vespa
Obeying The Law Is For Suckers
Derek Hunter
America’s Jews and Christians Are Failing the Test of Their Lives
Dennis Prager
For Now, an Unknown Monument Pivotal to Our History Is Safe From Historical Purges
Salena Zito
Regarding Rally Crowds, to the Media Size Matters – But Only Regarding One Candidate
Brad Slager
Are you leaving your legacy to strangers?
Sponsored by: Donors Trust
Stop the Madness of Congressional Spending
Stephen Moore
Singer Carrie Underwood Stresses Life’s Value: ‘You Are Loved’ by God
Katie Yoder
How Long Will the Vandals Run Amok?
Pat Buchanan
‘The Talk’: Time to Stop Needlessly, and Shamefully, Scaring Black Children
Mark Nuckols
ADVERTISEMENT
Systemic Ignorance
Bill Murchison
Will the 2020 Elections Come Down to Trump vs. Social Anarchy?
Michael Brown
Justice Gorsuch Channels Humpty Dumpty
Robert Knight
John Bolton Is Far From a Whistleblower
Lt. Col. Tony Shaffer
On These Issues, There Is Ample Agreement Among Americans
Chris Talgo
Video
Gov. Evers: Saying Abortionists ‘Execute Babies’ Is ‘Blasphemy’
Trump blasts Schiff as ‘political hack’
Pelosi’s condescension offers some laughs
Pelosi open to border infrastructure
INVESTING
Demolishing WashPo’s Racist Police Narrative With Their Own Data
Economist’s Love Of Fed Is Really Love Of Power
The United States Plummets In Ranking Of World Competitiveness
The Partnership Between Issachar And Zebulon
‘When All Men Are Paid For Existing’: Universal Basic Income Has Arrived
Radware Introduces API Protection to Detect and Defend Against Sophisticated, Malicious Bots | Conse
Tipsheet
CNN Commentator Eats Her ‘I Told You So’ Tweet After Horrible Take About George Floyd Protests and Coronavirus
Matt Vespa
Black Prison Guards Blow the Whistle on Segregation Surrounding Derek Chauvin
Beth Baumann
How More Than 200 Law Enforcement Agencies Were Doxxed
Beth Baumann
SCOTUS Delivered a Blow to the Gun Rights Community Last Week But There’s Still Hope
Beth Baumann
More Absurdity: Popular Ice Cream Bar Canceled for Having ‘Derogatory’ Name
Ellie Bufkin
Gov. Whitmer Declines to Answer Rep. Scalise’s Questions on Devastating Nursing Home Policy
Reagan McCarthy
Popcorn: Kayleigh McEnany Faced a Liberal Media Meltdown Over Trump Saying ‘Kung Flu’
Matt Vespa
University Chair Resigns After Liking Trump Tweets
Bronson Stocking
Joni Ernst Met With ‘Sexist’ Insult After Challenging Dem Opponent to Debates
Cortney O’Brien
Leader McConnell Sets Vote on JUSTICE Act
Reagan McCarthy
ADVERTISEMENT
Political Cartoons
Bearing Arms
NYC Gun Licensing Laws Should Be Part Of De Blasio’s Policing Reforms | Cam Edwards
How Spike In Gun Sales Will Inhibit Anti-Gun Activist Investors | Tom Knighton
Armed Demonstrators Leave Richmond Mayor With Tough Decision | Cam Edwards
How Riots Made One Man Buy His First Firearm | Tom Knighton
Meet The Police Chief Forced To Step Down After Expressing Support For The 2A | Cam Edwards
_______SUBSCRIPTION INFO_______
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the Townhall.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.

Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions

You can unsubscribe by clicking here.

Or Send postal mail to:
Townhall Daily Unsubscribe
P.O. Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219


* Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.


 

REALCLEARPOLITICS

06/23/2020
Share: Twitter Facebook Pinterest LinkedIn Google Plus Instapaper

Carl Cannon’s Morning Note

Dead Heat in MI; Backing Parscale; Winter in June

By Carl M. Cannon on Jun 23, 2020 08:35 am
Good morning. It’s Tuesday, June 23, 2020, the third day of summer — the summer of national discontent. John Steinbeck, a native of Salinas, Calif., usually wrote about life on the West Coast. But the book published by Viking Press on this date in 1961, “The Winter of Our Discontent,” was set on the Eastern Seaboard.

The novel featured a tortured protagonist named Ethan Allen Hawley, a man with a patrician’s pedigree, a Harvard education, and a World War II combat record. But neither the advantageous circumstances of Hawley’s upbringing nor his admirable war record provided him with a sufficient cushion from downward mobility. Or gave him the necessary moral grounding to resist the ethical shortcuts he used in his quest to regain the material prosperity that defined success in postwar America — and defines it still for many people.

Steinbeck would win the Nobel Prize for Literature the following year. The Swedish Academy praised the author for revisiting in his 1961 novel the “eternal” themes he had raised in “The Grapes of Wrath,” the book considered his greatest work. The Nobel committee’s prize to Steinbeck was for his entire body of work, even the nonfiction 1962 story of the road, “Travels With Charley.” I’ll have more on “The Winter of Our Discontent,” which I’ve written about previously, 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 and contributors, including the following:

*  *  *

Pollster Who Got It Right in 2016: Michigan a Dead Heat. Tom Bevan has the story.

Trump Campaign Stands By Parscale Amid Shake-Up Push. Top aides are circling the wagons around the president’s campaign manager despite some calls for his ouster after poor attendance at Saturday’s Oklahoma rally, Susan Crabtree reports. 

Bolton Is Wrong; I Was There. The former national security adviser’s memoir distorts the facts about the Trump White House, Casey B. Mulligan asserts.

Somewhere I Read of the Freedom of Speech. Ryan Clancy of No Labels laments that the brouhaha over Tom Cotton’s New York Times op-ed reflects a troubling reversal of the paper’s long tradition of championing robust debate about public issues.

Great Gifts of Health From U.S. Donors. As the world struggles to overcome a new malady, Karl Zinsmeister spotlights the tradition of philanthropy that led the way in overcoming past scourges.

Pandemic Exposes the Follies of Medicaid Expansion. Tim Phillips explains in RealClearHealth.

Closing Schools Was a Grievous Error. In RealClearEducation, Williamson M. Evers highlights a study showing that the number of COVID-19 deaths prevented by school closings is minuscule, and argues that the missed learning will prove devastating to student performance.

An Infrastructure Package Could Help America’s Economy — and the Environment. In RealClearEnergy, Todd BenDor promotes a bipartisan plan to put the country back to work.

The Behavioral Bias Blinding Investors to New Opportunities. In RealClearMarkets, Ken Fisher explains how past market traumas make it difficult for the pessimistic to see new, positive realities about equities.

Putin’s New Nuclear Doctrine. In RealClearDefense, Mark B. Schneider assesses the Russian leader’s edict on “the foundations of state policy in the field of nuclear deterrence.”

*  *  *

Steinbeck and his publisher assumed that mid-20th century readers would know that the phrase “winter of our discontent” comes from Shakespeare. The line is in the first scene in the first act of “Richard III,” and sets up the tension that follows. But the stanza is more complicated than the snippet in Steinbeck’s title suggests.

Now is the winter of our discontent
Made glorious summer by this son of York;
And all the clouds that low’r’d upon our house
In the deep bosom of the ocean buried.

The lines are Richard’s own, and he’s not actually lamenting the winter, or his own discontent. He is hailing an upturn in the House of York — his family — precipitated by the success of his brother Edward IV in wresting the crown from King Henry VI.

But what kind of king is Edward proving to be? In the mind of Richard (at least in Shakespeare’s telling) Edward’s decadence and love of wealth soon mar the national landscape. Steinbeck’s metaphor was easily understood in 1961. The United States had emerged from the Great Depression and World War II as a military and political powerhouse — and with a humming economy that was the envy of the world.

What Americans were doing with their newfound material success, or maybe more precisely, what rampant consumerism was doing to Americans’ moral compasses, is what “The Winter of Our Discontent” is about.

The story contains themes and plot twists that do not seem six decades old: A hard-working immigrant is mistreated by the government and people he thought were his friends. Political office is used to manipulate public policy in ways that make officeholders rich. Plagiarism is rewarded, not punished. The size of a man’s bank portfolio is considered more important than his values.

You get the idea. Am I saying Donald Trump should tackle this novel? I suppose so, although he famously eschews reading — and it’s a little late for him anyway. I was actually thinking more about people who go into politics, or journalism, to make money, and the ethical compromises this goal forces them to make. Also, while contemplating how much of our current national discontent stems from a willingness to judge our fellow Americans by their politics or skin color or the other various demographic cohorts they are assigned to, a line from Steinbeck’s 1961 novel came to mind: “I wonder how many people I’ve looked at all my life and never seen,” Ethan Hawley muses to himself. “It’s scary to think about.”

Carl M. Cannon
Washington Bureau chief, RealClearPolitics
@CarlCannon (Twitter)
ccannon@realclearpolitics.com

Having trouble viewing this email? | [Unsubscribe] | Update Subscription Preferences

Copyright © 2020 RealClearHoldings, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in at our website.

Our mailing address is:

RealClearHoldings

666 Dundee Road
Bldg. 600

Northbrook, IL 60062

Add us to your address book

CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY

Webinar Today – The Assault Against Free Speech
America’s most cherished freedom, the freedom of consciousness -to believe and speak freely, is increasingly under-siege. From Social Media platforms to college campuses to the workplace, the social, political, and even legal costs to exercising free speech are rising.

What is perhaps most striking about this most recent campaign against America’s 1st amendment is how it echoes -and was clearly shaped by- long running struggles over speech surrounding discussion of Islam and the jihadist threat. As the Center for Security Policy has long documented, international institutions, foreign governments, and Islamist pressure groups conducted a length campaign to pressure, vilify and even jail those who opposed them.

Click here to sign up.

John Bolton’s temper tantrum
Former US national security adviser John Bolton’s critics routinely refer to him as a neoconservative. But they are wrong. Bolton was never part of the neoconservative clique of Bush administration officials.

Neoconservatives are messianists and American imperialism is their replacement theology.

Read the article by Center Senior Fellow, Caroline Glick.

Upcoming Webinars
Wuhan Virus Propaganda Timeline
Highlighted Articles/Interviews

President Trump’s boffo two-fer on immigration

Tucker Carlson regularly and rightly bemoans the failure of political leaders of both parties to rise to the challenges of our times. Few topics exemplify better the recklessness of Democrats and the acquiescence, if not actual complicity, of many Republicans than immigration.

Yesterday, President Trump acted decisively to restrict the further mass importing of labor as 30 million Americans are out of work. He’s being criticized for doing so by members of both parties. And yet, his temporary blocking of visas for skilled and unskilled workers not only makes common sense. It enjoys broad, bipartisan support among the American people.

So does the need to secure our southern border. Mr. Trump travels to Arizona today to mark the 200th mile of new construction of his promised “wall.” Congratulations, Mr. President. Now, let’s get the rest of it done.

This is Frank Gaffney.

STEPHEN BLANK, Senior Fellow for Russia at the American Foreign Policy Council, 26 Years of Experience as a professor of National Security Studies at the Strategic Studies Institute of U.S. Army War College:

  • Russia’s attempt to “master” the Arctic
  • How will this impact Russia’s relations with the rest of the world?

GORDON CHANG, The Daily Beast contributor, Author of The Coming Collapse of China and Nuclear Showdown: North Korea Takes on the World, Latest book: Losing South Korea (2019):

  • An update on Hong Kong-China relations
  • Is South Korea trying to appease North Korea?
  • Who is in position to succeed Kim Jong-un’s as leader of North Korea?

MICHAELA DODGE, Research Scholar at the National Institute for Public Policy, Former Research Fellow at the Heritage Foundation:

  • How will US missile defense be designed in the future?
  • A historical look at US missile defense policy
  • How is US nuclear weapons testing progressing?

GRANT NEWSHAM, Senior Research Fellow at Japan Forum for Strategic Studies:

  • The current state of US-Japan relations
  • How is Japan increasing their defense capabilities?
  • The Japanese government’s treatment of their military
TWEET OF THE DAY
Retweet, like, and comment!
DONATE
View this email in your browser 
Copyright © 2020 Center for Security Policy, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
2020 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Suite 189
Washington, D.C.  20006
(202) 835-9077

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

BERNARD GOLDBERG

TWITCHY

________SUBSCRIPTION INFO________

This email is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this email on the Twitchy.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.

Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions

You can unsubscribe by clicking here.

Or Send postal mail to:
Twitchy Unsubscribe
P.O. Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219


* Copyright Twitchy and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.

HOT AIR

ADVERTISEMENT
Trump celebrates border wall milestone as opponents continue to fight against it
Karen Townsend
Will SCOTUS return this woman’s guns to her?
Jazz Shaw
Scott, DeSantis: Florida’s new COVID-19 spike not just related to testing
Ed Morrissey
Nadler: Naah, we’re not gonna subpoena Bolton
Ed Morrissey
ADVERTISEMENT
Hawaii’s army of Karens
Jazz Shaw
Democrats aren’t quite ignoring the Green Party this year
Taylor Millard
Tweety AOC: Tik Tok teens sabotaged Trump rally attendance
Karen Townsend
Acting DHS Secretary: DACA to continue but we think it’s illegal
Taylor Millard
Report: Trump “livid” about underwhelming rally turnout
Allahpundit
Trump’s UFO/Roswell interview didn’t seem all that compelling
Jazz Shaw
Not happy: Families of Aunt Jemimas react to her cancellation
Karen Townsend
Fear and the worth of sparrows: Sunday reflection
Ed Morrissey
Another shooting in the CHOP. Where is Seattle’s mayor?
Jazz Shaw
LATEST HEADLINES
NBC “It’s politics 101, you under-promise and over-deliver”
Harry Enten There’s no sign of “hidden” Trump voters
Barry Svrluga The return of sports anytime soon is unlikely and maybe irresponsible
Tiana Lowe Fake news: No, TikTok didn’t tank Trump’s rally
Politico Trump allies see a mounting threat: Biden’s rising evangelical support
AP A second wave of COVID-19? Not yet, say experts
Axios Exclusive: Trump held off on Xinjiang sanctions for China trade deal
CNN More young people across the south are testing positive for coronavirus, officials warn
NYT The president’s shock at the rows of empty seats in Tulsa
Fox News “Please do not quarantine any Floridians in the nursing homes in New York”
Axios Exclusive: Trump cold on Guaido, would consider meeting Maduro
The Hill Pelosi on Trump testing remarks: “The American people are owed answers”
ABC Bolton: Trump directly linked Ukraine aid to Biden investigation
AP Noose found in stall of Bubba Wallace at Alabama NASCAR race
NYT Theodore Roosevelt statue to be removed from NY Museum of Natural History
LAT Trump gets an all-Trump channel. It could be his future.
Berny Belvedere Leave the Washington and Jefferson monuments alone
Ross Douthat The tempting of Neil Gorsuch
NYT NYC hired 3,000 workers for contact tracing. It’s not going well.
Damon Linker John Roberts has had enough of Trump’s bad faith
ADVERTISEMENT
__________________________SUBSCRIPTION INFO__________________________

WERE YOU FORWARDED THIS EDITION OF THE HOT AIR DAILY?
You can get your own free subscription to the #1 blog delivered to your email inbox early each morning by visiting: http://www.hotair.com

This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on Hot Air OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.

Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions

You can unsubscribe by clicking here..

Or Send postal mail to:
Hot Air Daily Unsubscribe
P.O Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219


* Copyright Hot Air and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.

AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH

NATIONAL REVIEW

Morning-Jolt.png
WITH JIM GERAGHTY June 23 2020
hero

Will Andrew Cuomo Take Responsibility?

Alexandra DeSanctis here. I’ll be filling in for Jim this week, notwithstanding what it says in your email inbox.

On the menu today: Andrew Cuomo somehow thinks his policies aren’t at all to blame for the enormous number of COVID-19-related deaths in New York nursing homes, a look ahead at some of the Democratic primaries on the docket this evening, and it looks like the University of Michigan will be backing out of hosting a presidential debate this fall.

Cuomo Doesn’t Want to Own Up

In an interview on MSNBC yesterday, New York governor Andrew Cuomo refused to accept any blame for the number of COVID-19 deaths among nursing-home residents in his state. It seems clear at this point that, based on conservative estimates, at least 6 percent of the New York’s more than 100,000 nursing-home residents have died of the disease during the state’s outbreak.

Instead of acknowledging the role that his decisions almost surely played in that disaster, though, Cuomo has consistently blamed the federal government and the CDC and, in this interview, wrote off criticism of his policies as a “political charade.”

MSNBC’s Stephanie …   READ MORE

spacer
ADVERTISEMENT
Every vote is a voice heard

fb_voter_couple_20200617_570.jpg

Facebook is building the largest voter information effort in US history, starting with the new Voting Information Center, where you can find the latest resources about voting in the 2020 election.

Learn more about our efforts.

Trending on National Review

1. How Many More Trillions Must We Pump into This Economy?

2. The Strange Attempt to Stop a New Book on China’s Global Influence

3. A Shining Successor

Top Stories

Victor Davis Hanson

The Triumph of the Country Mouse

Our big cities are governed by a blue paradigm that fairly or not will now be increasingly synonymous with crime, …

NR PLUS   Kyle Smith

A Shining Successor

An eerie psychological thriller finds Kevin Bacon in top form.

Rich Lowry

Thomas Jefferson Must Stand

The woke philistines who are targeting Thomas Jefferson are incapable of thought or discernment and want to …

NEWS

Texas Governor: Coronavirus Spreading at ‘Unacceptable Rate’ in State

Texas has seen more than 25,000 new coronavirus cases over the past week and on Friday recorded a one-day record …

Dmitri Solzhenitsyn

Retaining Our Exceptionalism in the Age of AI

Machines are unlikely to surpass human creativity. But we’ll have some consolation if they …

The Editors

Statues and Limitations

The list of figures whose likenesses have been defaced now includes Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, Thomas …

NEWS

Protestors Attempt to Create ‘Black House Autonomous Zone’ Near White House, Trump Urges…

Protestors set up barricades and pitched tents near the White House and graffitied the historic St. John’s …

WHAT NR IS READING

The Case for Nationalism: How It Made Us Powerful, United, and Free

By Richard Lowry

“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

LEARN MORE

PODCASTS

PHOTOS

VIDEO

NRPLUS ARTICLES

Ready for Election Season?

National Review subscribers get the most out of National Review. Don’t miss out.

SEE MY OPTIONS
ADVERTISEMENT
national review

Follow Us & Share

19 West 44th Street, Suite 1701, New York, NY, 10036, USA
Your Preferences | Unsubscribe | Privacy
View this e-mail in your browser.

NATIONAL JOURNAL

What’s News

VOTERS ARE VOTING: Voters are voting in six states today, with Mississippi, North Carolina, and South Carolina holding primary runoffs. Polls closing at 7 p.m.: Kentucky, South Carolina, Virginia. Polls closing at 7:30 p.m.: North Carolina. Polls closing at 8 p.m.: Mississippi. Polls closing at 9 p.m.: New York.

GENERAL ELECTION: The University of Michigan “will no longer host one of three presidential debates planned this fall in the run-up to the Nov. 3 general election. … The Commission on Presidential Debates announced June 23 that the Adrienne Arsht Center … in Miami, Florida will host the Oct. 15 debate that had been planned for Crisler Center on U-M’s athletics campus.” (release) In a letter, Joe Biden’s “campaign on Monday committed to three scheduled debates with” President Trump “and criticized the president for taking varied positions on whether he would participate in debates.” The letter “came several days after top Trump aides … began pushing for four debates and called for them to be held earlier than usual.” (Washington Post)

KS SEN: “The Kansas Republican Party is eager to avoid helping Democrats repeat their 2018 upset in the state’s gubernatorial race—especially” by nominating 2018 KS GOV nominee Kris Kobach (R). However, after encouraging some candidates to drop out, Kansas GOP Chairman Mike Kuckelman told Hotline he is content that “the four front-runners are all solid Republican candidates.” (Hotline reporting) The U.S. Chamber of Commerce endorsed Rep. Roger Marshall (R-01) on Tuesday, “the strongest sign yet that the Republican establishment has coalesced around” Marshall. Chamber National Political Director Ashlee Rich Stephenson also warned “Kobach’s performance in 2018 stands out, how badly he lost at the top of the ticket in a red state. There’s no reason to believe he can run for U.S. Senate in 2020 and perform any better.” (Kansas City Star)

KENTUCKY: In the Senate race, 2018 KY-06 nominee Amy McGrath (D), state Rep. Charles Booker (D), and retired Marine Mike Broihier (D) will face off in the primary. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is expected to win the GOP nomination. In KY-06, Marine veteran Josh Hicks (D) is the favorite to win the nomination in the race against Rep. Andy Barr (R). (Hotline reporting)

NEW YORK: State Assemblywoman Nicole Malliotakis (R) is favored over Brooklyn prosecutor Joe Caldarera (R) in the primary to take on Rep. Max Rose (D-NY 11). In NY-15, New York City Councilman Ritchie Torres (D) has emerged as the strongest candidate to prevent fellow New York City Councilman Rubén Díaz Sr. (D) from winning the primary to replace retiring Rep. José Serrano (D). In NY-16, Rep. Eliot Engel (D) is fighting for his political life against middle school principal Jamaal Bowman (D) in a race that has garnered national attention. In NY-17, attorney Mondaire Jones (D) is the slight favorite to win the Democratic primary to replace retiring Rep. Nita Lowey (D). In NY-22, former Rep. Claudia Tenney (R) is the favorite to win the GOP primary, setting the stage for a rematch with Rep. Anthony Brindisi (D). In NY-24, 2018 nominee Dana Balter (D) is favored over Iraq War veteran Francis Conole (D) in the race to face Rep. John Katko (R). In NY-27, state Sen. Chris Jacobs (R) has an edge over 2018 nominee Nate McMurray (D) in the special election to replace former Rep. Chris Collins (R). Jacobs also has to contend with the regularly-scheduled primary with Fox News contributor Beth Parlato (R) and Erie County Comptroller Stefan Mychajliw Jr. (R). (Hotline reporting)

NC-11: GOP activist Lynda Bennett (R) is favored in the runoff over real estate investor Madison Cawthorn (R) to replace former Rep. Mark Meadows (R). The winner will face retired Air Force Col. Moe Davis (D) in a safely Republican seat. (Hotline reporting)

VA-05: Democrats are in a tight multi-candidate primary to take on former Campbell County Supervisor Bob Good (R). 2018 candidate R.D. Huffstetler (D), Marine Corps veteran Claire Russo (D), and physician Cameron Webb (D) are vying to take on Good, who defeated Rep. Denver Riggleman (R) at a party convention earlier this month. (Hotline reporting).

AL SEN: Sen. Doug Jones (D) released a TV ad Monday in which he discusses the death of George Floyd and the importance of racial justice. (YouTube) Former Auburn University football coach Tommy Tuberville (R) launched a TV ad claiming former Attorney General Jeff Sessions (R) “wasn’t man enough to stand with President Trump when things got tough.” (Ad Analytics)

AZ SEN: Sen. Martha McSally (R) launched a TV ad Monday highlighting her service as an Air Force pilot and reacting to “false” attacks on her health care record from retired astronaut Mark Kelly (D). (release) Kelly launched his own TV ad Monday that focuses on his record as an astronaut and Navy pilot. The spot calls McSally’s attacks “desperate” and defends his record on China. (Twitter

Hair of the Dog

“Petition calls for Columbus, Ohio, to be renamed ‘Flavortown'” (UPI)

Our Call

Among today’s House primaries, the marquee race is in NY-16, where progressives have pinned their hopes on Jamaal Bowman. He has endorsements from almost every major progressive organization and politician, from the Democratic Socialists of America’s National Electoral Committee to Sen. Elizabeth Warren. It’s a feat no other candidate currently running for Congress has achieved, although Mondaire Jones, running in NY-17, has also earned nods from progressive leaders. But elsewhere in New York City, which spans thirteen districts, there are left-wing candidates running in at least eight additional contests. In some races, however, progressive candidates could split progressive votes. One example is the crowded primary in NY-15, where leading voices on the left are divided between Samelys Lopez, Ritchie Torres, and Tomas Ramos. And in NY-09, Adem Bunkeddeko will have another shot at the incumbent after falling short in 2018, but Isiah James may siphon off support. All seven of these candidates have a lot in common with Alexandria Ocasio Cortez; they are all people of color, and many of them have organizing backgrounds and working class roots. But to achieve what she did, several of them will have to do more than outperform more moderate contenders; they’ll have to make it through each other. — Mini Racker

Two recent Democratic polls of PA-01 have shown Ivyland Councilwoman Christina Finello running closely with Republican Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, and both reveal that there is a significant contingent of ticket-splitters in Bucks County. Joe Biden led President Trump 56%-40% in one poll and 53%-40% in the other, while Fitzpatrick led 40%-38% and was tied 46%-46% respectively. While Democrats should be encouraged that Finello appears viable, especially after many wrote off the race once Debbie Wachspress dropped out, Fitzpatrick remains a strong incumbent with a history of overperforming the party baseline. — Alex Clearfield

Fresh Brewed Buzz

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms (D) will chair the DNC platform drafting committee. (NBC News)

Rep. Ro Khanna’s (D-CA 17) campaign manager circulated a petition calling for the congressman, rather than California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) to lead the state’s delegation at the Democratic convention. (HuffPost)

Former South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg (D) will be the Indiana delegation’s chair at the convention. (Indianapolis Monthly)

Mike Pence and his wife, Karen, voted by mail in April from a mansion they haven’t lived in for 4 years” (Business Insider)

As “Trump continues to rail about a ‘rigged 2020 election’ on Twitter, the group representing Democratic secretaries of state released its own social media campaign, accusing Trump and the Republican Party of engaging in voter suppression that is ‘rooted in white supremacy.’” (Washington Post)

“A day ahead of Trump’s visit to Arizona,” Sen. Martha McSally (R-AZ) proposed “giving taxpayers $4,000 each to take a vacation. Couples would get $8,000 in vacation tax credits, plus $500 per kid.” (Bloomberg)

“I deleted a tweet that many seem to think indicated that I support American interference in Latin American elections. For those like myself who have a weird habit of being up at 4 AM thinking about things like American foreign policy in Venezuela, know that I didn’t and I don’t.” — Author Marianne Williamson (D) (Twitter)

Kweisi Mfume Shares Personal Experience With Police Brutality, Outlines Legislative Priorities” (WJZ)

Amid national outrage about limited polling places in Kentucky, boards of elections in the state “are getting so many phone calls from out of state that it’s clogging up the phone lines for” voters who need help. (Lexington Herald-Leader)

Today, Rev. Raphael Warnock (D), “the senior pastor at Ebenezer Baptist,” who is challenging Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-GA), will deliver the eulogy for Rayshard Brooks, who was shot by a police officer this month. (AP)       

“Trump rally gives Fox News largest Saturday night audience in its history” (Fox News)

Trump dodged a question about whether he actually ordered officials to slow down testing for COVID-19, as he suggested at his rally over the weekend. (Scripps)

“Two additional Trump staffers tested positive for COVID-19.” They attended the Tulsa rally wearing masks. (Wall Street Journal)

Rooster’s Crow

The House is out. The Senate is in at 10 a.m.

Trump participates in a roundtable briefing on border security at 2:20 p.m. ET in Yuma, AZ. He participates in a commemoration of the 200th mile of border wall in San Luis, AZ at 3:40 p.m. before delivering an address to young Americans in Phoenix, AZ at 6:40 p.m.

Swizzle Challenge

Ben Franklin was the first postmaster general.

Karen Mark won yesterday’s challenge. Here’s her challenge: Who was the only president who actually served as a postmaster?

The 3rd correct email gets to submit the next question.

Early Bird Special

Republicans who are united against Kobach remain divided on an alternative
Cook: As is their habit, independents seem to be breaking against the incumbent
Stalled bill to boost DOJ watchdog could factor into Berman case
Quorum Call Episode 174: Coronavirus and the Campaign Trail

Shot…

“If they try to cancel Christianity, if they try to force me to apologize or recant my Faith, I will not bend, I will not waver, I will not break.” — Trump senior adviser Jenna Ellis (Twitter)

Chaser…

Jesus was cancelled and that didn’t stop him, did it?” — Sonny Shine (Happy!)

Mini Racker, Wake-Up Call! Editor

Editor: Leah Askarinam

Digital Editor: Mini Racker
Staff Writers: Madelaine Pisani, Matt Holt, Kirk A. Bado, Mary Frances McGowan

Fellows: Erin Covey, Dylan Wells

Associate Editor: Alex Clearfield

National Journal
600 New Hampshire Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20037

 

This email was sent to rickbulow74@live.com. If you no longer wish to receive these emails you may unsubscribe at any time.

GATEWAY PUNDIT

Web version
FINALLY: DC Police Are Not Letting the Mob Run the City Tonight, Rioters in a Panic (VIDEOS)
The DC police are not sitting back and letting violent mobs overrun the city tonight and it is causing the militant leftists to panic. In… Read more…
BREAKING: CHOP GETS THE CHOP! Seattle Mayor Announces City Will Retake East Precinct in the CHOP Zone (VIDEO)
So much for the “summer of love.” Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan ordered Seattle police to retake the East Precinct in the infamous CHOP Zone tonight…. Read more…
IT HAPPENED AGAIN! New Jersey Republicans Receive Mail-In Ballots With ONLY DEMOCRAT CHOICES
Gateway Pundit readers may recall a recent report we published that shed light on hundreds, possibly thousands, of Oregon voters who mysteriously had their party… Read more…
Billion Dollar Firm Leaving Seattle for Phoenix Due to Unrest in the City
Billion dollar investment firm Smead Capitol Management announced they are moving their headquarters from Seattle to Phoenix. According to FOX Business Network the CEO says… Read more…
Press Evacuated From White House Amid Riot Breaking Out in DC
The press has been evacuated from the White House as a criminal mob of rioters are clashing with police outside. Press evacuated from WH. pic.twitter.com/vLmM8NKkHD… Read more…
Looters Destroy Ohio Woman’s Cupcake Shop, Then People Threaten Her Life for Cooperating With Police
An Ohio cupcake shop owner says she is receiving death threats for cooperating with police after her store was destroyed by looters. Kelly Kandah owns… Read more…
“Tear Them Down”: Race Activist Shaun King Calls for Removal of All Statues, Murals and Stained Glass Windows of “White Jesus and his European Mother”
Race activist Shaun King on Monday called for the taking down of all statues, murals and stained glass windows of “white Jesus and his European… Read more…
Trump to Cut Legal Immigration by 525,000 by Suspending Five Classes of Work Visas
The Trump Administration announced on Monday it is suspending five classes of work visas, including H-1B visas through the end of 2020 in an effort… Read more…
It Begins… White Allies Paint Whip Marks on their Backs and Carry “Cracker for Sale” Signs to Win Favor from Black Lives Matter Mob (VIDEO)
White Allies dressed as slaves complete with whip marks on their backs at a protest Monday in Charleston, South Carolina. The white allies carried “Cracker… Read more…
Facebook Twitter

Copyright © 2020 All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy

This email was sent to rickbulow1974@gmail.com. You are receiving this email because you asked to receive information from The Gateway Pundit. We take your privacy and your liberty very seriously and will keep your information in the strictest confidence. Your name will not be sold to or shared with third parties. We will email you from time to time with relevant news and updates, but you can stop receiving information from us at any time by following very simple instructions that will be included at the bottom of any correspondence you should receive from us.

Our mailing address is: 16024 Manchester Rd. | St. Louis, MO 63011

Unsubscribe or Update Preferences

FRONTPAGE MAG

FrontPage Mag

FrontPage Mag DAILY
June 23, 2020

FaceBook
Twitter

Please consider making a tax-deductible donation to support FrontPageMag’s efforts to continue publishing articles such as this!

Donate
FPM

HOOVER INSTITUTE

A daily digest of analysis and commentary by Hoover fellows. Problems viewing this email? View this email in your browser
Tuesday June 23rd, 2020
Featured
The Doctor Is In: Scott Atlas And The Efficacy Of Lockdowns, Social Distancing, And Closings
interview with Scott W. Atlas via Uncommon KnowledgeDr. Scott Atlas’s prescription includes more protection for people in nursing homes, two weeks of strict self-isolation for those with mild symptoms, and most importantly, the opening of all K–12 schools.
The Gorsuch Legal Alchemy
by Richard A. Epstein via Defining Ideas Standard textual analysis doesn’t support the meaning he gives to “sex” in Title VII.
The Triumph Of The Country Mouse
by Victor Davis Hanson via National ReviewCities lose their charms when they’re engulfed in chaos, crime, and mobs — and run by virtue-signaling appeasers.
How The Supreme Court’s DACA Decision Harms The Constitution, The Presidency, Congress, And The Country
by John Yoo via National ReviewAccording to Chief Justice Roberts, the Constitution makes it easy for presidents to violate the law, but reversing such violations difficult — especially for their successors.
Competition For Dominance: Asia’s Geopolitics And The Trends Shaping The Indo-Pacific Future
via Hoover Institution PressThere has been no more critical time in US-Sino relations since 1949. Michael Auslin’s latest book, Asia’s New Geopolitics, prepares us for what we need to know and explores the breadth of geopolitical dangers that will inform and educate the future of the Indo Pacific. Watch the book’s launch event “Competition for Dominance” recorded on Wednesday, June 17, 2020 at 1 p.m. PDT.
Analysis and Commentary
Still The World’s Safe Haven? Redesigning The U.S. Treasury Market After The COVID-19 Crisis
by Darrell Duffie via Brookings InstitutionThe market for U.S. Treasuries has long been viewed as the world’s most liquid and deepest financial market. That presumption was questioned when the COVID-19 crisis triggered heavy investor demands for trading that overwhelmed the capacity of dealers who usually serve as middlemen in this market. Over several tense days in March, yields rose sharply, calling into question the longstanding view that Treasuries are a reliable safe haven in a crisis.
Trump’s Petty Grievance? It’s The Same Old Song
by Bill Whalen via ForbesA few things we can expect in most any presidential election.
Tackling Corona In India: Why The Sledgehammer Approach Is Doomed To Fail
by Bibek Debroy, Bjorn Lomborg via The Times of IndiaThe corona challenge will likely be with us for a year or more, until we find a cure or a vaccine and it may strike again, after remaining dormant for a while. Thus, it is more urgent than ever to find policy responses that can be sustained and don’t end up leaving India worse off overall.
David Davenport: Will Government Return To Normalcy?
by David Davenport via Townhall ReviewWe all long to return to normal but the big question is whether government will. Our nation has a history of government taking on special powers and more spending during emergencies and never returning to normal.
Russia Claims It Will Have A Covid-19 Vaccine In Production By September
by Paul R. Gregory via What Paul Gregory Is Thinking About (Blog)According to TASS, a spokesperson for a Russian state medical institute (Gamalei Institute) claims that they will have a coronavirus vaccine ready for production in September. The Institute is working together with a medical lab of the defense department. Clinical trials have been underway starting in June and will be completed by August at which time the vaccine will be registered with the appropriate authorities. The vaccine will be ready for use before the end of 2020.
Interviews
Dr. Scott Atlas On COVID-19 Spike Among Young People
interview with Scott W. Atlas via Fox NewsHoover Institution fellow Scott Atlas discusses the spike in COVID-19 cases among young people, who are mostly asymptomatic, resulting in the silver lining of herd immunity.
Victor Davis Hanson Calls Election ‘A Manichean Choice’ About ‘Whether You Want Civilization’
interview with Victor Davis Hanson via Fox NewsHoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson says  that the continuation of civilization is at stake in the November election.
America Is On Road To Relapse, Not Recovery: Niall Ferguson
interview with Niall Ferguson via BloombergHoover Institution fellow Niall Ferguson discusses his Bloomberg article “America Is on the Road to Relapse Not Recovery.”
Shelby Steele: “A Leap Of Faith In Black America”
interview with Shelby Steele via Fox News RadioHoover Institution fellow Shelby Steele talks about about how the George Floyd protests and COVID-19 have impacted the black community, the importance of viewing charter schools as a civil rights issue, and Steele encourages members of his own community to take charge in creating a better future for black America.
Victor Davis Hanson On The Larry O’Connor Show
interview with Victor Davis Hanson via The Larry O’Connor ShowHoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson talks about the changing landscape of the presidential election, cultural revolutions and more.
In the News
Why The U.S. Government Would Sell Bonds That Don’t Need To Be Paid Back
quoting John H. Cochrane via MarketplaceWith the mountain of debt the federal government is amassing during the pandemic, it helps that interest rates are so low. There’s renewed talk of an additional strategy to defer the debt burden — borrowing by selling bonds that don’t need to be paid back until … well, ever.
The Emotional Whitewashing Of History Is An Enormous Mistake
quoting Thomas Sowell via Bluefield Daily TelegraphThe tragic and indefensible killing of Minneapolis resident George Floyd at the hands of city police officers created understandable emotions of pain and anger in the country. We have all witnessed the resulting peaceful protesting of police brutality against citizens. But in many cases protests turned into violent, dangerous rioting, and now rising anti-slavery emotion has spawned tearing down statues associated with that dark period in American history, and condemnation of other things reminiscent of that period.
With Challenges Aplenty, Europe’s Navies Are Coming To Grips With High-End Warfare
quoting Admiral Gary Roughead via Defense NewsThe former head of the U.S. Navy said in June testimony that as the service grapples with establishing the right type of force, it must account for the degraded capabilities of its allies, hinting at the once substantial Cold War-era European navies.
The University Of Chicago Took A Stand For Free Speech. Faculty Say They Live In Fear Anyway.
quoting John H. Cochrane via ReasonFormer professor John Cochrane: “I spent much of my last few years of teaching afraid that I would say something that could be misunderstood and thus be offensive to someone.”
Kennedy Center Board Chairman David Rubenstein Hosts New PBS History Series
quoting Andrew Roberts via WTOPYou know him as co-founder of The Carlyle Group and chairman of the Boards of Trustees at the Kennedy Center, Smithsonian and Council on Foreign Relations. Starting July 3, David Rubenstein will host “History with David Rubenstein,” a 10-episode program airing on PBS stations across the country, including WETA in D.C.
Closing Schools Was A Grievous Error
quoting Michael J. Petrilli via Real Clear EducationEducation leaders across the country are trying to determine whether and when they can safely reopen K-12 schools. What everyone needs to realize is that for students under 16 years of age schools never should have been closed. These students should return to their classrooms for summer school right away.
Former U.S. Secretaries Of Defense Robert Gates And James Mattis
mentioning General Jim Mattis via Commonwealth ClubSince the end of the Cold War, the global perception of the United States has progressively morphed from dominant international leader to disorganized entity. Robert Gates, defense secretary under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, asserts that this transformation is the result of the failure of political leaders to understand the complexity of American power, its expansiveness, and its limitations. Join Sec. Gates and former Secretary of Defense James Mattis as they discuss the future of U.S. national security.
Enjoy Receiving Hoover Daily Report?
Share it or Subscribe now!
Copyright © 2020 by the Board of Trustees of Leland Stanford Junior University, Hoover Institution, Stanford University

434 Galvez Mall, Stanford, CA 94305-0610 Ι Phone: 650-723-1754 Ι Hoover.org

The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.

Thank you for subscribing to the Hoover Daily Report.
This email was sent to: rickbulow1974@gmail.com

Remove me from this list Ι Update my settings