Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday July 14, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
|
THE RESURGENT
THE EPOCH TIMES
“Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity.”
SENECA
Good morning,
The first federal execution in 17 years was stalled on Monday by a federal judge, who argued a delay was in the public interest because of legal issues that needed to be resolved.
The DOJ, in turn, appealed the order, arguing that the Federal Bureau of Prisons is likely to suffer harm if the executions are postponed.
Hilarious Kid Explains to His Dad Why He Doesn’t Want to Get Married: ‘I Would Be Scared!’
You may have read our articles on our website, but did you know we have a print edition as well? Each week our team of reporters, editors, and designers produce a beautifully designed broadsheet newspaper with the best of our in-depth content. It includes news and opinion, as well as inspiring content in our Life & Tradition section, advice on healthy living in our Mind & Body section, our amazing Food section, and puzzles—a reader favorite. It’s a reading experience you don’t want to miss!
Try the paper yourself for just $1 and get a free gift. Cancel anytime
‘National Conversations’ About Race, and Other Progressive Monologues
In the wake of the George Floyd affair—as in the wake of the Tawana Brawley, Rodney King, Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, and Freddie Gray affairs—everyone agrees that it is time to have a “national conversation”… Read more
Systemic Racism Claims Exacerbating ‘Cancel Culture’ Climate
Several incidents in recent months seem to indicate that the wave of “cancel culture” and political correctness is only becoming more intense. In particular, the claim of widespread systemic racism has reached… Read more
Once the Domain of States, Private Sector Now Dominates 76 Percent of Space Economy By Cindy Drukier (July 17, 2015)
The commercial space industry has hit a rough patch. The dramatic June 28 explosion of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket—meant to deliver supplies to the International Space Station—was the third private spacecraft in a year to meet with disaster. Read more
Nearly every country in the world felt the impact of the new coronavirus, whether it was lockdowns, economic loss, or the impact of the virus itself. Yet, while the recent virus is unique in having the whole world face it together, pandemics like this have existed throughout history…
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 Click here to unsubscribe. |
DAYBREAK
|
THE SUNBURN
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
FOX NEWS
JUST THE NEWS
THE FLIP SIDE
- Subscribe
- Past Issues
- RSS
- Translate
|
AXIOS
Good Tuesday morning. “Axios Today,” our 10-minute podcast, is ready for your ears.
- Today at 12:30 p.m. ET, Caitlin Owens and I will host an Axios virtual event on new tech spawned by the pandemic. Register here.
Bulletin: The Trump administration was planning to go ahead today with the execution of the first federal prison inmate in 17 years, after a divided Supreme Court reversed lower courts and ruled federal executions could proceed in a 5-4 vote. (AP)
71% of U.S. parents polled in the new Axios-Ipsos Coronavirus Index say it’d be risky to send children back to school in the fall — including nine in 10 Black Americans and even a slim majority of Republicans, Axios’ Margaret Talev writes.
- Why it matters: President Trump and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos have threatened to withhold federal funds from schools that don’t reopen. These findings suggest that the pressure campaign could backfire.
As with so many aspects of the pandemic, there are big differences in risks perceived by Ds and Rs, and between whites and people of color.
- 82% of Democrats and 53% of Republicans say returning to school would be very or moderately risky.
- 89% of Black parents saw returning to school as a large or moderate risk, compared with 80% of Hispanic parents and 64% of white parents.
Driving the news: Officials announced plans yesterday for some giant metro areas, erring on the side of caution.
- In California, with Gov. Gavin Newsom locked down much of the state amid a virus surge, officials announced that public schools in Los Angeles and San Diego (825,000 students) will hold online classes only.
- Gov. Andrew Cuomo said New York schools will open only if the daily infection rates in their region are below 5% over a 14-day average: “We’re not going to use our children as guinea pigs.”
How it’s playing …
Nearly two-thirds of Americans — and a noticeably increasing number of Republicans — say they’re wearing a face mask whenever they leave the house, Axios’ Sam Baker writes from the new Axios-Ipsos Coronavirus Index.
62% of those surveyed said they’re wearing a mask “all the time” when they leave the house — up from 53% when we asked the same question two weeks ago.
- The biggest jump was among Republicans: 45% say they’re wearing a mask all the time, up from 35% at the end of June.
- Even though it’s narrowing, there’s still a big partisan divide: 95% of Democrats say they wear a mask some or all of the time outside the house, compared with 74% of Republicans.
Between the lines: These numbers may seem high — do two-thirds of the people you pass on the street have a mask on?
- But the fact that more people are claiming to wear them is a sign that masks are increasingly seen as important.
My favorite stat: 15% said they’ve told someone else to put on a mask.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Three missions from three nations — the U.S., China and the United Arab Emirates — head to Mars in the next month, writes Miriam Kramer, author of Axios Space.
- The UAE, a new player in planetary exploration, is expected to launch its first spacecraft to the Red Planet this evening.
Why it matters: More nations are going to space as the costs of launch and development drop.
The U.S. is the only nation to successfully land and operate rovers on the Martian surface, and expectations for NASA’s new Perseverance mission are high.
- This rover is designed to collect interesting samples of rock and dirt, and will hunt for signs of past life from its landing site.
- It’s part of setting the stage for eventual human missions to the Red Planet.
The China and UAE missions will be historic feats if they get to Mars at all.
- China’s mission — which includes an orbiter, lander and a rover — would be the country’s first solo journey to Mars.
- The UAE sees its Hope mission as a way to boost scientific know-how in the Middle East. UAE leaders want science to be “deeply integrated” into the nation’s economy, Omran Sharaf, Hope’s project lead, told Axios.
The intrigue: All three of the missions had to contend with virus issue in to get to the launch pad this summer.
- NASA persevered with Perseverance during the pandemic because the window to launch to Mars only comes around every two years.
- 🚀 Sign up for Miriam Kramer’s weekly newsletter, Axios Space.
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
Office furniture lined with plants could be used to clean air in cubicles, Axios’ Joann Muller writes from Detroit.
- Why it matters: People won’t feel safe returning to schools, offices, bars and restaurants unless they can be assured they won’t be infected by virus particles in the air.
The University of Oregon’s Institute for Health in the Built Environment is designing micro-environments that could provide office workers with their own supply of fresh air.
- HyPhy is a twist on the traditional cubicle: It’s a personal clean air pod that integrates a fern called Azolla into the furniture to provide personalized air circulation and purification.
- The plants, when treated with ultraviolet lights under the desk, may help kill pathogens, while pumping localized fresh air into the cube’s breathing zone.
Political junkies know Macomb County, Mich. But Gogebic?!
- Gogebic County in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula will cast a tiny amount of votes, but went for President Trump in 2016 and a Democratic ticket in 2018 and looks like the state’s political median in the age of Trump.
Third Way, the center-left think tank, is out with “Bellwether Counties 2020,” isolating 21 counties in the swing states of Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin as well as the Senate battlegrounds of Arizona, Iowa and North Carolina.
- Why it matters, from David de la Fuente, who wrote the report: These counties may be the best indication leading up to November, and even on election night, of which way a state will tip.
About half of the bellwethers are mostly suburban, or in an urban county with heavy suburban influence.
Bruce Mehlman of Mehlman Castagnetti Rosen & Thomas, who tells me he spends about 50 hours on each of his famous quarterly decks, has delved into all the ways the pandemic is bringing us the future faster.
- Bruce’s bottom line: If things feel historically disruptive, it’s because they are.
The WNBA season is scheduled to tip off July 25 (five days ahead of the NBA), with opening-weekend games dedicated to the Black Lives Matter movement, AP’s Doug Feinberg writes.
- All 12 WNBA franchises will play the opening weekend and honor victims of police brutality and racial violence.
Team uniforms will display Breonna Taylor’s name. Players will have the option to continue to wear Taylor’s name for subsequent games.
- All season, players will wear warm-up shirts with “Black Lives Matter” on the front and “Say Her Name” on the back.
The league’s 24th season will be played at a single site in Bradenton, Fla.
Juice, a pit bull on L.A.’s Skid Row, is checked yesterday by Christian Kjaer, Amanda Howland and Dr. Gabe Rosa at a mobile vet service.
- The Pets in Need Project has been traveling to areas with homeless populations throughout California over the past eight weeks, and has provided about 1,200 pets with food and free veterinary services.
📱 Thanks for reading Axios AM. Please invite your friends to sign up here.
THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
|
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
|
PRO TRUMP NEWS
THE HILL
|
ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
An expanded federal benefit of $600 per week is set to expire at the end of July, and Speaker Nancy Pelosi says an unemployment insurance extension must be part of any new package. But GOP lawmakers and the Trump administration have opposed continuing a benefit they say could dissuade laid-off workers from reentering the job world. Read More…
Amid a national debate over bias and discrimination in the criminal justice system, Rep. Mark Takano, D-Calif., is pushing legislation that he says will level the playing field for criminal defendants whose lives may depend on the conclusions of forensic software that are entered as evidence in court. Read More…
Leahy to Barr: Is Roger Stone sentence commutation ‘a crime’?
Sen. Patrick J. Leahy wants the Department of Justice to review what led to the president’s decision to commute the sentence of former Trump campaign associate Roger Stone. Read More…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Tortilla Coast, Capitol Hill spot specializing in Tex-Mex and political intrigue, faces closure
The end of a Capitol Hill era, one marked by frozen margaritas and queso combos, is nigh. Tortilla Coast, the Tex-Mex restaurant that played host to staffers, interns and lawmakers and employed a future speaker of the House, is expected to close its doors by Sunday, July 26, co-owner Geoff Tracy told Heard on the Hill on Monday. Read More…
Domino effect: Washington football team’s name, statues in DC, in Capitol, face removal
As word came that Washington’s NFL franchise has played its final season with a name long considered a slur against Native Americans, that could also mean it is one step closer to bringing the team back to the District, D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton says. Read More…
Julián Castro plans to get out the immigrant vote in 2020
While Julián Castro’s run for president may have ended earlier this year, his work as a key, multifaceted purveyor of progressive politics in the 2020 election has only started gaining steam. Read More…
Appropriations gavel candidate pledges federal resources for minorities
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz promised Monday that if she becomes House Appropriations Committee chairwoman next year, she’ll establish an advisory panel to address systemic racism in federal funding. The Florida Democrat is one of at least three panel members campaigning to replace retiring Chairwoman Nita M. Lowey. 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
Trump’s waning power
DRIVING THE DAY
DOES PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP have any sway left?
— HE’S INTENT ON HOLDING a convention in Jacksonville, Fla., yet, as the NEW YORK TIMES catalogues today on its front page, a whole bunch of senior members of the Republican Party are saying they have no interest in going.
— HE HAS DEMANDED THAT schools reopen in person in the fall, but some of the nation’s largest school districts — including Los Angeles and San Diego — are staying closed. (BTW, as the NYT points out, this represents an about-face for conservatives, who have advocated local control for decades.)
— HE HAS SAID the country can’t lock down again, yet that’s what’s beginning to happen in California.
— HE HAS HAD one consistent ask in Covid relief negotiations: the payroll tax cut. Capitol Hill Republicans have had no interest in that.
WHADDYA SAY, MR. PRESIDENT? YOU DISAGREE WITH ME? … ANTHONY FAUCI will appear at a Georgetown event on Covid-19, moderated by MO ELLEITHEE and JOHN MONAHAN at 4 p.m. today. Tune in
NEWS … THE DCCC is reserving its second round of advertisements, and it’s heavy in TEXAS. The House Dem campaign committee has put another $2.8 million on the board: $845,500 in Albuquerque, N.M.; $424,500 in El Paso; $420,000 in Charleston, S.C.; $896,400 in Houston and $247,520 of Spanish ads in Houston — their first Spanish-language ad buy of the cycle.
— THE DCCC’S first round of reservations were $18.3 million, and included battleground states for the Senate and presidential. Expect the DCCC to buy in smaller chunks going forward so they can capitalize on what they see as an advantageous climate for Democrats.
DRIVING TODAY: THE ALABAMA SENATE PRIMARY. Check out the robocall TRUMP did for TOMMY TUBERVILLE: “He’s going to have a cold direct line into my office. … We had the Jeff Sessions thing, we gave it a shot, I had no idea it could be as bad as it was. But he had no clue. He just let it get away from him. It’s really a shame.” The 30-second robocall (h/t Elaina Plott, who is in Mobile)
— JAMES ARKIN and ALLY MUTNICK: “7 things to watch on Tuesday’s big primary day”
HOW THE PRESIDENT IS CAMPAIGNING THESE DAYS … TEXAS TRIBUNE: “Donald Trump makes last-minute pitches for Tony Gonzales, Ronny Jackson in Texas congressional runoffs,” by Patrick Svitek: “With hours until polls open, Trump joined tele-town halls for Tony Gonzales and Ronny Jackson, who are vying for the nominations to replace retiring Reps. Will Hurd, R-Helotes, and Mac Thornberry, R-Clarendon, respectively. Hurd’s seat is one of Democrats’ top pickup opportunities nationwide, while Thornberry’s is one of the reddest in the country — and gives Trump the opportunity to install a loyal ally in Jackson, the former White House doctor.”
VP MIKE PENCE will be in Louisiana. He’ll meet with Gov. JOHN BEL EDWARDS. The schedule, via The Advocate
Good Tuesday morning. JOIN US! We’ll be interviewing Austin, Texas, Mayor STEVE ADLER this morning at 9 a.m. in the latest Playbook Interview. Watch
NEW … MOVEON, SEIU and the AMERICAN FEDERATION OF TEACHERS are among the progressive and labor groups that have launched a $1 million weeklong ad buy to push senators for coronavirus relief funding ahead of their return to Washington. Care in Action, Community Change Action and For All 2021 are also among those who are targeting senators in battleground states to pass House Democrats’ latest package. The tagline: “It’s not too late to do the right thing. Save the economy. Pass the HEROES Act.” The effort includes digital, billboard and TV ads in Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Iowa, Maine, Montana, North Carolina and South Carolina.
SCOOP … SABRINA RODRÍGUEZ and DANIEL LIPPMAN: “U.S. plans to restrict Mexico, Canada border crossings until late August”: “The Trump administration is planning to extend restrictions barring non-essential travel across the Mexican and Canadian borders until at least late August as coronavirus cases and deaths continue to spike in the U.S. and Mexico, according to three people familiar with the plans.
“The U.S., in separate agreements with Mexico and Canada, will make a formal announcement before July 21 that non-essential travel will be restricted for at least another 30 days, the people said. ‘It’s an almost certainty,’ a senior administration official told POLITICO. It will be the fourth time border restrictions have been extended since the partial closure was first announced in March as a measure to stop the spread of the coronavirus.” POLITICO
WSJ: “Coronavirus Spending Pushes U.S. Budget Deficit to $3 Trillion for 12 Months Through June,” by Kate Davidson: “The U.S. budget deficit reached $3 trillion in the 12 months through June as stimulus spending soared and tax revenue plunged, putting the federal government on pace to register the largest annual deficit as a share of the economy since World War II.
“As a share of gross domestic product, the 12-month deficit came to 14% last month, compared with 10.1% in February 2010, when the U.S. was still recovering from the last recession. In June alone, the deficit widened to a monthly record of $864 billion, the Treasury Department said Monday—nearly as much as the gap for the entire previous fiscal year, which totaled $984 billion.”
CORONAVIRUS RAGING …
— MIAMI HERALD: “Faster COVID testing needed, DeSantis says, in talking at Jackson about rise in cases,” by Kirby Wilson: “Gov. Ron DeSantis acknowledged on Monday that Floridians are not getting their coronavirus test results fast enough. ‘There’s a need for faster results,’ DeSantis said at a news conference at Miami’s Jackson Memorial Hospital. ‘When people go through, a lot of times they’re not getting their results back for seven days. Obviously we want to improve that.’”
— NYT: “A Record 5.4 Million Americans Have Lost Health Insurance, Study Finds”: “The coronavirus pandemic stripped an estimated 5.4 million Americans of their health insurance between February and May, a stretch in which more adults became uninsured because of job losses than have ever lost coverage in a single year, according to a new analysis.
— LAT: “Newsom orders statewide reclosure of indoor dining, limits on church services, salons,” by Melody Gutierrez in Sacramento: “California is largely closing again amid a spike in COVID-19 cases across the state, as Gov. Gavin Newsom announced statewide restrictions Monday to again halt all indoor dining and close bars, zoos and museums.
“At the same time, most counties, including Los Angeles, San Bernardino, Orange and Riverside, will be forced to shutter gyms, houses of worship, hair salons, malls and other businesses under the new order, which is effective immediately and remains in effect indefinitely. In addition, offices with nonessential workers in those counties must close.”
ROGER STONE SPEAKS — “Roger Stone, in post-clemency interview, casts justice system as unfair,” by Matthew Choi: “Roger Stone’s got a bone to pick. The longtime confidant of President Donald Trump on Monday lamented his trial as unfair and led by partisan fiends during his first public appearance since the president commuted his sentence last week. Speaking with Fox News’ Sean Hannity, Stone named federal prosecutors and Judge Amy Berman Jackson, who presided over his case in federal court in D.C., as denying him a fair trial.” POLITICO
IVANKA TRUMP will participate in a virtual roundtable with TIM COOK and GINNI ROMETTY to discuss a new ad campaign for the Ad Council, “Find Something New,” at 11:30 a.m. The campaign urges “alternate pathways to professional success.”
KYLE CHENEY: “House to quickly revive legal effort to get Trump’s financial records”: “The House is planning to quickly revisit its effort to obtain President Donald Trump’s personal financial records, urging the Supreme Court on Monday night to take its final formal steps on the matter so lawmakers can reignite the issue in the lower courts.
“In a filing late Monday, the House’s top lawyer, Douglas Letter, urged the justices to immediately effectuate their July 9 ruling on the House’s subpoena for Trump’s records. Once the ruling is in force, the House can return to the U.S. District Court judge who initially heard the case and ask for renewed consideration.
“‘The Committees’ investigations are ongoing, remain urgent, and have been impeded by the lack of finality in these litigations, which were initiated in April 2019,’ Letter and other House attorneys wrote.” POLITICO
MICHELE BACHMANN’S defunct campaign account gave $10,000 to MICHAEL FLYNN’S defense fund.
TRUMP’S TUESDAY — The president will meet with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at 3 p.m. in the Oval Office.
PLAYBOOK READS
ALEX THOMPSON: “Newsroom or PAC? Liberal group muddies online information wars”: “Rep. Max Rose, one of the most vulnerable Democrats in Congress this November, couldn’t have written a better headline himself. ‘Rep. Max Rose Deploys With National Guard to Get Hospital Ready For Coronavirus Patients,’ read an April 17 article about the freshman congressman from New York. The article — boosted into circulation in New York by thousands of dollars in targeted Facebook ads — was mostly a rewrite of the congressman’s press release from the previous day. The same thing happened the next month: A May 28 press release touting coronavirus legislation of Rose’s quickly turned into an article with almost exactly the same headline as the release.
“The articles and Facebook ad dollars look like the efforts of a run-of-the-mill political group. But they are actually from a news outlet: CourierNewsroom.com, also known as Courier, which was created and funded by the Democratic-aligned digital organization Acronym. Courier has spent over $1.4 million on Facebook ads this election cycle, mostly to promote its flattering articles and videos about more than a dozen endangered House Democrats at the top of the Democratic Party’s priority list this November, according to Facebook’s political ad tracker. But because Courier is organized as a media outlet, it does not have to disclose its donors or the total money it spends promoting Democratic politicians.”
FOR YOUR RADAR — “China accuses U.S. of sowing discord in South China Sea,” by AP’s Ken Moritsugu in Beijing: “China on Tuesday described a U.S. rejection of its maritime claims in the South China Sea as completely unjustified and accused the U.S. of attempting to sow discord between China and the Southeast Asian countries with which it has territorial disputes.
“The Chinese Embassy in Washington said that a statement issued by U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo deliberately distorts the facts and disregards the efforts of China and the others to achieve peace and stability in the South China Sea.
“‘The United States is not a country directly involved in the disputes. However, it has kept interfering in the issue,’ the embassy said on its website. ‘Under the pretext of preserving stability, it is flexing muscles, stirring up tension and inciting confrontation in the region.’” AP
MAIN STREET NEWS — “‘I Can’t Keep Doing This:’ Small-Business Owners Are Giving Up,” by NYT’s Emily Flitter: “[T]he resurgence of the virus, especially in states such as Texas, Florida and California that had begun to reopen, has introduced a far darker reality for many small businesses: Their temporary closures might become permanent.
“Nearly 66,000 businesses have folded since March 1, according to data from Yelp, which provides a platform for local businesses to advertise their services and has been tracking announcements of closings posted on its site. From June 15 to June 29, the most recent period for which data is available, businesses were closing permanently at a higher rate than in the previous three months, Yelp found. During the same period, permanent closures increased by 3 percent overall, accounting for roughly 14 percent of total closures since March.
“Researchers at Harvard believe the rates of business closures are likely to be even higher. They estimated that nearly 110,000 small businesses across the country had decided to shut down permanently between early March and early May, based on data collected in weekly surveys by Alignable, a social media network for small-business owners.” NYT
PLAYBOOKERS
Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
MEDIAWATCH — Maria Cardona and Alice Stewart have a new podcast, “Hot Mics: From Left to Right,” in which the two friends and CNN commentators from different ideological backgrounds talk politics and culture. Apple Podcasts listing
TRANSITIONS — Christian Lee is joining Cornerstone Government Affairs’ national security team. He previously was a professional staff member for the Senate Appropriations Homeland Security Subcommittee, and is a retired Coast Guard captain. … Sery Kim is now assistant administrator for women’s business ownership at the SBA. She most recently was a corporate litigation associate at Scheef and Stone LLC, and is a Trump HHS alum.
WEDDING — Tommy Joyce, deputy assistant Energy secretary for global energy security and multilateral affairs and acting DAS for market development and energy innovation, and Katelyn Petroka, strategic comms specialist at Hogan Lovells and a CNN alum, got married at sunset recently on their sailboat “Southern Cross” on the Chesapeake. They met at a Toys for Tots holiday fundraiser in 2017. Pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Stacey Hutchinson, principal at Monument Advocacy, and Benji Hutchinson, VP of federal business at NEC, welcomed James Lincoln on Monday morning. He came in at 7 lbs, 12 oz and 19 3/4 inches, and joins big sister Cora. Pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Edda Collins Coleman, associate director of comms and government affairs at the Executive Leadership Council. A fun fact people might not know about her: “I secretly love fly-fishing! It’s calming, and being surrounded by nature is the best.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Matthew Shay, National Retail Federation president and CEO (h/t Mary McGinty) … Brent Bozell, Media Research Center president … ABC News’ Devin Dwyer … former New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez is 61 … Martha Coakley is 67 … James Capalino is 7-0 … The Guardian’s Daniel Strauss … Raytheon’s Mary Lee … James Davis … Google’s Brian Gregory … Rhonda Foxx … Ammon Simon … Mike Panetta, Beekeeper Group partner, is 49 … Julie Wood … Facebook’s Nkechi Nneji … POLITICO Europe’s Matthew Karnitschnig … Axios’ Caitlin Owens … WSJ’s Nicole Friedman … CNN’s Caroline Kelly and David Shortell … NYT’s Matina Stevis-Gridneff … Mike Casey, president of Tigercomm, is 56 …
… Eliana Johnson, Washington Free Beacon EIC … Dalton Dismukes … Ted Goodman is 29 … Jordan Sekulow is 38 … Elizabeth Bennett … Corey Solow … former Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-R.I.) is 53 … former Rep. Tom Latham (R-Iowa) is 72 … Laurily Epstein … Washington state Sen. David Frockt … Gail Ross … David Goodman … Kip Talley … Sarah Ruane … Elysia Sivak … POLITICO’s Dayton Potter and Mark Cavanagh … Warren Fried … Zeina Awad … Richard Seline is 61 … Kiernan Majerus-Collins … Nate Bermel … LinkedIn’s Dan Horowitz (h/t Jon Haber) … Heather Colburn (h/t Teresa Vilmain) … Jeffrey de Hart … Pam Dearden … Phil Rosenthal … Marggie Graves … Howard Lutnick is 59
Follow us on Twitter
AMERICAN MINUTE
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
|
CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
|
PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Change All the Names, Nuke All the Statues—Grievance Wusses Will Still Be Whining
Welcome to Grievance on Steroids
No doubt I will catch some grief for this one but that is kind of my role around here, is it not?
The grievance mob is picking up steam, using the Year of the Riot to claim more cultural victims. We’ll get into the philosophical discussion about all of this in a moment but, on a personal note, I find it rather exhausting just attempting to keep up with whom or whatever they are mad at during any given moment. At this point, I’m not even certain there are any statues left in America.
What we’ve witnessed in recent weeks is truly a descent into madness. Criminals are taking over cities with the backing of the elected officials who run those cities. Those same officials proudly abandoning their police forces to score points with a bunch of Marxists, then predictably seeing violent crime skyrocket overnight. We are supposed to believe that this is all being done in the name of delivering some long-overdue justice.
It’s all bunk.
The always-eloquent Thomas Sowell put it very well in a recent conversation with Mark Levin:
Right off the bat, Levin asked Sowell about the rioting that has gone on nightly in America since the murder of George Floyd at the hands of the Minneapolis police. “I’m regarded as pessimistic,” Sowell said, “but I was never pessimistic enough to believe that things would degenerate to the point where they are now, where adult human beings are talking about getting rid of the police … what is frightening is how many people in responsible positions are caving in to every demand that is made, repeating any kind of nonsense that you’re supposed to repeat. I do believe that we may well reach a point of no return. I hope, of course, that will never happen.”
Count me among the pessimists.
We’re not focusing on riots today but this is all tied together.
It’s only Tuesday and the grievance-mongers have been busy. They pulled off the seemingly impossible, making Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder back down after years of saying that he wouldn’t change the team’s name. Barely pausing to take a breath, the grievance mob then decided to go after the Texas Rangers.
That’s a rather ambitious Monday.
But wait, there’s more! Time ran a post yesterday titled “Don’t Stop at Statues. Demand a Reconsideration of Place Names Too.”
This grievance slope isn’t just slippery, they’ve now got a free army of people to keep covering it with Vaseline. We’ll be sliding down it forever at this rate.
I don’t care if people have hurt feelings. Everybody has hurt feelings at one time or another. The thing is, the lunatics that are becoming a bigger blight on America every day always have hurt feelings. They wake up aggrieved, and the day just becomes one long list of grievances that is updated hourly. Though it may seem impossible, there is an inexhaustible supply of grievances to keep them raging.
Back in the Occupy days, I kept saying and writing that the rage was the endgame for them. It’s basically the same now. They keep saying they want change, and I don’t doubt that they would like to affect some political change here and there but that won’t make them any less angry. There is nothing that will make them less angry simply because angry is what they want to be.
The grievance freaks will always find another grievance. They’re addicted to it. What’s disturbing about the last couple of months is the pace at which they’re finding new ones. As we have seen with the destruction of the statues, they are also not very discriminate about focusing their wrath.
It’s very aggravating that there are so many Republicans in Washington who don’t understand this. We’re fighting for the soul of America and we’ve got Republicans in Congress going on about statues as if they’re trying to get dates with Antifa. I wouldn’t be surprised to see Mitt Romney at the next statue-toppling. He and his ilk are forever convinced that, if they just give the grievance crowd one more concession, everything will be roses and puppies.
There is no telling how long we’re going to be subjected to this nonsense that’s largely being fueled by woke white people at the Washington Post and New York Times, but it will no doubt be awhile. We may truly have reached a point of no return. The inmates are most definitely running the asylum right now.
Yeah, yeah, I know…that’s offensive to crazy people.
Great Idea. Make Him Testify in Mandarin.
PJM Linktank
Updating Your MMR Vaccine Might Help Fight COVID. Here’s How.
Black Lives Matter Mural at Trump Tower Draws Angry Crowd
Lashing Out: China Targets Ted Cruz Amid Mounting Pressure Over COVID, Hong Kong, Uyghurs
VodkaPundit: HCQ Helps Contain COVID-19 Cases: New Evidence and a Major Retraction
AOC Tries to Explain New York Crime Spike While Ignoring the Deadly George Floyd Riots
Did Axios Just Help Mark Meadows Find a Leaker?
Ya think? Lifting Lockdowns Not the Culprit Behind New Surge in Coronavirus Cases, Doctor Says
Wokism Erases Native American Who Designed the Redskins Logo, and the Real Lady A
Washington Post: Now That We’ve Finished Off the Redskins, the Texas Rangers Must Go
Police Under Investigation for Traffic Safety Message That Offended Black Lives Matter Protesters
Heh. Uh-Oh: AOC’s Goya Boycott is Having a Massive Effect Across the Country
VIP
VIP Gold
‘Unredacted with Kurt Schlichter’: Why It Was Important for President Trump to Commute Roger Stone
The Kira Davis Show Ep.10: Back to School Blues
From the Mothership and Beyond
De Blasio’s Public Safety Plan Fails To Protect Anyone
McCloskeys Turn Down Offers For Free Rifles. Here’s What They Should Do Instead.
Gottlieb: Gun Control Groups’ Use Of PPP Funds An “Outrage”
Getting Your Carry License? You Could Be In For A Long Wait.
WATCH: Thugs Killed an Innocent One-Year-Old. Now the Family Has Questions for Black Lives Matter.
Here’s the Coronavirus Protocol One Teachers’ Union is Demanding Schools Implement this Fall
Should Have Seen It Coming: China Proposes Deal with Iran
TOWNHALL EXCLUSIVE: National Security Adviser Robert O’Brien on China, TikTok, Iran, and John Bolton
Kayleigh McEnany Honors Fallen Law Enforcement Officers
A Massachusetts Historical Site Will Change Its Name To Be More Inclusive
How Is 2020 RNC Voter Registration Going? The Chairwoman Explains
Ossoff Perpetuates Debunked Talking Point Claiming That Trump Administration ‘Silenced’ CDC Official
UPDATE: Los Angeles Unified Schools Bend the Knee to Teachers Union
Adam Carolla Brilliantly Breaks Down Self-Esteem, Free Speech, and Cancel Culture
More of this. Watch: Antifa Guy Finds Out the Hard Way He Opened the Wrong Motorist’s Door
Again, for the Win: Ricky Gervais Completely Demolishes Cancel Culture
Another Chicago Weekend Of Violence: 64 Shot And 13 Killed
Groundbreaking: Scientists Create An Air Filter That Kills The Coronavirus
Democrats To Double Down On Immigration Reform If Biden Wins
Here We Go Again: Houston Mayor Wants A Two-Week Shut Down
Unthinkable: Could Ghislaine Maxwell Get Bail?
The perfume makers that can’t smell a thing
Grant Imahara Dies: Former ‘MythBusters’ & ‘White Rabbit Project’ Host Was 49
The ‘Glee’ Cast Says Its Final Goodbyes To Naya Rivera
Smells Like Onion
The Kruiser Kabana
More taco trucks would cure all of this.
___
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.
WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Politics vs. Public Health
Plus, Poland’s nationalist-populist president wins re-election.
The Dispatch Staff | 1 hr | 2 |
Happy Tuesday! We didn’t know slow news days were still possible, but yesterday was one—we’ll get you up to speed in a jiffy.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- As of Monday night, 3,363,056 cases of COVID-19 have been reported in the United States (an increase of 60,361 from yesterday) and 135,605 deaths have been attributed to the virus (an increase of 429 from yesterday), according to the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, leading to a mortality rate among confirmed cases of 4 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 41,002,876 coronavirus tests conducted in the United States (720,700 conducted since yesterday), 8.2 percent have come back positive.
- California’s two largest public school districts, Los Angeles and San Diego, announced their schools will be online-only to begin the fall semester, adding they will “continue planning for a return to in-person learning during the 2020-21 academic year, as soon as public health conditions allow.” The move comes as a part of California’s broader rollback of reopening efforts, including Gov. Gavin Newsom’s reclosing of bars, restaurants, and movie theaters statewide, and gyms, barbers, and places of worship in the state’s most affected counties.
- Driven primarily by the CARES Act, the U.S. budget deficit hit $864 billion in June, an all-time high for this early in the year.
- Following widespread pressure and an internal review, the Washington Redskins announced Monday they will retire their name. The team reportedly has a new name in mind, but its announcement is being delayed by trademark issues.
Politics vs. Public Health
With the United States experiencing unprecedented surges in new coronavirus cases across the country, a public health vs. politics schism within the Trump administration is spilling out into the public. The president used to appear nightly alongside his administration’s coronavirus task force to update Americans on the latest developments in our COVID-19 response. Those briefings ended when the calendar flipped from April to May, and the administration’s messaging transitioned from “slowing the spread” to “opening up America again.”
To the delight of cable news producers and his own campaign staff alike, President Trump donned a mask over the weekend on a trip to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. But that very same day, White House officials began circulating a memo with talking points meant to discredit Dr. Anthony Fauci, the 79-year-old director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) who has served under six presidents. “Several White House officials are concerned about the number of times Dr. Fauci has been wrong on things,” a Trump administration aide anonymously told reporters. Trump aide Peter Navarro argued recently that Fauci “has been wrong about everything I have ever interacted with him on.” Informal Trump adviser Stephen Moore even bragged to the Daily Beast that he is working on a memo that will “go after Fauci” and show “how many times [he’s] been wrong during not just [this pandemic], but during his entire career.”
Fauci—who was at the White House yesterday but hasn’t met with President Trump since the first week of June—was wrong about a few key aspects of the novel coronavirus early on before we had much data, thanks in part to China’s obfuscation. “There’s no reason to be walking around with a mask,” he told 60 Minutes on March 8. Asked about these comments last month, Fauci admitted that “masks work,” and said his—and other Trump administration officials’—hesitancy to recommend them stemmed from a desire to ensure health care workers were able to secure as much personal protective equipment as possible. The White House memo also cited Fauci’s previous comments downplaying the seriousness of the virus (though he usually hedged his answer with a “right now” or “this could change”) and initial questioning of asymptomatic transmission (though he added he would “really like to see the data”).
Polish President Wins Re-election
Nationalist-populism is here to stay in Poland—at least for the next five years. President Andrzej Duda of the Law and Justice party (PiS) won re-election by a slim margin on Monday, defeating his more centrist opponent with 51.2 percent of the vote. Duda’s win solidifies the PiS’ hold on power until the next general election three years from now, allowing its populist agenda to continue apace.
Poles headed to the polls in droves; voter turnout was near its highest level since the fall of communism in Poland in 1989. The presidential election was Europe’s first since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic.
Duda claimed a preliminary victory on Sunday evening: “Winning the presidential election with 70 percent of turnout, it’s excellent news. I’m very moved.” His challenger—Warsaw Mayor Rafal Trzaskowski of the Civic Platform Party—did not concede the race until Monday afternoon.
Worth Your Time
- Yesterday’s episode of the Ezra Klein Show with Yascha Mounk emphasized how much more productive and fruitful actual conversation is than long back-and-forths over Twitter or email. Ezra and Yascha got into it on Twitter last week over the merits of the Harper’s Magazine open letter on free speech. But they decided to table the debate and have it on the podcast instead. They ended the conversation still disagreeing on a few key points, but not as many as either may have expected.
- If you—or people you know—are still unsure about the efficacy of masks in slowing COVID-19 transmission, this conversation with epidemiologist George Rutherford and infectious disease specialist Peter Chin-Hong is among the best things we’ve read on the subject. “In one case, a man flew from China to Toronto and subsequently tested positive for COVID-19. He had a dry cough and wore a mask on the flight, and all 25 people closest to him on the flight tested negative for COVID-19. In another case, in late May, two hair stylists in Missouri had close contact with 140 clients while sick with COVID-19. Everyone wore a mask and none of the clients tested positive.”
Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- Get yourself a podcast that does it all: Monday’s episode of Advisory Opinions features a discussion between Sarah and David on presidential campaign strategy, Trump’s pardon of Roger Stone, the theological and constitutional arguments related to the death penalty, and the tax-exempt status of academic institutions.
- Andrew writes today about the divergent fortunes of Anthony Fauci and Deborah Birx. Both shot to national prominence when the pandemic hit, but Fauci hasn’t briefed the president since June, while Birx is still directly involved in the federal COVID response. What gives? It’s got to do with loyalty.
- It’s been a rough year, one that doesn’t inspire much optimism. Yet that is exactly what Vivek Ramaswamy writes about on the site today. He looks at how Americans have come together during past conflicts and challenges, and remains hopeful that we can again, if we return to our values.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Sarah Isgur (@whignewtons), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Nate Hochman (@njhochman), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
Photograph by Alex Edelman/AFP/Getty Images.
2 |
LEGAL INSURRECTION
|
THE DAILY WIRE
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
DESERET NEWS
|
BRIGHT
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
AMERICAN THINKER
|
|
LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— President Trump’s position has been perilously weak for a month and a half. — With Joe Biden’s national lead around eight to 10 points, there is a possibility that he could compete for some usually Republican states. — We are moving seven states from Safe Republican to Likely Republican. — Our current ratings represent something of a hedge between a Trump comeback and Biden maintaining or expanding his large national lead. — We also are moving the Missouri gubernatorial race from Likely Republican to Leans Republican. Table 1: Crystal Ball Electoral College rating changes
Table 2: Crystal Ball gubernatorial rating change
Map 1: Crystal Ball Electoral College ratingsThe Electoral College fringe expandsWe are now about six weeks into a downturn in Donald Trump’s polling numbers. It’s worth thinking about the ramifications of this change if it endures. In the RealClearPolitics average of national approval polling, Trump went from about early December to late May without ever dipping below -10 in net approval (approval minus disapproval). He has spent every day since June 1 at or below -10 net approval, and he’s currently at about -15. Joe Biden’s national polling lead over Trump during May was in the four-to-six-point range. That was a decent lead, but not one that suggested Biden was a towering favorite, particularly because Trump was able to win in 2016 without winning the popular vote. But since early June, Biden’s lead has ballooned to the eight-to-10-point range. He has also enjoyed healthy leads in many polls of the most important swing states, like Florida, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. The bottom line here is that the nation is in a state of terrible crisis, and the public has, at least for now, judged the president’s responses to both coronavirus and protests of racial inequalities in policing to be lacking. In an ABC News/Ipsos poll released Friday, 67% of respondents disapproved of Trump’s handling of coronavirus and of race relations. 2020 is shaping up to be a bad year in American history, which Republican lobbyist Bruce Mehlman illustrates in his latest look at the political environment. It is not the kind of year when one wants to be an incumbent running for reelection, and a majority of the public appears to believe that this president is not meeting the moment. A few weeks into the public health crisis, we explored the possibility of Trump being the second iteration of Jimmy Carter, whose reelection bid fell apart among myriad crises in 1980. Since then, the Trump-as-Carter scenario has grown even more plausible. There is time for the situation to change — as we wrote a few weeks ago, we want to see where things stand after the conventions, around Labor Day. But Trump is extremely unlikely to win if the polls continue to look the way they do now. And if these numbers represent a new normal, we need to account for the possibility that this election won’t be particularly close, and that new states may come into play. In other words, if the national picture remains bleak for Trump, then the slippage he’s seen from earlier this year wouldn’t just be limited to a handful of swing states. Over the past few weeks, there have been some interesting little nuggets here and there about the map expanding into red turf. The very well-sourced New York Times trio of Maggie Haberman, Jonathan Martin, and Alexander Burns recently reported that internal Republican data showed Trump with only a small lead in Montana and trailing in Kansas, two states that Trump carried by about 20 points apiece in 2016 (both have competitive Senate races, too). Enterprising members of the #ElectionTwitter community spearheaded a fundraising campaign to poll under-polled states: Public Policy Polling, the Democratic pollster, stepped up and polled Alaska and Montana on their behalf, with the money raised going to charity. Trump was up 48%-45% in Alaska and 51%-42% in Montana. (The #ElectionTwitter polling project remains underway, and we have supported them and we encourage others to as well at their GoFundMe page.) Democratic pollster Garin-Hart-Yang had Biden up two points in Missouri, a 19-point Trump state; an earlier poll for Missouri Scout conducted by Remington Research, a GOP firm, had Trump up eight. On Monday, polling from Saint Louis University/YouGov had Trump up by a similar 50%-43% margin. A UtahPolicy.com/KUTV 2 News poll of Utah had Trump up just 44%-41% there in late May, although the pollster (Y2 Analytics) later re-weighted the poll by education, which suggested a lead for Trump more in the six-to-10-point range, depending on which weighting was used (the Y2 post includes a thoughtful discussion of education weighting, an important factor in polling and something that might have contributed to some Democratic bias in state polls in 2016). One other caveat comes from friend of the Crystal Ball Dan Guild, who has noticed that in the last three elections, some summer polling has seriously overstated eventual November Democratic performance in red states. That may be a factor now. But Trump’s position is weak enough in mid-July that we have to concede there are some signs of competitiveness in states that were not competitive in 2016. This sort of thing can happen when the overall election is tilted toward one side over the other, which is the state of play at the moment and the advantage Biden currently holds. If Trump were up by 10 nationally, we might be moving Safe Democratic states that Hillary Clinton won in the low double-digits, like Delaware and Oregon, into more competitive categories. More to the point, we continue to rate states like Colorado, New Mexico, and Virginia as Likely, not Safe, Democratic. That’s despite it being hard to imagine Trump carrying any of them, even if his position dramatically improves. So we’re moving seven Safe Republican states to Likely Republican: Alaska, Indiana, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, South Carolina, and Utah. Do we think Biden will win these states? Not really. In all likelihood, these red states are going to vote for Trump, and not just by a few points. But could one or more flip if Biden wins decisively in November? Possibly. Let’s remember: A “Likely” rating still means we see one side — in this case, the Republicans — clearly favored in a state. We just don’t feel 100% certain about these states in the event of a lopsided election. Our current electoral map represents something of a hedge between Trump cutting markedly into Biden’s lead versus Biden maintaining his current edge or even expanding it. In the former scenario, all of these states we’ve moved into Likely Republican would move back into the Safe Republican camp, and states like Michigan and Pennsylvania (which we rate as Leans Democratic) as well as Toss-ups like Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, and Wisconsin could all be on the razor’s edge. These six states remain the core battlegrounds that seem likeliest, collectively, to decide the election. In the latter scenario, where Biden continues to do very well, most or all of those core battleground states would be more like Leans Democratic (or even Likely, at least in some cases); Leans Republican states like Georgia, Iowa, Ohio, and Texas would be more like Toss-ups; and some of the states we’ve flagged in today’s update could be in play. As it stands now, our ratings account for both of these scenarios. We think we’ll get more clarity about which scenario is more likely following the conventions — whatever the conventions actually look like. Even with 2020’s scaled down, undramatic, and overshadowed conventions, voters and media see them as departure points into the general election. Casting a ballot is no longer just on the distant horizon. It’s a reality that will firm up people’s choices — and our ratings. P.S. Missouri governor rating changeWhile Missouri still seems very likely to vote Republican for president, a reduced margin could give Democrats a chance to truly compete against Gov. Mike Parson (R-MO). We’re moving the Missouri gubernatorial race from Likely Republican to Leans Republican. Parson is running for his first elected term as governor. He was elected as lieutenant governor in 2016, defeating former Rep. Russ Carnahan (D), scion of the famous Missouri political family, by about 11 points. He was elected separately from Eric Greitens (R), who won the gubernatorial race but had to resign about a year and a half into his term because of scandal. Parson, a longtime legislator before becoming lieutenant governor, has had a smoother time in office than his predecessor, who made very few allies in Jefferson City. Still, Parson is an unelected incumbent, and sometimes those incumbents don’t have the same kind of incumbency benefit that elected ones do. Polls have shown Parson ahead, although the most recent one, by Saint Louis University/YouGov, only had him up 41%-39% over state Auditor Nicole Galloway (D) — other polls have had Parson up by more, though, including the Democratic poll cited above that had Biden implausibly leading Trump by two points (Parson was up 47%-40% in that poll, conducted for Galloway’s campaign). Galloway won a full term as state auditor in 2018 after then-Gov. Jay Nixon (D) appointed her to replace Tom Schweich (R), who took his own life in 2015. Galloway is about the strongest candidate Democrats could have mustered in Missouri, a border state where Republicans have been ascendant over the past decade. Still, down-ballot Democrats are often able to perform better than their party’s presidential candidates in states like Missouri. In 2012, when Barack Obama lost Missouri by nine points, Democratic incumbents won both the gubernatorial and Senate races. In 2016, under the strain of Hillary Clinton’s 19-point statewide loss, Democrats lost the open governorship, although then-Missouri Secretary of State Jason Kander (D) came within three points of unseating Sen. Roy Blunt (R-MO). Perhaps if Clinton had been able to do a little bit better, Kander could have won. It may be that in some of these red states, Biden can improve Democratic presidential numbers to look more like 2012 than 2016 — in other words, losing by more like 10 instead of 20. That sort of improvement, if it happens, could have down-ballot consequences. Read the fine printLearn more about the Crystal Ball and find out how to contact us here. Sign up to receive Crystal Ball e-mails like this one delivered straight to your inbox. Use caution with Sabato’s Crystal Ball, and remember: “He who lives by the Crystal Ball ends up eating ground glass!” |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
© Copyright by the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia |
THE BLAZE
View this email in your browser
July 14, 2020 Trending now
How to entirely empty your bowels every morning – top surgeon explains how Sponsored
More from TheBlaze
Top House Republican predicts ‘people will die’ in imminent armed conflict with China
Listen live to Blaze Radio Tune in to the next generation of talk radio, featuring original content from hosts like Glenn Beck, Pat Gray, Stu Burguiere, Steve Deace and more!
One last thing … A militant in Portland, Oregon — apparently a woman — was caught on video punching an elderly man in the face while an accompanying left-wing mob was harassing and ganging up on him. What are the details? Photojournalist Alex Milan Tracy posted video of the attack on … Read more
You might like …
© 2020 Blaze Media LLC. All Rights Reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive emails from Blaze Media. Privacy Policy | Manage your preferences | Unsubscribe 8275 S. Eastern Ave, Ste 200-245 Las Vegas, Nevada, 89123, USA
|
THE FEDERALIST
|
NOQ REPORT
NOQ Report Daily |
- The one reason Christians cannot vote for Democrats
- #BlackLivesMatter is dead wrong on #DefundThePolice
- China is becoming increasingly assertive – security law in Hong Kong is just the latest example
- Prepare for the worst with a brave heart, guarded optimism, and militias
- Bipartisan coalition of lawmakers introduce legislation to restore Congressional War Powers
- Larry Elder is considering a run for governor of California
- 20,000 mail-in ballots in NY may be disqualified because of post office overload
- China and AI: What the world can learn and what it should be wary of
The one reason Christians cannot vote for Democrats
Posted: 14 Jul 2020 03:20 AM PDT The title of this chapter will be hated by both sides of the argument. Each side will focus on one word. Christians who vote for Democrats will wonder why I feel obliged to tell them they “cannot” vote for whomever they feel best serves them. Christians who do not vote for Democrats will ask why I believe there is “one” reason when they can list off dozens. I expect this chapter will draw plenty of scrutiny, counterarguments, and possibly even scorn. As an Evangelical Christian, I have many political, cultural, and religious reasons why I’ve never voted for a Democrat. I’m not a Republican by registry and there are many Republican lawmakers I truly do not respect. Invariably the candidates I end up supporting are aligned with the GOP based almost exclusively on a single reason within the realm of religion. Before I explain this reason, let’s discuss some of the other reasons Christians cite when voting for Republicans exclusively. Over the years I’ve heard reasons some Christians vote Democrat exclusively as well, but I won’t be covering those in-depth in this chapter. Instead, I’ll sum them up by saying reasons such as social justice, poverty, or reducing incarceration are generally flawed from a Biblical perspective. That’s not to say that Democrats do not claim to address poverty or any of these issues, but one needs only look at poverty levels in cities that have been under Democratic control for decades to understand why I’m skeptical of claims that Democrats handle it better. Clearly, they do not. The reasons I’m about to discuss are common ties between Evangelicals and Republicans. By no means am I suggesting that these reasons are not valid. All of them are very valid. But, all of them have flaws that prevent them from being irrefutable. Christians may make solid arguments to vote Republican to reduce crime and poverty, for example, but Democrat-voting Christians can also make Biblical arguments through their own reckonings. The purpose of pointing these out is not to negate their importance in any individual’s worldview. It’s important to realize that all of these can be argued against while the one indisputable reason for Christians to never vote Democrat is unambiguous. One final prelude, if I may. We must appreciate the difference between voting Republican and not voting Democrat. This is not a plea to vote straight-ticket GOP. Independents, Libertarians, Constitution Party members, and people with other affiliations should examine candidates closely before casting their votes. Some argue that voting 3rd-party or no party at all is a wasted vote. I disagree. But, one thing has been made clear to me over the past few years: A vote for a modern Democrat is a vote against Christianity’s future. We’ll get to the biggest reason at the end. But first, let’s discuss other arguments many Christians make. One of the most common reasons people cite for never voting for Democrats is the abortion issue. Over the last six decades we’ve seen the Democratic Party creep further down the path towards promotion of abortion. What was once supposed to be “safe, legal, and rare” has evolved into a form of birth control on-demand that leftists claim should be celebrated jubilantly. It’s becoming increasingly uncommon to find a pro-life Democratic lawmaker. They’ve either been converted to pro-choice or unceremoniously evicted. Some analysts say this is the biggest reason for the exodus from the party as there’s no longer room for pro-life Democrats in a party that embraces abortion at any time and in any form. Admittedly, I’ve cited this issue many times in the past as a huge reason to never vote Democrat. It’s not that I feel it’s the most important reason but it’s the easiest case to make, especially to Christians who are pro-life. The reason it really shouldn’t rank at the very top for Christians isn’t because it lacks importance. What could be more Biblical than preservation of life? This comes down to one assertion for me, that abortion is only partially a political issue. There are more productive ways to address abortion in the United States, most notably from a cultural perspective. I’ve seen pastors such as one of this book’s co-authors, Ken Peters, preaching outside of Planned Parenthood as their congregations sing. I’ve seen them hold signs and spend a day praying for parents entering an abortion clinic. And I’ve seen people emerge from these clinics with their babies still intact. That type of abortion activism is more effective today than votes for Republicans. As the left often says, people who want an abortion will find ways to do it even if they’re deemed illegal. The cultural battle over abortion is more powerful than the political one. What about the courts? If we get conservative lawmakers to pass abortion-restricting laws and appoint originalists up and down the bench to uphold them, doesn’t that mean voting Republican is the biggest issue? No. It might be the case if it were possible in 21st century America for Republicans to sustain control of the White House for long enough to clear out progressive judges, but that’s unrealistic. Two steps forward, one step back. One step forward, two steps back. The courts are unlikely to ever be a reliable method of fighting abortion. Republicans controlled the White House for all but four years during the stretch from 1969 to 1992. During that time, abortion laws were loosened and the judiciary was barely right-leaning. A stretch like that is unlikely for Republicans in the foreseeable future, and even if it could happen, there’s no guarantee the judiciary would be changed enough to make real headway against abortion. To do so would mean controlling the Senate as well during the stretch, and that’s even harder than controlling the White House. In short, abortion is an important Biblical consideration, but reliance on fighting the political battle is arguably the reason why we’re losing the cultural one. If we take abortion out of the equation, surely there are other Biblical reasons to hold the courts in high regard as reasons to vote Republicans. In fact, there are other reasons and they vary in range of importance. Again, our adherence to fighting political battles and not putting enough attention to fighting the cultural battles is why we haven’t been winning. Let’s look at gay marriage, for example. Leftist California voted against gay marriage a dozen years ago. But while conservatives and Christians were continuing the political battle, progressives fought a culture war over the issue. Our votes were systematically erased. Our political victory was reversed. The left’s effectiveness in promoting social progressivism allowed them to supersede our initial political victories. As a result, gay marriage went from being a state issue, as it should be, to a Supreme Court issue. And we lost. The argument could then be made that this makes for even more of a Biblical reason to vote against Democrats. But, let’s look at the aftermath of Obergefell v. Hodges. A year and a half following the decision to allow gay marriage, we had a Republican-controlled White House, House of Representatives, and Senate. We had a judiciary that was rapidly being shifted to the right. Yet through this time, there were no efforts made to address the issue because there were no options for doing so. Moreover, Republican leadership has had a “softening” on the issue ever since. With the battle over, they’ve generally chosen to abandon the fight. Once again, our focus on the political side of the culture war led to defeat and there are no pathways outside of spreading the Gospel and working harder against Cultural Marxism to reverse course. We are an LGBTQ-embracing nation and have been for half-a-decade. We will continue to be so unless a spiritual awakening happens in America. The courts cannot help us with this anymore. Another arena in which we continue to fight political battles is in education. Like the reasons previously mentioned, there are valid political battles to be waged. Additionally, it’s the cultural war that must be won if we’re going to see real change. For example, the theory of evolution is taught as fact while Biblical creationism is forbidden. Textbooks are being altered to indoctrinate our children into believing there are dozens of genders. Climate change is treated with religious vigor while religion is treated as myth. All the while, our children must run off to private settings if they want to pray. They’re fearful of being caught by their teachers, and in some cases, fearful of being caught by their peers. The principles taught in public schools today are fraught with anti-Biblical worldviews and bigotry towards those of the Judeo-Christian faiths. It takes a mighty feat of parenting and divine assistance for children in some schools to emerge without a solid belief that Christianity is the root of all evils in this world. There is solid backing for the above arguments to be important Biblical reasons to not vote for Democrats. We definitely can and should fight political battles over education, and it’s a good reason to never vote for Democrats from a Biblical perspective. But, there are better ways to protect our children. Homeschool and Christian private schools are far superior alternatives to public schools. Unfortunately, those options aren’t open to every family. We, as parents, are ultimately responsible for the education of our children even if they go to public school. It’s imperative that we take more than a passing interest. Don’t just ask them about their grades. Ask them what they were taught. Learn their curriculum in real time with them every evening. This won’t just protect our children from the indoctrination we’re often forced to allow them to endure. It will also help them do better in school. The political battle for more Biblical education is worthwhile, but let’s not stop with voting against Democrats. The most important education battle happens at home every night. The economic argument with Biblical backing to vote against Democrats is common but tricky. Lest we forget, Democrats have mastered the art of making promises about reducing crime and improving conditions for the poor. They sell these promises with surface-level policy proposals and appealing social giveaways. What’s more, they’re able to position socialistic principles in ways that can sound appealing to those suffering or nearly suffering from destitution. Don’t misunderstand me. Both parties are guilty of empty promises. Republicans have been invoking the middle class as a talking point for years. But, the Democrats use the impoverished and/or the minority groups to get them elected, and that’s where their concern and promises end. Period. Conservatives and Christians generally realize that these programs are problematic and antithetical to Biblical solutions. Meanwhile, welfare programs have become an easy pathway through which the left can make Biblical arguments to vote for Democrats. They’ll go so far as to claim Jesus Christ was a socialist, ignoring the fact that personal philanthropy and community engagement are conservative and Biblical. Government-operated socialism is not. Left-leaning churches, pastors, and congregants are often the most susceptible to the social program sales pitch by Democrats. This is arguably the biggest reason churches in low-income areas are often filled with spiritual vigor while maintaining adherence to Democratic doctrines. It makes sense, on the surface, that Democrats promising better conditions can be popular with Bible-believing communities. Republicans have done a poor job of explaining that government assistance leads to government dependency, or that enriching communities through private organizations and community-based programs yields opportunity for growth. The real social justice from a Biblical perspective is based on personally caring for those in need as Jesus and the disciples did, not by taking handouts from Caesar in exchange for permanent allegiance. At this point, some may have come to the conclusion that the biggest reason Christians should never vote for Democrats is because of their growing allegiance to anti-Biblical worldviews. The left’s embrace of Islam, atheism, and other ideologies is certainly a compelling reason to vote against Democrats, but it’s counterproductive to fight these things politically. In fact, doing so actually works against our greatest Biblical defense as Americans. These other ideologies are our enemies on multiple fronts. The spread of these ideologies can make it challenging to share the Gospel and expose more people to the truth of the Bible. One can easily make a correlation between the rise of these ideologies and the need to vote against Democrats in an effort to stifle them. In reality, the opposite is true. Before I explain why this is the case and conclude with the most important reason Christians should never vote for Democrats, it’s important to establish a couple of premises. First, the Biblical Christianity we need in America is not the lukewarm version that’s all-to-common today. We need a hearty, Bible-driven faith to spread if we are to survive as a nation. The second premise is best explained through an incident I had a few years ago. I vividly remember a meeting I had with an executive associated with a Christian movie project. They needed help with messaging but quickly rejected a Biblical one. I asked how we were supposed to deliver a Christian message without allowing it to be a Biblical message. He told me we don’t need to inject Christianity into people with a hypodermic needle, but instead we need to feed them “Flintstones Vitamin Christianity.” Needless to say, my vehement objection to their concept meant I did not work on the project. As Christians in the United States of America in the 21st century, we need all of the tools at our disposal to practice our faith, spread the Gospel, and fight the forces arrayed against us. There may have been a time in the past when “Flintstones Vitamin Christianity” was suitable, but in modern America it can do more harm than good. Today, we must take advantage of every opportunity presented to us, and to do that we need our constitutional protections. With those premises understood, maintaining our full First Amendment protection for Freedom of Religion is the indisputable reason to never vote for Democrats. When given majorities in legislature at any level, Democrats have shown they will compress our religious freedoms bit by bit, law by law. When they have control over executive power at any level, Democrats take advantage of it by enacting draconian mandates that reduce our ability to not only be Christians, but to engage in faith-based outreach. With a progressive judiciary brought forth by a Democratic White House and Senate, we have been and will continue to be told how we can and cannot live our lives as Christians. This is the dividing line that all Democratic lawmakers must cross if they intend to maintain their support. It’s why prayer is either anathema at official Democratic gatherings or exchanged for religious syncretism. As Christians, we can and should believe that our faith is right and therefore others are wrong. That may sound as sharp as a hypodermic needle, but it’s a necessary understanding in America today as interfaith dialogue has become all the rage. Even Christians who are more forgiving of such things need to understand that our best chance of enabling our faith to endure in this nation is through our freedom to express the truth. This is why our political battle is not against Islam, atheism, or other ideologies. From a purely political perspective, we must encourage freedom for all people to express their own religious beliefs so we can keep the same freedoms for ourselves. If we are, indeed, right with our Biblical beliefs, then freedom for all to engage in religious activities gives us the greatest opportunity to spread the Gospel and help others find the truth. The modern Democratic Party is so enamored with “protecting” people from being offended that they are engaged in an all-out war to quash expressions of our faith. Nothing is more offensive to the left than the tenets of Christianity. Nothing. Whether they empower other religions over Judeo-Christian faiths out of a sense of progressive “fairness” or eliminate religion altogether, a Democratic Party with enough power will separate, isolate, and eventually vanquish churches in America. One needs only look at the failed logic in their asinine COVID-19 mandates to see this is true. Many if not most Democratic lawmakers labeled anarcho-communist protests as essential while giving out violations to people who attended drive-in church. They said we couldn’t pray out loud or sing. They arrested pastors who dared invoke our First Amendment right to practice our religion without government interference. They barred us from praying over our recently deceased, yet kept liquor stores open. What we experienced through the coronavirus crisis is just a taste, a microcosm of what they would enact at all times across the nation if ever given enough power. Christians who vote for Democrats are hastening the effective end of our religion as we know it. The faithful will still worship at home, but our Biblical mandate is to spread the Word. Democratic Party leadership has evolved to the point they see active and vibrant Christianity in this nation as a threat to their power, so their nature emboldens them to suppress it. We’ve already seen this script played out time and again in nations throughout history and across the globe. Those who sailed to America for the first time did so for religious freedom. Thus, our founding fathers were certain to protect those liberties within the first amendment to the constitution they wrote. The separation of church and state was established initially to keep the state out of the church. However, over the centuries it morphed into a misguided protection for the state from the church. Today, Democrats are actively attempting to take it to the final step in which the church is separated from this nation altogether. Our dystopian future follows the removal of our religious liberties. That removal will start when Democrats are given enough power with the help of misled or masochistic Christians. I am honored to join people like Dr. Michael L. Brown, Denise McAllister, Mychal Massie, Greg Locke, Jeff Dornik, Cary Gordon, and others in writing “Church and State.” Please take a moment to pre-order the book. Use “JD” as the promo-code during checkout. God Bless.Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin 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 post The one reason Christians cannot vote for Democrats appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
#BlackLivesMatter is dead wrong on #DefundThePolice
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 11:00 PM PDT One of the key aspects that he is pushing for is more accountability for the criminal justice system. This is one of his biggest concerns as he’s calling for bail reform. The conversation also turned to a discussion about Black Lives Matter and their vilification of the the police in our country, claiming that they are systemically racist against minorities and especially the Black Community. In reality, however, we are seeing that the majority of the crime is happening in minority communities. Thus, when crime happens more often in a particular part of town, the police will focus more of their attention there. So, logically, if a part of town has more crime, it necessitates a more concentrated focus of the police. So, the claim that the police are systemically racist is flat out wrong! The push to defund the police is one that cannot go uncontested. As conservatives we need to push for law and order, not pure anarchy, as the left is pushing for. On one hand, the Democrats want to take away all of our guns, citing the argument that we can rely on the police to protect us. But then, those same people will claim that “all cops are bastards” and are pure evil, and pushing to completely abolish the police. This should just show you how idiotic the arguments from the left actually are. It’s time to protect our protectors. Do the police need accountability? Absolutely! That is why I am 100% for body cameras. With that said, this will allow the police to be protected when they are innocent and condemn them when they are in the wrong. We need to push for justice, and ending the police is not how to do that. I’m thankful for Ken Good and his understanding of the criminal justice, explaining what’s actually going on. There’s a lot of propaganda out there, so it takes talking to someone “in the know” to truly understand the truth. Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin 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 post #BlackLivesMatter is dead wrong on #DefundThePolice appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
China is becoming increasingly assertive – security law in Hong Kong is just the latest example
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 10:59 PM PDT Niki JP Alsford, University of Central Lancashire and Ed Griffith, University of Central Lancashire China’s enforcement of a new security law in Hong Kong marks the de facto end of the “one country, two systems” model that came into effect following the British handover in 1997. This has repercussions that go far beyond Hong Kong. The Sino-British Joint Declaration, signed by both China and the UK in 1984, paved the way for the handover. It states clearly that the territory shall enjoy “basic rights and freedom” and “a high degree of autonomy” for 50 years – until 2047. The treaty was lodged with the UN and so any breach of it is a breach of international law. Arguing that the new security law prematurely removed Hong Kong’s high degree of autonomy, the UK proposed a pathway for an estimated 3 million Hong Kongers to gain British citizenship. China was quick to assert that this decision breached the terms of its agreements with the UK.
The Chinese government has made no secret of its contempt for the joint declaration in the past, deriding it as nothing more than a simple historical document. However, a number of China’s other territorial claims could equally be brought into question using the very same logic. China’s sovereignty over Tibet, for example, is rooted in international law governing the succession of states, which China claims makes it the successor state to the Qing government that signed the Anglo-Chinese Convention of 1906. Claims by China that Taiwan should be “reunified” with the mainland rest partially on its interpretation of the 1951 San Francisco Peace Treaty, which stipulates that Japan is to renounce all right, title and claim to Formosa (Taiwan) and the Pescadores (Penghu). China’s claims over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands in the East China Sea – which are disputed between Japan, Taiwan and China – are also based on the 1943 Cairo and 1945 Potsdam declarations, which declared that Japan should return all of its occupied territory at the end of the war. All this means that China should be careful its neighbours don’t take such a dismissive approach to these historical treaties as it has done with the joint declaration. Flexing musclesBut something more nuanced is happening in China’s foreign policy towards both friends and rivals than just a rejection of a historical agreement. Recent deadly clashes along the border with India in the Himalayas, attempts to shift the parameters of the Senkaku/Diaoyu dispute with a near-continuous presence around the islands, and continuing moves to strengthen its control of the South China Sea all point to a conscious shift in China’s behaviour. What really matters, it would seem, is China’s relative power in the international system – both against its neighbours in the region, and the wider world. It’s likely that Chinese officials see this as a chance to shift the parameters of operations in a number of areas while the US is distracted domestically by COVID-19 and led by a non-internationalist president. Extradition disagreementsSince the new security law makes secession, subversion, terrorism and foreign intervention illegal in Hong Kong, it has certain spill-over effects. Not least is the issue of extradition, which is a controversial issue in Hong Kong. A proposed new extradition bill sparked mass protests in Hong Kong in June 2019 in which nearly 2 million people took to the streets, over fears people could be extradited to China.
The period of terror that is enveloping the island would mean that those commenting on issues of independence for Hong Kong run the risk of breaching the new security law outside of Hong Kong’s territory. It’s possible that even this article might fall foul of it. This brings into question the other extradition agreements that Hong Kong has with 30 countries, most of whom do not have similar arrangements with mainland China. Canada was the first to suspend its extradition treaty with Hong Kong in early July 2020 and Australia followed suit a few days later. These countries are right to respond to such a danger to their citizens and residents. Others with such agreements include the US, New Zealand, the UK, Germany, Singapore, Malaysia and India. It’s likely only a matter of time before others make similar decisions.
China’s actions in Hong Kong are symptomatic of its changing outlook and attitude to its neighbours. The days of taoguang yanghui – the approach taken to foreign policy under Deng Xiaoping in the late 1970s and 1980s that is frequently translated as “keeping a low profile” – are already long gone. However, a clear willingness to disregard international treaties in this way shows that China now has the confidence and courage to challenge the status quo of the international system. The global reaction indicates that this will not be left unanswered, laying the groundwork for an increasingly difficult relationship between China and other world powers. Niki JP Alsford, Professor in Asia Pacific Studies, Director of the Asia Pacific Studies Institutes, University of Central Lancashire and Ed Griffith, Principal Lecturer in Asia Pacific Studies, University of Central Lancashire This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin 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 post China is becoming increasingly assertive – security law in Hong Kong is just the latest example appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Prepare for the worst with a brave heart, guarded optimism, and militias
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 10:08 PM PDT Two Mikes with Dr Michael Scheuer and Col Mike is a podcast usually interviewing unique and special guests. This time, the Mikes simply have a conversation about Dr Mike’s latest blog post about the need to prepare for the worst. We are facing unprecedented times in our nation’s history, and, while we need to remain optimistic, we also have to face the reality that we are facing the potential for irreversible harm as we enter into this final phase of election season as we get closer to November 2020. Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin 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 post Prepare for the worst with a brave heart, guarded optimism, and militias appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Bipartisan coalition of lawmakers introduce legislation to restore Congressional War Powers
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 09:42 PM PDT Washington, D.C. – Congressman Tom Cole (OK-04) joined House Armed Services Committee Vice Chair Anthony G. Brown (MD-04) and Reps. Abigail Spanberger (VA-07), Don Bacon (NE-02), Jimmy Panetta (CA-20), Francis Rooney (FL-19), Jason Crow (CO-06), Ted Yoho (FL-03), Jared Golden (ME-02) and Rob Woodall (GA-07) in introducing bipartisan legislation to establish limits on the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF). The Limit on the Expansion of the Authorization for Use of Military Force Act, H.R. 7500, would reassert Congress’ constitutional role in the declaration of war. For nearly two decades, the 2001 AUMF passed in response to terrorist attacks on September 11 has been used by three presidents as the legal justification for the deployment of American servicemembers into new countries, each time without a debate or vote in Congress. Since the initial operations by the United States and our allies in Afghanistan, the 2001 AUMF has been used to authorize the use of force in at least 19 countries. This legislation would provide new guardrails on its use, limiting existing authorization to countries with ongoing hostilities. In the event a President acts to defend the United States in a country where we are not operating today, the executive branch would be required to seek Congressional approval under the War Powers Resolution of 1973. The President would retain other authorities, such as train and assist, to continue working with partners and allies to address terrorist threats to the United States. ‘As granted by the Constitution of the United States, the authority to declare war resides with Congress and Congress alone. This bill is neither an attempt to repeal the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force nor meant to be a statement on current or previous U.S. military actions,’ said Congressman Tom Cole. ‘The legislation brings back to Congress the authority to deploy forces and declare war. I am proud to join my colleagues in introducing this important legislation.’ ‘As someone who was deployed to Iraq, I understand the cost of war on a personal level. For too long, Congress has abdicated its Constitutional responsibilities. We will continue to counter ISIS, international terrorism other national security threats, but we cannot do so with a nearly two decades old authorization that doesn’t recognize the current landscape,’ said Congressman Anthony Brown. ‘We have a responsibility to the men and women who wear the uniform to ensure the authorized missions they execute are targeted, defined and achievable. This debate is long overdue.’ ‘After decades of prolonged military conflicts overseas with little congressional input, Congress needs to reclaim its authority under the U.S. Constitution to debate our military engagement abroad. Our current process is broken, and this bipartisan bill builds the foundation for reaffirming the Article I powers of Congress,’ said Congresswoman Abigail Spanberger. ‘Members of Congress – as the voices of those they represent – should expect to be held accountable for their votes to send U.S. servicemen and women off to war. This much-needed legislation would make sure the nearly 20-year-old AUMF does not continue to expand for the purposes of justifying deployments of U.S. servicemembers into new foreign countries. This legislation – supported equally by Democrats and Republicans – lays the foundation for replacing the 2001 AUMF while also protecting our ability to combat terrorism threats around the world and keep American families safe. Our discussions about the future of authorizations for military force must acknowledge the range of threats that exist. We will be in a better position to engage in these conversations after we pause the expansion of the 2001 AUMF – thus reducing Executive Branch reliance on an outdated authorization – and acknowledge that our existing authorizations are in desperate need of reforms.’ ‘It is long overdue that Congress assert its authority and responsibility for authorizing the use of military force overseas,’ said Congressman Don Bacon. ‘The Constitution is clear. If it’s important enough to put our men and women in harm’s way for months and years at a time, then members of Congress need to go on the record with a vote.’ Since 9/11, more than 2.7 million troops service members have served on 5.4 million deployments across the world- more than 700,000 of those who deployed did so multiple times. Federal spending on post-9/11 military action in Iraq, Afghanistan and other countries is estimated to exceed $6.4 trillion. In March 2019, the Department of Defense estimated that the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria have cost each US taxpayer more than $7,600. ‘The 2001 and 2002 AUMFs are outdated and do not meet the realities of today’s conflicts. Congress must reassert its constitutional duty to clearly define military action against adversaries and keep our country safe,’ said Congressman Jimmy Panetta. ‘Our bipartisan legislation will allow us to better meet our obligation to provide our service members with clear guidance, and also our constituents with the assurance that it’s the responsibility of Congress to determine and define the use of our military force around the world.’ ‘Placing the brave men and women of our military in harms way is one of the most difficult decisions that can be made by any government. It is the Constitutional duty of Congress to authorize use of force,’ said Congressman Francis Rooney. ‘We should not operate under a nearly two decade authorization that has been used by multiple administrations to justify action without renewed Congressional authorization.’ ‘Over the past few decades, Congress has slowly ceded power to the Executive, forfeiting our Constitutional duties and dodging accountability for the sake of expediency,’ said Congressman Rob Woodall. ‘Requiring Congress to approve a new authorization for the use of military force for any future engagement isn’t a partisan issue, but rather a Constitutional one. Our addressing it is long, long overdue.’ ‘The most solemn responsibility of Congress is the decision to send our men and women into harm’s way,’ said Congressman Jason Crow. ‘My military career started as an enlisted soldier and I will never forget being Private Crow as I make decisions in Washington. For too long, we’ve heard the same political argument that the time is not right to have the hard discussions about our foreign military involvements. This bill reasserts Congress’ constitutional authority over matters of war and diplomacy. We must prevent another endless war.’ ‘I’m honored to join my colleagues in a long-overdue bipartisan effort to establish limits on the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF). We need to have an updated AUMF that establishes clear constitutional boundaries and restores congressional oversight for U.S. military engagements,’ said Congressman Ted Yoho. ‘Our brave men and women in uniform are the finest fighting force in the world and will continue to face all threats to our national security. However, we must clearly define our goals and move away from waging never-ending wars anywhere in the world.’ ‘This country sends young men and women to war using an AUMF that was authorized almost twenty years ago and has not been revisited since. But the AUMF was never meant to be a permanent authorization for perpetual, global conflict,’ said Congressman Jared Golden. ‘I served under this AUMF in Afghanistan and I believe it’s well past time for Congress to reclaim its authority and fulfill its responsibility when sending our military into conflict.’ Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin 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 post Bipartisan coalition of lawmakers introduce legislation to restore Congressional War Powers appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Larry Elder is considering a run for governor of California
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 04:08 PM PDT Everybody knows that California has become one of the most progressive states in America, rivaling even New York in the Progressive Olympics. Governor Gavin Newsom has led the charge in authoritarian oppression over his state, demanding that everyone wear masks anytime they are in public, banning church services of more than 100 congregants, banning singing worship music during church services and pushing the state back to an indefinite shelter-in-place order. It’s time for a chance in leadership! The problem for us Conservative Californians is that there’s rarely a strong conservative choice for governor. Well, that may change if Larry Elder decides to jump into the ring! The beauty of having a candidate like Larry Elder is that he has that ability to expose the truth without fear of the left destroying him. Being fearless takes away the power from the opposition, and that is benefit of someone like Elder. Yesterday, Pastor Jack Hibbs announced that he and Dennis Prager are putting pressure on Larry Elder to run for Governor of California, as he’s already stated that he’s interested in running. If Larry jumps into the race, I will fully support and endorse him for Governor! Orange County schools may reopen in the fall without face masks or social distancingWhile Los Angeles County just announced that they will not be reopening school in August, Orange County took a step in the right direction by not only announcing that they would reopen for the new school year, but do so without face masks or social distancing measures being in place! While the left is up in arms over this decision, when you look at the statistics, minors very rarely contract COVID-19, and even more rarely have sever reactions to it. It’s important that when looking at the data, we are looking at the right numbers. We can’t make a decision about schools by looking at the overall numbers. We have to look at the data in relation to the age of the victims of COVID-19. In reality, half of all of the deaths in Orange County were from people in nursing homes, and very few, if any, were those under the age of 18. Thus, we shouldn’t shut down the education system because of a disease primarily focused on those that are older and in nursing homes. Kudos to Orange County on this decision!AOC explains why crime in NYC has increased… and she unknowingly blames Democrats! AOC is one of those politicians that is ideological before anything else, so reality to her is defined as what fits into her worldview. In many place across the country, including in New York City, crime is rising after the Black Lives Matter riots and the defunding of the police. In fact, statistics show that it’s not just crime that is rising, but violent crime. This is evidenced by the rioting and looting and the complete lack of respect for the office of the police. However, AOC has a completely different explanation… one that actually undermines one of her own principles! She explains that with people not being able to work, they are desperate to survive and are resorting to stealing bread from stores, which attributes to the rise in crime. While this is wholly unsubstantiated, she’s running with it. But does that surprise us that a Democrat politician is promoting an unverified claim? What she doesn’t realize is that this actually discredits her support of the shelter-in-place orders. If you notice, it’s the Democrats that are destroying everyone’s lives by keeping us all from going back to work. So if there’s anyone to blame for people not being able to pay rent, it’s politicians like AOC, Gavin Newsom and Bill de Blasio. Her argument is actually a justification of the Conservative argument for opening up our nation’s economy. Thank you AOC for helping us to make our point! Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin 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 post Larry Elder is considering a run for governor of California appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
20,000 mail-in ballots in NY may be disqualified because of post office overload
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 03:29 PM PDT A news story came out last week that didn’t get nearly the attention it deserved. The reason is obvious. It highlighted the risks and foible of mail-in balloting as 20,000 New York ballots may get tossed. It wasn’t because the ballots were bad. They weren’t late. The voters who cast the ballots were, we assume, eligible to vote. The reason they may get tossed is because the post offices were so overloaded, 20,000 ballots on election day weren’t properly postmarked. Some might say, “Oh, no worries. Just count them.” The problem with that notion is that it would break New York law. Others might say, “Oh, it’s just 20,000 and probably wouldn’t have affected the election.” To those who would say this, I would remind them that three states during the 2020 election were decided by fewer than 20,000 votes.
In the latest episode of Conservative Playbook, JD examines this incident and talks about the risk to our republic if mail-in balloting becomes ubiquitous. He’s not against absentee ballots for those who have valid reasons, but the coronavirus simply isn’t such a reason. If they can allow protesting, they can allow in-person ballots at the polls. Even if we dismiss voter fraud as a problem with mail-in balloting (and yes, it would be a huge problem), the sheer inefficacy of mass mail-in ballots is enough to throw the idea in the waste bin… where these 20K ballots may end up going. Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin 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 post 20,000 mail-in ballots in NY may be disqualified because of post office overload appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
China and AI: What the world can learn and what it should be wary of
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 12:50 PM PDT China announced in 2017 its ambition to become the world leader in artificial intelligence (AI) by 2030. While the US still leads in absolute terms, China appears to be making more rapid progress than either the US or the EU, and central and local government spending on AI in China is estimated to be in the tens of billions of dollars. The move has led – at least in the West – to warnings of a global AI arms race and concerns about the growing reach of China’s authoritarian surveillance state. But treating China as a “villain” in this way is both overly simplistic and potentially costly. While there are undoubtedly aspects of the Chinese government’s approach to AI that are highly concerning and rightly should be condemned, it’s important that this does not cloud all analysis of China’s AI innovation. The world needs to engage seriously with China’s AI development and take a closer look at what’s really going on. The story is complex and it’s important to highlight where China is making promising advances in useful AI applications and to challenge common misconceptions, as well as to caution against problematic uses. Nesta has explored the broad spectrum of AI activity in China – the good, the bad and the unexpected. The goodChina’s approach to AI development and implementation is fast-paced and pragmatic, oriented towards finding applications which can help solve real-world problems. Rapid progress is being made in the field of healthcare, for example, as China grapples with providing easy access to affordable and high-quality services for its ageing population. Applications include “AI doctor” chatbots, which help to connect communities in remote areas with experienced consultants via telemedicine; machine learning to speed up pharmaceutical research; and the use of deep learning for medical image processing, which can help with the early detection of cancer and other diseases. Since the outbreak of COVID-19, medical AI applications have surged as Chinese researchers and tech companies have rushed to try and combat the virus by speeding up screening, diagnosis and new drug development. AI tools used in Wuhan, China, to tackle COVID-19 – by helping accelerate CT scan diagnosis – are now being used in Italy and have been also offered to the NHS in the UK. The badBut there are also elements of China’s use of AI which are seriously concerning. Positive advances in practical AI applications which are benefiting citizens and society don’t detract from the fact that China’s authoritarian government is also using AI and citizens’ data in ways that violate privacy and civil liberties. Most disturbingly, reports and leaked documents have revealed the government’s use of facial recognition technologies to enable the surveillance and detention of Muslim ethnic minorities in China’s Xinjiang province. The emergence of opaque social governance systems which lack accountability mechanisms are also a cause for concern. In Shanghai’s “smart court” system, for example, AI-generated assessments are used to help with sentencing decisions. But it is difficult for defendants to assess the tool’s potential biases, the quality of the data and the soundness of the algorithm, making it hard for them to challenge the decisions made. China’s experience reminds us of the need for transparency and accountability when it comes to AI in public services. Systems must be designed and implemented in ways that are inclusive and protect citizens’ digital rights. The unexpectedCommentators have often interpreted the State Council’s 2017 Artificial Intelligence Development Plan as an indication that China’s AI mobilisation is a top-down, centrally planned strategy. But a closer look at the dynamics of China’s AI development reveals the importance of local government in implementing innovation policy. Municipal and provincial governments across China are establishing cross-sector partnerships with research institutions and tech companies to create local AI innovation ecosystems and drive rapid research and development. Beyond the thriving major cities of Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen, efforts to develop successful innovation hubs are also underway in other regions. A promising example is the city of Hangzhou, in Zhejiang Province, which has established an “AI Town”, clustering together the tech company Alibaba, Zhejiang University and local businesses to work collaboratively on AI development. China’s local ecosystem approach could offer interesting insights to policymakers in the UK aiming to boost research and innovation outside the capital and tackle longstanding regional economic imbalances. China’s accelerating AI innovation deserves the world’s full attention, but it is unhelpful to reduce all the many developments into a simplistic narrative about China as a threat or a villain. Observers outside China need to engage seriously with the debate and make more of an effort to understand – and learn from – the nuances of what’s really happening. Image via Shutterstock Hessy Elliott, Researcher, Nesta This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin 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 post China and AI: What the world can learn and what it should be wary of appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
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: 19 new items) |
- Hagia Sophia: From Ancient Church to Mosque
- Confronting Communist China, China Sanctions Conservatives, Churches Burned
- Trump Needs to Scale the Real Wall of 2020
- Romney Again Sides With Democrats To Blast Trump, This Time For Commuting Roger Stone’s Sentence
- On Jack Kemp’s Birthday, Remember How He Made America Great Again
- Who is in Control?
- Will the Federal Reserve Cause the Next Riots?
- China Abets American Totalitarianism
- Lori Lightfoot Either Doesn’t Understand Federal Law, or Hopes Nobody Else Does
- Schools
- Orange Man Good
- Dereliction of Duty
- Stimulate Job Growth, Not the Printing Press, In Next COVID Relief Package
- Jewish Federations are Promoting a Farrakhan Fan Who Told Jews to “Go F___ Themselves”
- Idiots at USA Today Apparently Ignorant of the American Eagle
- NFL Again Fumbles Opportunity to Unite America
- Soviet-Style Sacking of Statues by Sanctimonious Stalinists
- Bye Bye Deep State Republicans, Hello New Biden-Pelosi-Schumer Democrats
- Are We In The First Days Of A Lawless Era?
Hagia Sophia: From Ancient Church to Mosque
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 10:15 PM PDT by Lela Gilbert: On July 10, a Turkish court announced its decision to permit President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s regime to convert the ancient Christian church Hagia Sophia — the Church of the Holy Wisdom — into a mosque. An outcry from around the world greeted the news. But within an hour, Erdogan signed an official declaration, stating that the conversion of Hagia Sophia to a Muslim place of worship is a fait accompli. The revered Christian historical site has served as a museum since the overthrow of the Ottoman Empire following WWI, and the subsequent secular Turkish presidency of Kemal Ataturk. The magnificent building — an architectural marvel — contains some of the most beautiful Christian frescos and mosaics in the world (including the one above). Hagia Sophia remains the most popular tourist site in Turkey and is regularly visited by millions of Christian pilgrims. The existing church, located in the heart of Istanbul, is a truly sacred space for Christians worldwide. It stands intact as one the most ancient artifacts of early Christian history: Today’s Hagia Sophia was completed and inaugurated in by Emperor Justinian the Great in 537; the magnificent mosaics — some of the finest in the world — were completed later in the sixth century. It is for both historic and sacred reasons that voices are protesting the Islamization of the holy site. On July 10, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) decried the declaration that the ancient church would be converted into a mosque. USCIRF Vice Chair Tony Perkins said: Turkey’s Hurriyet Daily News reported: Putin proudly — perhaps even pretentiously — belongs to the Russian Orthodox church, and represents it globally. And Hagia Sophia has great significance to the Russian Orthodox world community. In fact, the most important Russian Orthodox voice in the world, Patriarch Kyrill, was quoted in The Moscow Times stating that he is “deeply concerned” by Turkey’s moves, describing Hagia Sophia as “one of the greatest monuments of Christian culture…” “In particular, and according to a statement issued by the Kremlin, Vladimir Putin drew the attention of Recep Tayyip Erdogan to ‘the significant social impact caused in Russia regarding the decision to change the status of Hagia Sophia in Constantinople.'” Earlier Russian Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Vershinin had said, “You know that this issue has caused a public outcry in our country and beyond.” But to make matters worse, it seems that Erdogan isn’t content with this latest Islamist move. The New Arab news site, along with the Jerusalem Post, reports that Turkey’s president has also vowed to “liberate Al-Aqsa mosque” from Israel. He made this statement just moments after his controversial decision to transform the Hagia Sophia from a museum into a mosque was announced. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said (in Arabic), “The resurrection of Hagia Sophia is the footsteps of the will of Muslims across the world to come…the resurrection of Hagia Sophia is the reignition of the fire of hope of Muslims and all oppressed, wrong, downtrodden and exploited.” An Arabic translation of the statement suggests Turkey’s Hagia Sophia move is part of the “return of freedom to Al-Aqsa” from Israel. The decision to Islamize Hagia Sophia, and Erdogan’s subsequent declared “return to freedom” of Al Aqsa Mosque — which stands in the heart of Jerusalem on the biblical Temple Mount — expose even more starkly Erdogan’s triumphalist pan-Islamist vision, as well as his loathing for Israel. Will international reactions — including Russian distress, Israeli dismay, and American disgust — somehow lead to the rejection of Erdogan’s fantasy of a neo-Ottoman Empire? Or will the world once again turn a blind eye to the Turkish strongman’s insatiable ambitions? Time will tell. Tags: Lela Gilbert, Family Research Council, Hagia Sophia, From Ancient Church, to Mosque To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Confronting Communist China, China Sanctions Conservatives, Churches Burned
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 09:23 PM PDT
by Gary Bauer: Confronting Communist China She knew then that there was human-to-human transmission and that the virus presented a serious threat of becoming an uncontrollable pandemic. But her superiors warned her to keep quiet or risk being “disappeared.” As you may recall, Chinese authorities were telling the World Health Organization (WHO) that the coronavirus was not contagious to humans. That was false and they knew it. As Dr. Yan continued to watch the lies coming out of Beijing and the WHO, she decided to flee Hong Kong in order to tell the truth about what she knew. Her husband refused to leave, warning Yan that Chinese authorities “will kill all of us.” Since this outbreak began, President Trump was quick to lay the blame squarely where it belonged – on the Chinese Communist Party. But Joe Biden and the left made excuses for China and accused the president of trying to deflect responsibility. We may soon learn that the president was right while Biden and his media allies were wrong. According to former White House adviser Steve Bannon, more Chinese whistleblowers are coming forward, including some from the epicenter of the outbreak – the Wuhan Institute of Virology. “They are not talking to the media yet, but there are people out of the Wuhan lab and other labs that have come to the West and are turning over evidence of the culpability of the Chinese Communist Party,” Bannon said. “I think people are going to be shocked.” The Chinese Communist Party has repeatedly lied to the world. It tried to corner the market on vital medical supplies and sent defective supplies to other countries. Beijing’s communist bosses have hundreds of thousands of deaths on their hands as a result. China Sanctions Conservatives For these and other reasons, I and my fellow commissioners on the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom are also urging the Trump Administration to boycott the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. Today, China responded by imposing sanctions on leading U.S. conservatives, including Senators Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio, Rep. Chris Smith and Ambassador At Large for International Religious Freedom Sam Brownback. While it’s not immediately clear what the Chinese sanctions entail, presumably Cruz, Rubio, Smith and Brownback would be denied visas if they attempted to travel to China or Hong Kong. It’s telling that no progressive Democrats were targeted by Beijing. Churches Burned
There’s a phenomenon in the news industry called spiking. It’s when a newsworthy story is withheld and not reported, often for political reasons. And predictably, these church fires were barely mentioned by the national media. What do you think you’d be hearing about if three mosques had burned under suspicious circumstances? It would dominate every newscast and appear on the front page of every national paper. How do you explain the scant coverage of three churches burning in one weekend? Investigative reporters should be asking whether the church fires have anything to do with recent protests against Christian monuments in recent weeks. The Saint Gabriel Mission that burned in California was founded by Junipero Serra, a Franciscan priest whose statue was recently torn down by radical activists who claim he was a colonialist. I hope investigators take each of these cases seriously. But there are two things we all can do in the wake of these fires. We can pray for fellow believers to be safe. And we can approach our religious leaders and ask them what their plans are to defend not only our houses of worship but also our religious freedom in an increasingly hostile society. The Carnage Continues Meanwhile, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio is working hard to make sure “Black Lives Matter” is painted outside of Trump Tower and all large events but BLM protests are banned. How’s that for progressive priorities?! By the way, more than 500 of the NYPD’s finest have filed for retirement since the end of May – a 175% increase over the same time last year. It’s a similar story in Minneapolis, where approximately 20% of the city’s police force has taken initial steps toward retirement. As one commentator recently put it, “We don’t have to defund the police. We just have to demoralize them.” Sadly, two police officers were ambushed and murdered Saturday in McAllen, Texas. When the 18 year-old daughter of Officer Ismael Chavez posted a tribute to her father, she was ambushed online by hate-filled trolls who no doubt consider themselves quite progressive. Unfortunately, as law and order wanes, it’s low-income minority communities that will suffer the most. Those who refuse to stand with the police are putting black and Hispanic lives at risk. The Goya “Buycott” Last week, Unanue attended a White House Rose Garden event promoting President Trump’s Hispanic Prosperity Initiative. As the CEO of the nation’s largest Hispanic food company, it was only appropriate for him to be there. Unanue has also participated in White House events hosted by President Obama. But now the left is trying to destroy Goya foods with a massive boycott because Unanue had the audacity to say nice things about President Trump. He’s also refusing to apologize, accusing the left of “suppressing free speech.” In response to the left’s boycott, conservatives are rallying to Goya with a “buycott.” In some cases, they are purchasing Goya products and donating them to local foodbanks. By the way, Unanue has donated millions of pounds of food during the pandemic and other natural disasters. But the left’s “cancel culture” wants to destroy this generous American company, no matter who gets hurt in the process, proving yet again what a threat the totalitarian progressive movement truly is. Tags: Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Confronting Communist China, China Sanctions Conservatives, Churches Burned 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 Needs to Scale the Real Wall of 2020
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 08:45 PM PDT
by Victor Davis Hanson: Donald Trump is trying to break through a 2020 wall. By January 2019, after over three years of failed efforts to impeach him, sue him, indict him, impoverish him, and destroy him, the Left had failed. The economy was booming. Trump’s tweets were mostly bragging about his accomplishments. And the Left was dumbfounded that both impeachment and Mueller, in Nietzschean fashion, had only made Trump stronger. Then came an unexpected trifecta catastrophe—plague, a quarantine-induced recession, and a leftist cultural revolution in the streets. Suddenly, the Left saw all of that as a gift that might succeed where its own self-constructed melodramas had failed. By late May, Trump’s polls had dived. His enemies declared this time he was really, actually, truly finished. Never-Trumpers hit the media to boast they were finally redeemed. The discredited pollsters of 2016 reemerged, this time even convincing once-burned, never-again Las Vegas bookies that Trump was toast. Leftists, depressed over the progressive implosion in the Democratic primaries, now rebranded Joe Biden as a useful septuagenarian. He could carry them to victory before being pushed aside. Biden was put on ice, a virtual prisoner of the Democratic establishment, who gave him teleprompted messages and pre-canned interviews to stumble through on Skype. “Keep silent, keep hidden,” was the motto of Biden’s keepers. Trump railed. He fumed. As a furious Achilles, he tweeted about the unfairness of it all—how he had defeated concocted attacks, but suddenly a virus from his nemesis China had unleashed sheer madness, with him as its target. To get back on track, Trump almost alone became the defender of tradition under assault, of security, and safety. He deplored the statue toppling, the madness of cancel culture, the racial obsessions of the Black Lives Matter/Antifa cultural revolution. He praised America’s goodness and reminded the country it was good without having to be perfect. And still, the Left hobbled him. In truth, the media, the universities, and the Left by weaponizing plague, lockdown and riot had found a winning strategy. The mere threat of being called a “racist” in such a Reign of Terror climate could win over unlikely allies, abettors, and appeasers. Corporate America, the retired and serving four-star officer class, local and state government apparatchiks, and many terrified Republican politicians and pundits (hoping to be dismembered last by leftist wolverines) began pledging their allegiance to the Left or staying mum. In Hollywood, directors promised to begin calibrating their casts by race, or as the unabashed racialist director Jordan Peele recently put it, “I don’t see myself casting a white dude as the lead in my movie. Not that I don’t like white dudes. But I’ve seen that movie before.” According to this logic, I suppose a Latino NFL coach one day could say something similar, “I don’t see myself casting a black dude as the lead on my team. Not that I don’t like black dudes. But I’ve seen that team before.” Suddenly, American CEOs shined the sneakers of rappers, on video no less. There were to be “black” and “white” national anthems played at NFL games. “Diversity training” would be rebooted as segregated white reeducation sessions in full Maoist style. In New York, all protests were dangerous to public health, except those of Black Lives Matter, as if the virus was political in its targeting. The more Trump was bleeding out from a thousand such nicks, the more his enemies marshaled for the kill, and the more his political supporters hedged their bets. What then was Trump to do? Three things. They will not topple statues, like frenzied Taliban, in the dead of night. They will not reduce their rich history and traditions to “racism.” And they will not embrace McCarthyism and destroy lives and careers. But they will protect the Bill of Rights. They will honor dead Americans who bequeathed this current lucky generation the freest, the most secure, and the most prosperous nation in history. He might also remind the country that the United States is the beacon of freedom and anti-racism. Try naturalizing as a black citizen in China or South Korea. Try to become a white Christian citizen of Pakistan. Try living as a Catholic Latino in Saudi Arabia. Try opening a private roadside canteen in Cuba or Venezuela. Try founding a Jewish or Buddhist temple or evangelical church in Iran or Turkey. Try dealing with the police in Somalia or Sudan. Try rallying against illegal immigration, radical Islam, the European Union, or wind and solar power in Germany. Given China’s culpability, he is justified in reminding the country that his lone voice was prescient in warning of the multifarious dangers emanating from the Chinese Communist Party. He did deregulate and expand our energy resources. All that by 2021 will help restore prosperity. But that is now, unfortunately, ancient history for a terrified public assuming a fetal position in the face of a public health threat. The swing voters, independents, and purple-staters are framing their 2020 choice in the stark terms of who will “make it all go away.” They want a magical end to the virus, the quarantines, the violence, the hate, and the division. And at this point, they want near-divine interventions to do all that and more. But in November, less than four months from now, rightly or wrongly, they will see their choices both rationally and emotionally. For now, some swing voters are in paralyzed despair. They believe if BLM, Antifa, the media, the Left, the universities, the corporations, the military, Silicon Valley, and Wall Street just get Joe Biden, perhaps they will put an end to the furor. Perhaps the anarchy and chaos will just go away if Trump does too. The left-wing victors, in theory, could be magnanimous and their frenzy was just over Trump, not over America itself. Of course, not all swing voters are not so dumb. They rightly suspect that eventually there will be a terrible price to pay for such a superficial calm. But right now, in the dead of contagion and lockdown, with “racists!” under every bed, they are willing to give in to surrender and win the pseudo-calm of cultural defeat. About half of swing voters, however, remain defiant. They want no more apologies; in lieu of just another defense of America, they want a plan to go forward and make it even more prosperous and secure. To win these swing-state voters, Trump needs to offer a blueprint for 2020 that builds upon his proven 2016 economic restoration. But he must address the causes of the current turmoil in terms of solutions to many of the root causes of the current chaos. First, Trump, the builder, can outline a renaissance effort to reconfigure infrastructure, especially in light of the failed high-density, mass transit, high-rise progressive model that proved a feeding trough for the contagion—and will again when the next Chinese virus arrives. A far better alternative is to diversify our demography and to reboot smaller cities and towns, along with reconnecting to rural living. America’s small towns are underpopulated, while big cities of plague, protests, and panic are overpopulated, overpriced, and over-popularized. We could start by ensuring rural spaces high-speed internet (still unavailable as I can attest in the rural center of supposedly high-tech California), a repair of our crumbling interstate freeway system, and completion of the long-planned highways, reservoirs, bridges and transmission lines that were canceled over the last 50 years in the elite green-era madness of “small is beautiful.” The crisis of the inner city is not just the erosion of the black family, high crime, fatherless children, dismal schools, cynically concentrated abortion clinics, racism, and tribalism, but the old nemesis of segregation. Black families should have the alternative of moving out of Chicago or Baltimore into smaller towns and the countryside, where race far more easily becomes incidental, not essential, to one’s persona. Second, he needs to create a task force to deal with the next epidemic—and we can be sure that there will be one, given China’s realization of how easily it went from global goat responsible for the veritable murder of hundreds of thousands, to an unrepentant and terrifying bully who might do it again unless concessions are made. Such a plan would entail a national board of medical experts including front-line doctors who do not work for government; a national stockpile of protective equipment and medicines; a graduated plan of quarantine, with red/yellow/green phases known to the public in advance; and national standards that define viral lethality, define cases of infection, and evaluate dispassionately possible treatments. Third, of course, people need liquidity now. And the mega-deficits for the present have staved off depression. But the public is terrified of the aggregate debt that is now nearing $30 trillion. It is serviceable only by perennially zero-interest rates that themselves warp the economy. Trump could dust off the recommendations of the now old and forgotten Simpson-Bowles commission, update them, and remind Americans that a restored economy, not a depression, will soon be the time to control spending and avoid financial Armageddon. Fourth, in some sense, higher education fueled this entire frenzied refutation of all that is good about America—the attacks on its founders, its history, icons, music, and culture. The quarantine pulled away the curtain of campus overcharging and showed the public that tele-teaching does not require a vast overhead of counselors, facilitators, and busybodies. The ways universities treat guest lecturers, use star-chamber proceedings against their own students, and stifle free expression explain much of the present street violence and cancel culture. Constitutional protections were under relentless assault for a half-century by a leisured and exempt class of professors and administrators who fed venom to an indebted and now embittered generation of lower-middle-class youth, who lack all the material opportunities of those who radicalized them. Large endowments over a specified size should have their interest and stock income taxed. The federal government should no longer guarantee student loans, but shift their bonding to vocational schools, where training is quicker, and will lead to a sustainable wage. The argument for a well-rounded liberal education for half the country’s youth was the university’s selling point, but when it junked that idea and replaced it with indoctrination, so went any obligation of the government and people to subsidize their own extinction. Teaching credentials and the school of education should have no monopoly on K-12 education; master’s degrees in academic subjects should also certify teachers. Federal aid to higher education should be predicated on guaranteed campus adherence to the Bill of Rights. Fifth, the ghost of Joe Biden: Trump need not be cruel but remind the country that Joe Biden is not really a candidate. He is a wraith, a specter. Trump must remind America he is not running any more against even the facsimile of Biden, but rather against an entire socialist cultural revolution—a pirate ship with Joe Biden no more than its carved wooden figurehead. In truth, he needs to eschew “I” and substitute “we.” A record low percent black unemployment rate? That translated into job seekers having leverage over employers and with it dignity and value. Gas prices falling due to expanded oil production? That means the minimum wage worker can afford her commute. Returning industry? That means more clout, honor, and a good living for an unemployed middle-aged worker in Ohio and Michigan, and less fuel for the Chinese Communist Party. Tweeting cannot be about the past, but only the present and future. Trolls, washed-up celebrities, know-nothing pampered athletes, and hack leftists don’t deserve mention in the campaign’s final 100 days. Ignore them all and focus on Restoration, 2021—and how the president has a detailed plan to focus on all classes and races, while reminding us of what we owe the dead and all that they have given us. Tags: Victor Davis Hanson, American Greatness, Trump Needs to, Scale the Real Wall, of 2020 To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Romney Again Sides With Democrats To Blast Trump, This Time For Commuting Roger Stone’s Sentence
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 08:17 PM PDT
by GOPUSA News via the Boston Herald: Mitt Romney is slamming President Trump for commuting the sentence of longtime confidant Roger Stone, the Republican U.S. Senator joining the chorus of Democrats denouncing the decision. “Unprecedented, historic corruption: an American president commutes the sentence of a person convicted by a jury of lying to shield that very president,” the former Massachusetts governor and current Utah pol tweeted Saturday in a blistering missive that garnered him some social media plaudits. Trump’s action came just days before the 67-year-old Stone was set to report to federal prison Tuesday to serve out a 40-month sentence. Stone was found guilty in February of lying to Congress, witness tampering and obstructing the House investigation into whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russia to win the 2016 election. Not long after Trump commuted his sentence, Stone told the Herald, “I live to fight another day.” Trump tweeted Saturday morning, “Roger Stone was targeted by an illegal Witch Hunt that never should have taken place. It is the other side that are criminals, including Biden and Obama, who spied on my campaign — AND GOT CAUGHT!”
Romney, a frequent critic of Trump, disagreed, as did a host of Democrats, including many in the Massachusetts delegation. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi blasted Trump’s move as “an act of staggering corruption.” Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez questioned, “Is there any power Trump won’t abuse?” Trump’s Democratic foe in the general election, former Vice President Joe Biden, tweeted, “I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: Donald Trump is the most corrupt president in modern American history. Every day that he remains in office, he further threatens the future of our democracy.” U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a potential Biden running mate, slammed Trump as a president who “commits crimes and pardons guys who commit crimes for him,” while also Stone’s commuted sentence as fodder to promote electing Biden. U.S. Sen. Edward Markey and his primary challenger U.S. Rep. Joseph Kennedy III both derided Trump’s decision, as did U.S. Reps. Richard Neal, Lori Trahan and Ayanna Pressley, the latter of whom called it “despicable.” Herald wire services contributed to this report. Tags: GOPUSA, Romney, Again Sides With Democrats, To Blast Trump, This Time, For Commuting Roger Stone’s Sentence To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
On Jack Kemp’s Birthday, Remember How He Made America Great Again
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 08:02 PM PDT
by Ralph Benko: July 13 is the anniversary of the birth of the late, great, Jack Kemp. Kemp, half-forgotten, was one of the most consequential figures of the 20th century. His birthday is a moment for valuable recollection. Kemp dragged America out of a misery index that makes today’s look puny and short-lived by comparison. (So far.) America, thanks to its political, economic and academic Establishment, had to be dragged into prosperity kicking and screaming. Memory is short, especially in politics. As Aldous Huxley once observed, “That men do not learn very much from the lessons of history is the most important of all the lessons history has to teach.” Let’s give our current batch of leaders a brief refresher course on how Kemp made America great again. In High and Far Off Times, Oh Best Beloved, meaning the 1970’s, the economy was in horrendous shape. The Dow Jones was bumping along around 1,000. Less than four percent of where it is today. What happened? Inflation was soaring. Prosperity was withering. Lyndon (“Guns and Butter”) Johnson, Richard (“I am not a crook”) Nixon, Gerald (“I am a Ford, not a Lincoln”) Ford and Jimmy (“I cannot guarantee that our joint effort will succeed.”) Carter bequeathed us that torment. The conventional wisdom then was to raise taxes and sink the dollar. Prof. Robert Mundell and Dr. Arthur B. Laffer channeled by flamboyant journalist Jude Wanniski taught an inquisitive Kemp that the solution to stagflation lay in stabilizing the dollar and cutting tax rates. In that order. Mundell later received the Nobel Prize in economics, Laffer the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Kemp, a former champion quarterback, modestly described himself as a “phys ed major from Occidental College.” Then a junior Congressman, he stood up to a tsunami of ridicule by proposing to stand the conventional wisdom on its head. He crusaded, with courage and good cheer, on a 30% across-the-board marginal tax rate cut and the gold standard as propounded by businessman/philanthropist Lewis E. Lehrman. Foremost among those who endorsed the tax-rate cut (and gave lip service to the gold standard) was Ronald Reagan. Jeff Bell, a member of Kemp’s inner circle, once told me that Reagan endorsed that controversial tax rate cut to gain Kemp’s endorsement. He wished to preempt the possibility Kemp might declare for the 1980 presidential contest, splitting the right and throwing the Republican nomination to George H.W. Bush. Then Bush ridiculed Reagan’s plan as “voodoo economics.” Carter attacked it as “inflationary.” Reagan defended it again and again. By the time Reagan was elected this tax rate cut had emerged as his signature economic campaign pledge. Reagan’s economic advisers were dismayed. After the election Kemp relentlessly held Reagan to his campaign commitment to offer the 30% across-the-board cut in marginal tax rates. Reagan’s team delayed and slightly diluted it but could not avert it. Reagan delegated stabilizing the dollar — of great or greater importance — to Fed Chairman Paul Volcker who painstakingly slew the inflation dragon that President Carter considered bewildering to the point of insoluble. The political establishment showed trepidation. The (Republican!) Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker called it a “riverboat gamble.” Kemp, playing David to the Establishment’s Goliath, won. So did America. And the world. Reagan and Volcker, following Kemp’s playbook, wrung out inflation and phased in the tax rate cut. Then the American economy soared. It continued to soar, albeit with stumbles like President George H.W. Bush’s violation of his “read my lips, no new taxes” pledge and the mediocre economic policies of George W. Bush and Barack Obama. On the day in November 1979 that Reagan officially declared for the presidency the Dow was at 814. As of this writing, the Dow is at 26,000. U.S. GDP for 1979, per the St. Louis Fed, was about $2.7T. It’s now at $21.5T. Other nations, like the Russian Federation and the People’s Republic of China, followed Reagan’s lead in cutting tax rates. Everyone benefited from the stabilization of the dollar, the world’s reserve currency. World nominal GDP soared from $11T then to $88T today. Jack Kemp is the hero of this economic epic. Inflation is no longer the problem. Some believe that a deflationary Fed policy was the cause of the rather modest performance of the economy prior to the pandemic. Kemp’s unfinished symphony, the gold standard, surely would be the best way to restore sizzling economic growth and equitable prosperity. President Trump himself is on record as favorably disposed toward the gold standard. Celebrating Jack Kemp’s birthday is not an exercise in nostalgia. It is an opportunity to reflect on the economic formula that Kemp sold to a recalcitrant capital. Low marginal tax rates. And the very monetary policy that made America great: the classical gold standard. Happy Jack Kemp’s birthday, America. Onward to a golden age? Tags: Ralph Benko, The Capitalist League, On Jack Kemp’s Birthday, Remember How He Made, America Great Again To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Who is in Control?
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 07:42 PM PDT Received as an anonymous but totally on-point editorial on the suppression of riotous conduct in major cities. Many people are looking at this anarchist situation in Seattle and asking “WHY is nothing being done?” Allow me to explain. THIS IS BAIT for President Trump. Just in case anyone needs a primer, under our system of government, use of the national guard in a state is the responsibility of that state’s governor. Many people believe that the president is the one who activates the guard for things like this. He can FEDERALIZE the guard, and bring them under his command, but it’s not his place to activate them for use when dealing with a state issue. If Trump reacts independently, it will be a violation of the 10th amendment and is an impeachable offense. So, think… why would the Governor’s and Mayor’s do nothing? Nothing is being done in blue states, because they WANT Trump to take the bait and deploy military forces. If he does that, then he owns the consequences, rather than these chickenshit and traitorous governors, and these same states will then beat his ass to death in the media, claiming that he is usurping states’ rights by using military force against the wishes of the states. Trump is correct in not taking this bait, but the downside of it is that people who misunderstand the states’ role in their use of their national guard will accuse Trump of doing nothing. The left will play that card too, in order to sway voters. What’s going on in Seattle is the State of Washington’s problem to solve, not the federal government. Don’t think for a minute that the lack of any meaningful action on the part of the left is anything but a calculated move in these blue states. This is all about GET TRUMP. It’s never been about anything else. Share to spread the word of law. Tags: Anonymous Editorial, Who is in Control?, 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! |
||
Will the Federal Reserve Cause the Next Riots?
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 07:25 PM PDT
by Dr. Ron Paul: Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly both recently denied that the Federal Reserve’s policies create economic inequality. Unfortunately for Powell, Daly, and other Fed promoters, a cursory look at the Fed’s operations shows that the central bank is the leading cause of economic inequality. The Federal Reserve manipulates the money supply by buying and selling government securities. This means that when the Fed decides to pump money into the economy, it does so by putting it in the pockets of wealthy, and oftentimes politically-connected, investors who are able to spend the new money before the Fed’s actions result in widespread inflation. Wealthy individuals also tend to be among the first to invest in the bubbles that form when the Fed distorts interest rates, which are the price of money. These investors may lose some money when the bubble bursts, but these losses are usually outweighed by their gains, so they end up profiting from the Fed-created boom-bubble-bust cycle. In contrast, middle-class Americans lose jobs as well as savings, houses, and other assets when bubbles burst. They will also not benefit as much as the rich and well-connected from government bailouts and stimulus schemes. Middle- and working-class Americans also suffer from a steady erosion of their standard of living because of the Fed’s devaluation of the currency. This is the reason why so many Americans rely on credit cards to cover routine expenses. The Federal Reserve is thus the reason why total US credit card debt is almost one trillion dollars. Big-spending politicians are also beneficiaries of the fiat money system. The Fed’s purchases of US debt enable Congress to massively increase welfare and warfare spending without increasing taxes to politically unacceptable levels. The people pay for the welfare-warfare state via the Fed’s hidden and regressive inflation tax. Low interest rates also benefit politicians by keeping the federal government’s interest payments low. This is an unstated reason why the Fed will keep interest rates near zero or even lower interest rates below zero. In response to the government-caused economic collapse, the Federal Reserve increased the money supply by about a trillion dollars from mid-April to early June. In contrast, it took the Fed all of 2019 to grow the money supply by 921 billion dollars. Even before the lockdown, the Fed was massively intervening in the economy in a futile attempt to prevent economic crisis. A coming crisis will likely be triggered by a collapse in the dollar’s value and a rejection of the dollar’s world reserve currency status. The economic collapse will be worse than the Great Depression. This will result in widespread violence along with government crackdowns on liberties, accelerating the US slide into authoritarianism. The only way to avoid this is for Congress to make drastic cuts in spending — starting with defunding the military-industrial complex — and to audit then end the Fed. Tags: Dr. Ron Paul, Will the Federal Reserve, Cause the Next Riots? To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
China Abets American Totalitarianism
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 07:18 PM PDT . . . ChiCom infiltration of our country is posing an enormous threat to Liberty. by Arnold Ahlert: “If you’re an American adult, it is more likely than not that China has stolen your personal data.” — FBI Director Christopher Wray It is almost impossible to overstate the seriousness of the threat China poses to America. For anyone with even half a brain — and an iota of patriotism — the reality of a government run by communist thugs bent on dominating the world needs no explanation. Tragically, America is in critically short supply on both counts. First, the nation is beset by legions of “woke” progressive marauders whose arrogance is exceeded only by their ignorance, as they continue their exceedingly communist-like — and wholly indiscriminate — purge of America’s history and foundations. Their brainlessness is exponentially magnified by social media, where the toxic brew of anonymity and bloodlust is akin to George Orwell’s “Two Minutes Hate” with one exception: Today, everyone is a potential Emmanuel Goldstein who can be targeted for complete destruction by the mob. Ironically, some of these same Americans were undoubtedly alarmed by China’s “social-credit system”, a vast government-controlled apparatus of cyber-based scorekeeping that ultimately determines one’s worthiness as a citizen. A low score can precipitate exclusion from well-paid jobs, a mortgage, or a car loan, and one’s children can be banned from attending private schools. One can even have his or her profile posted on a public blacklist for all to see. And yet these same Americans now embrace what they ostensibly despised. “For all of the high-profile sackings, vandalism, and cancellations … there have been an equal number of stories concerning absolute nobodies, pipsqueaks, formally anonymous men and women whose unpopular opinions or boneheaded errors of judgment, widely publicized on social media, transform them into public enemies, splittists, and heretics whose livelihoods suffer as a result,” columnist Matthew Continetti explains. Yet as bad and brainless as they are, they pale in comparison to our multinational, “citizen of the world” elites for whom even the aforementioned iota of patriotism is a bridge too far. They worship the god of market share, and if their religion requires the sellout of the American heartland, abiding the massive theft of intellectual property, accommodating censorship of creative works, and the hollowing out of supply chains to the point where manufacture of key ingredients for crucial antibiotics like penicillin hasn’t occurred in this nation for 16 years — so be it. Moreover, the transition from enabling their own avarice to compromising national security is seamless. “Of the nearly 5,000 active FBI counterintelligence cases currently under way across the country, almost half are related to China,” Wray reveals. “And at this very moment, China is working to compromise American healthcare organizations, pharmaceutical companies, and academic institutions conducting essential COVID-19 research.” Does anyone still remember that this society-altering virus originated in China, and that the panoply of China-like, government-enforced lockdowns it precipitated was principally due to that nation’s determination — along with its World Health Organization lackeys — to conceal the seriousness of the outbreak until the entire world was infected? Or do Americans prefer a corporate-media narrative so corrupt that Hollywood writer Charles Randolph will be given his directing debut and access to filming in China by corporate titan SK Global to create, as company spokesmen John Penotti and Charlie Corwin put it, a movie about the response of China’s “heroic medical community” to the virus? It’s impossible to say. What is possible to say is that the sellout continues with gusto, and Chinese data-gathering remains at the heart of it. And once again, the ignorant remain vulnerable to the sellouts. “TikTok is one of the most popular entertainment apps for mobile devices in the United States,” states a recently filed class-action lawsuit. “It has acquired one of the largest installed user bases in the country on the strength of its popular 15-second videos of fun activities like dancing, lip-syncing, and stunts. Unknown to its users, however, is that TikTok also includes Chinese surveillance software.” TikTok is owned by Beijing-based company ByteDance, which denies the allegations. Yet a new security feature in Apple’s iOS 14 caught the company spying on millions of its users. It’s not the first time. In 2019, TikTok agreed to pay a $5.7 million fine to settle Federal Trade Commission allegations that the company violated the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) and collected personal data from children — under the age of 13. As the FTC stated at the time, “This is the largest civil penalty ever obtained by the Commission in a children’s privacy case.” Unfortunately, for a company with 800 million monthly active users, and 30 million users in the U.S., the fine amounts to chump change. President Donald Trump is threatening to ban the app, echoing Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s assertion that downloading it puts Americans’ private data “in the hands of the Chinese Communist Party.” That Apple still allows the app to be part of its product line? The globalist agenda must be served. Yet once again, our corporate media sought to frame the proposed ban in partisan political terms. Business Insider asserted, “The app’s popularity may rankle for a different reason. Teen activists on the app in June claimed to have tanked Trump’s comeback rally in Oklahoma by signing up for tickets and not attending.” That the same app, along with 58 others, was banned in India, which voiced the same security concerns? “Once you stop TikTok, you reduce the amount of data going into China,” stated Gordon Chang, Daily Beast columnist and author of The Great U.S.-China Tech War. “That’s a really important thing for us.” Who’s “us”? On Friday, the Department of Justice announced charges against yet another college professor, Ohio State University’s Song Guo Zheng, for using more than $4 million in U.S. grant money to develop rheumatology and immunology expertise for the Chinese government. Since 2013, Zheng had been participating in a Chinese Talent Plan, one of many initiatives China uses to infiltrate American classrooms, from K-12 public schools through the nation’s university systems. And a great many of “us” still welcome them into America’s educational institutions. Is there a tipping point? November is a time for choosing. One can opt for a narcissistic but patriotic incumbent and a Republican Party rife with cynical cowards whose current silence is based on knowing decent Americans have nowhere else to turn. Or they can opt for a dementia-addled, easily controlled insider and a Democrat Party seeking absolute power by any means necessary. Power that will have future generations of Americans walking on dogma-enforced eggshells — for their entire lives. Thus, Americans are faced with what is arguably the evilest “lesser of two evils” choice in modern history. Yet if America opts for the latter choice, we will no longer have to worry about Communist Chinese infiltration. We will be China, in every totalitarian sense of the word. Tags: Arnold Ahlert, Patriot Post, China Abets, American Totalitarianism To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Lori Lightfoot Either Doesn’t Understand Federal Law, or Hopes Nobody Else Does
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 06:51 PM PDT
by NRA-ILA: It has become commonly accepted among anti-gun extremists to ignore the mountains of evidence that exposes the abject failure of gun control to prevent violent criminals from acting like violent criminals. They reject the fact that criminals already violate myriad laws at the local, state, and federal level in furtherance of their illicit activities, and insist that the only way to prevent criminals from committing crimes with firearms is to add more laws. Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot has learned that lesson well. As the Windy City experiences dramatic increases in violent crimes involving firearms, the Washington Examiner reports that Lightfoot was “told that the police union blames her for a lack of moral (sic) among the city’s law enforcement officials.” In an attempt to deflect criticism of her administration, the mayor decided to blame, you guessed it, gun laws. Rather than look at what she and her city could do better, in an interview on MSNBC’s Live With Stephanie Ruhle, Lightfoot claimed, “We have to have a federal policy on background checks and making sure people are not able to go across the border to states like Indiana and get military-grade weapons in quantities and then bring them back to the streets and shoot people up. That’s what’s happening.” The only problem with her response is…well…everything. First, we have a federal policy; several, in fact. The “N” in NICS stands for “National,” as in, the National Instant Criminal Background Check System. It is the law of the land, and requires all sales at gun dealers, no matter what state they take place in, be subject to a NICS check to ensure the purchaser is not prohibited from making such a purchase. Second, federal law generally prohibits private citizens—who are not licensed gun dealers—from lawfully transferring a firearm to anyone who is not a resident of the state in which they reside. Third, if her reference to “military-grade weapons” is her way of referring to semi-automatic rifles like the AR-15, such firearms represent a small fraction of the guns used in firearm-related crimes nationally. It is unlikely that Chicago is any different than the rest of the country in this regard. And finally, while Lightfoot appears to be looking at adding new restrictions to the current lawful transfer of firearms, she ignores the fact that violent criminals primarily acquire firearms through already illegal channels. That’s not even taking into account the gun laws in Chicago and Illinois, which are, arguably, some of the most restrictive in the country. So, rather than looking at what she can do better to stem the rising tide of violence in her city, Mayor Lightfoot has decided to misrepresent federal law, malign her neighboring states, and suggest we need more laws that will further infringe on the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens; more laws that violent criminals will regard with as much disdain as the current mountain of laws they violate. President Trump has even offered federal assistance to help improve police efforts. It seems Lightfoot, however, is more interested in scoring political points by promoting anti-gun policies embraced by the far left, rather than considering strategies that will actually help the citizens of her city. Tags: NRA-ILA, Mayor, Lori Lightfoot, Either Doesn’t Understand, Federal Law, or Hopes, Nobody Else Does To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Schools
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 06:35 PM PDT by Kerby Anderson: Two weeks ago, schools were in the news for many different reasons. The Supreme Court ruled in a case involving schools and scholarships. The latest book by Thomas Sowell (Charter Schools and Their Enemies) was released. And Kevin Williamson wrote a commentary that asked the question, What Are Schools For? The Supreme Court ruled that if a state like Montana provided scholarship programs that allowed students to attend private schools of their family’s own choosing, it could not prohibit the funds from being used to attend a private, religious school. In the process, it essentially removed the Blaine amendment. As I explained in my commentary in February, the Blaine amendment was a failed attempt a century ago to keep Catholic schools from receiving any government funds. More recently, its inclusion in some state constitutions had been used to prevent any funds going to religious schools. The criticism of the Supreme Court’s decision brings us to the focus on the book by Thomas Sowell and commentary by Kevin Williamson. They both make a point that should be obvious but has been lost in all the debate about education. The key point is this: “Schools exist for the education of children.” If our goal is “the education of children,” then any school, program, or scholarship that advances that goal should be sufficient. Students usually do better in charter schools and private schools and Christian schools than in public schools. But teachers’ unions and education agencies don’t control those other school choices, and that is why all the critical comments. Perhaps they should focus their attention on what is NOT happening in the public schools. The National Assessment of Educational Progress found that only a third (37%) of the nation’s 12th-graders tested proficient or better in reading. Only one fourth (25%) were proficient or better in math. This seems to me to be a failing grade. Tags: Kerby Anderson, Schools To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Orange Man Good
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 06:25 PM PDT . . . This isn’t Beijing Biden’s first time plagiarizing, now it’s Trump’s economic buy American hire American plan.
Tags: Editorial Cartoon, by AF Branco, Orange Man Good, This isn’t Beijing Biden’s, first time plagiarizing, now it’s Trump’s, economic buy American, hire American plan To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Dereliction of Duty
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 06:11 PM PDT by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: Must governments act to protect you when you or your property are attacked — for example, by rioters who vandalize and burn your store? Is the government liable if it willfully lets it happen? Protection of life and property is the moral obligation of governments constituted for this purpose. But whether officials who ignore the obligation can be held to account is another question. A Madison Avenue shop, Domus Design Center, is suing the mayor of New York City and the governor of New York State. In late May and early June, hundreds of businesses were damaged by rioters while Mayor de Blasio and Governor Cuomo refused to act to oppose them. “Where are our tax dollars going?” asks the Center’s attorney, Sal Strazzullo. “Not protecting commercial properties is negligence of duty. Paying taxes that help pay the salary of the NYPD, we expect protection in return. Government is responsible to protect its citizens and businesses against criminals who want to do bad.” Yes. But Strazzullo’s client faces the precedents of rulings in cases like Warren v. District of Columbia, Castle Rock v. Gonzales, and a lawsuit by Parkland, Florida students against the local sheriff’s office. In these cases, plaintiffs argued that law enforcers had a positive duty to protect the plaintiffs when they were being clearly threatened. The courts disagreed. We must hope that there are limits to the willingness and ability of judges to avert their gaze. Otherwise, we are paying everyone in the system to look the other way when trouble comes. This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. Tags: Paul Jacob, Common Sense, Dereliction of Duty To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Stimulate Job Growth, Not the Printing Press, In Next COVID Relief Package
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 05:32 PM PDT
by Ken Blackwell, Contributing Author: U.S. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), and the rest of the U.S. Senate are working on a new COVID relief bill the legislative branch will consider in July. Which raises the question: what should the new plan look like? While the House-passed HEROES Act authorized another round of $1,200 stimulus checks, last week, many Republicans – including ones that previously championed the idea in the CARES Act, like Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) – have already expressed their disapproval. And for good reason. The term “stimulus checks” is a bit of a misnomer. Stimulus is supposed to encourage production and generate new income, but printing dollars to create free income from the Treasury Department does the opposite. In many cases exceeding standard take-home pays, these checks do nothing other than embolden the status quo by redistributing wealth and discouraging the citizenry from going back to work. The federal budget deficit has already hit an astounding $1.8 trillion in the first half of this year, compared to just $984 billion for all of 2019. This reckless fiscal path is unsustainable and will ultimately benefit no one. Rather than spend more money we don’t have, the Treasury and Congress should enact real stimulus in the next round of COVID relief. That means shelving the printing press and pushing forward pro-growth policies that improve business conditions, accelerate job development, and increase consumer demand. Instead of handing out checks, the federal government should allow business owners and workers to hold onto more of the money they already have. Implementing a payroll tax holiday through the end of the year represents an ideal place to start. Currently, this Social Security and Medicare tax takes roughly 7.5 percent from a worker’s paycheck, with another 7.5 percent paid by employers. Suspending it until 2021 will make immediate cuts to small business’ overhead costs, allowing them to hire more workers and get their operations back on more stable grounds. The payroll tax holiday will bring significant more opportunity to the one in four people who find themselves on the unemployment line today. By fattening the paychecks of all 150 million U.S. workers, it will also increase economic activity by shoring up demand for goods and services. While lowering the American people’s tax liabilities will help drive more consumer spending and business growth, lingering health concerns among the public will still remain an obstacle to the circulation of this money throughout the economy. Congress and the White House must also address this issue for consumers and businesses to reap a payroll tax holiday’s full benefits. In letters to the executive branch, nearly three-quarters of the U.S. Senate and a sizable majority of the House have already expressed their support for fast forwarding government advertising spending during this pandemic. This would help significantly in resolving the current consumer confidence problem throughout the economy, and best yet, it wouldn’t add a cent to the deficit. Historically, advertising has always been one of the leading drivers of economic growth during recessions. Research has shown that every $1 of spending generates $19 in economic activity, but in a pandemic-plagued economy, the informational value of advertising should make the resulting return on investment even greater. The American people need real solutions, not more Band-Aid measures. Another round of broad-based stimulus spending won’t create economic prosperity; it will prolong the current mediocre state of affairs. By lowering government impediments to job growth and employment and enacting laissez-faire policies that increase consumer demand, Congress and the White House won’t receive the same degree of short-term accolades from the public as they would from sending out more direct payments to individuals. However, choosing to enact thoughtful policy-based reforms over more ballooning of the deficit will cement their legacies as the COVID economic doctors in the months and years ahead. Tags: Ken Blackwell, Stimulate Job Growth, Not the Printing Press, In Next, COVID Relief Package To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Jewish Federations are Promoting a Farrakhan Fan Who Told Jews to “Go F___ Themselves”
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 05:15 PM PDT by Daniel Greenfield: “It was powerful for me the way he spelled it out,” Chelsea Handler said of Louis Farrakhan. “So whatever, you know, everybody can go f___ themselves.” Handler, a comedian pushing a new book, was responding to the backlash over her praise for the racist black supremacist leader on Instagram. The people complaining about her praise for the bigot were Jews. And the celebrity was telling critics, including Holocaust survivors, to go “f___ themselves.” Farrakhan had called Hitler a “great man”, ranted about “Satanic Jews”, and, more recently, claimed that Florida was suffering from the coronavirus because he had asked Allah to punish Cuban Jews. In that same speech, he thanked Chelsea Handler for posting a clip of him on Instagram. Handler decided to promote the antisemitic hate group leader to her 4 million followers as part of her newly woke brand which included a Netflix special, Hello, Privilege. It’s Me, Chelsea, and her book, Life Will Be the Death of Me, from Penguin Random House. The theme of both the special and the book was Handler’s journey from self-absorption to wokeness by ranting about how horrible white people are. Farrakhan had been ranting about how horrible white people are since Chelsea was in kindergarten. “I learned a lot from watching this powerful video,” Handler had told her followers The obnoxious celebrity was well aware of Farrakhan’s antisemitism, and defended him, arguing that, “perhaps Farrakhan’s anti-Semitic views took form during his own oppression.” While some celebrities have been cancelled for the smallest of missteps, there was no apparent sign that Penguin Random House or HBO Max, which will be airing a new standup special by Handler, were ending their relationship with the hateful celebrity. But perhaps something was happening behind the scenes because after telling Jews to “go f__ themselves”, she finally apologized and deleted the video. The apology was stiff and unconvincing, but it was enough for her book tour to go forward, not just at Penguin Random House, owned by Bertelsmann, the massive German media giant whose owner had donated to the SS, put out exciting fare such as, “The Christmas Book of the Hitler Youth”, and benefited from Jewish slave labor during the Holocaust, but at Jewish federations around America. After Handler touted an antisemitic bigot and told Jews who didn’t like it to “go f___ themselves”, the Miami Jewish Federation is touting a Zoom evening with Chelsea Handler to sell her new book. The 39th Annual Berrin Family Jewish Book Festival features Chelsea and her book, courtesy of the Alper JCC in Miami, and the JCCs of Atlanta, Boulder, Dallas, Ft. Lauderdale, Indianapolis, Nashville, Memphis, and St. Louis, who have all taken Chelsea’s advice and are “f____” themselves and their communities. No word on whether they’re also willing to help sell “The Christmas Book of the Hitler Youth”. Why exactly does Handler, who is descended from a German mother and Jewish father, whose grandfather was a Nazi soldier, and who once had her sidekick dress up as Hitler to celebrate Germany’s World Cup victory, and then touted a bigot who admires Hitler, belong at a family Jewish book festival? The answer is that the Jewish federations of nine major cities are telling Jews to “f___” themselves. It’s not just that politically correct antisemitism leads to very little in the way of a response from mainstream society, or even from the organizations that claim to represent local Jewish communities, but those same organizations actually help mainstream and reward the promoters of antisemitism. Chelsea Handler knows perfectly well that she can promote Farrakhan or mock the Holocaust, and local Jewish federations will still eagerly line up to help her sell her books and make her even richer. The Alper JCC claims that its mission is “providing programs and services that are rooted in and promote Jewish values, ethics and traditions”. The Aaron Family JCC in Dallas claims that it wants an “environment defined by Jewish values and culture”. The Marcus JCC in Atlanta claims that it’s dedicated to “strengthening Jewish life” and creating “Jewish moments”. Which Jewish values does Chelsea Handler represent besides a suicidal embrace of leftist politics? The only references to Jewishness in Life Will Be the Death of Me are negative or derogatory, and revolve around her Jewish father’s response to the death of her brother. Even without the Farrakhan, Hitler, and Holocaust stuff, Handler would be the last person to be associated with Jewish values. But so are the Jewish federations and JCCs that made the hateful decision to help her sell books. The unwillingness of organizations with lots of J’s and little Jewishness in them to take even the most basic of stands by cancelling an event with the granddaughter of a Nazi soldier who defended antisemitism and told Jews to “go f___ themselves” isn’t cowardice: it’s disinterest and contempt. They don’t care. They didn’t care during the Holocaust when millions of Jews were being killed. They didn’t care when Islamic armies and terrorists spent generations trying to wipe out the Jews of Israel. They don’t care about the big stuff, let alone the little stuff, like their celeb promoting a bigot who called Jews termites. The vast infrastructure of the Jewish federations and the JCCs, the campus Hillels and the alphabet soup of national organizations, is a rotted mass of deadwood built long ago by people who at least had some distant sense that being Jewish mattered in some way. Built by German Jews, funded by deceased Jewish philanthropists, many of whom survived the Holocaust, they’re now just a sinecure for full-time professional non-profit fundraisers with their “inspiring” clergy and their incubators for leftist activists. They exist to cadge money from elderly Jews who think that funding a building or a book festival with their name on it at the local JCC will be a meaningful legacy, instead of a forum for a Farrakhan supporter, by filling their fundraising letters with mentions of Jewish values, ethics, meaning, and other things they can’t define and don’t believe in. What do they believe in? As little as Chelsea Handler does. They believe that Black Lives Matter, that the planet is in danger, that whatever Israel did last week was wrong, and whatever else their intellectual cohort of social media lefties happens to believe this week. They’re as ignorant of what the Torah says as of the contours of the Martian mountains, but like the bigot they’re eagerly hosting, they know how to jump on the bandwagon of the cultural moment. The problem with actual Jewish values is that they are as eternal as their Creator and don’t fit into trends. The cultural moment and its politics are momentary, filled with obvious contradictions when you try to apply them beyond the hashtags and the memes of the now. Jewish ethics and values might ask why antisemitism is acceptable, when racism isn’t, but the cultural moment has no use for consistency. To be eternally in the moment is to have neither values nor ethics, Jewish or otherwise, and no future. The vast billion-dollar infrastructure of organizations that are Jewish in name only are as happy to put their membership lists at the disposal of Chelsea Handler and Bertelsmann, as of Black Lives Matter. They stand for nothing, except for whatever members of their cohort are standing for now, and they make no impact on the Jewish community, and have no future once the donors and the money run out. Chelsea Handler, like many of the celebs these organizations promote, represents them all too well. There are no children, no values, and no future, but right now the drinks are flowing and the money is coming in as long as you spew whatever garbage is in the cultural moment without thinking about it. Chelsea Handler’s book is titled, Life Will Be the Death of Me. The Jewish view of life is that of a gateway to eternity. That’s why the Talmud comments on Ecclesiastes 9:5 by saying that good people are considered living even when dead, while evil people are deemed dead even while they’re still alive. Life and death don’t exist in the present moment. It’s not the now that matters, but the future eternity. There are a great many organizations with the ‘J’ in them that are already dead because they chose to exist in the political moment without caring about the Jewish past or the Jewish future. Featuring Chelsea Handler is their way of telling their donors and members to, “go f___ themselves”. Tags: Daniel Greenfield, Sultan Knish, Jewish Federations, Promoting a Farrakhan Fan, Who Told Jews. to “Go F___ Themselves” To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Idiots at USA Today Apparently Ignorant of the American Eagle
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 05:14 PM PDT by Stephen Kruiser: The Eagle Has Landed Before we delve into this lunacy about the eagle in question, it should be noted that USA Today is the CNN of newspapers. Just as CNN would have no audience whatsoever if it weren’t being broadcast to people stuck in airport terminals, USA Today wouldn’t have any readership if it weren’t being given away for free in hotels all over the country. Honestly, I rarely read it when I’m on the road and it’s delivered to my hotel room door every weekday. It’s also rather laughable that the paper was presenting this as a “fact-check.” Trump must be the most fact-checked president in history. Barack Obama enjoyed eight years of a fact-free presidency while never, ever being fact-checked by the swooning MSM. Back to the eagle. Victoria has the full story here, and I think her opening paragraph sums it up nicely: To say that the paper got dragged for this Nazi eagle nonsense on social media would be a monumental understatement. The morons stuck with the original post though. The USA Today Twitter account did issue a hilariously tone-deaf clarification that said, “Worth noting, the eagle is a longtime US symbol, too.” I wouldn’t be surprised if the social media millennial who wrote that tweet didn’t know that about the eagle until just then. Twitter stepped up with a lot of eagle awareness help for USA Today. Looks like Granny Boxwine is a Nazi eagle fan too:
PJ Media Deputy Managing Editor Bryan Preston offered this:
As Victoria pointed out in her post, a similar eagle symbol is on our money. The United States Marine Corps also uses an eagle in its logo. Using the USA Today logic, Nazi eagles abound. The patent absurdity of choosing a graphic of an eagle on a t-shirt to make the Orange Man Bad Nazi pitch would have been laughed off as a pathetic joke at a saner time in American history. What’s sad is that there wasn’t an adult anywhere in any room at USA Today to say, “Hey, maybe this isn’t a good idea.” As long as it’s dumping on Trump, every editor at every major newspaper in America thinks it’s a great idea. The enemy of the people, indeed. Tags: Stephen Kruiser, PJ Media, Idiots at USA Today, ignorant, American Eagle To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
NFL Again Fumbles Opportunity to Unite America
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 03:18 PM PDT by Ken Blackwell: The National Football League once again is fumbling away an opportunity to unite America. This is the result we could have expected, given the NFL’s playbook over the past few years. The NFL’s decision to play what is known as the black national anthem—“Lift Every Voice and Sing”—before every Week 1 game beginning Sept. 10 seems poised to divide, not unite, our country. But a secondary, more certain outcome of this decision is that the NFL will lose its luster at a greater pace than it achieved its dominant allure. Football once reigned supreme in American culture. The sport wove its way into American homes all but two nights a week, catapulting up the ratings charts. To the unending benefit of the NFL—and its teams and players—football replaced baseball as America’s game. Is our new national pastime now telling us we’re not one nation? The league’s response to our current, divisive moment was amplified by the contrast offered from a former player. Marcellus Wiley said something very different, and so much more profound, that it deserves air time in every home. Appearing on the “Speak for Yourself” show on Fox Sports 1, Wiley said he didn’t support the recent proposal to paint the words “Black Lives Matter” on the floor of NBA basketball courts. He cited the anti-family mission of the Black Lives Matter organization and the fact that painting those words would play into the identity politics that are dividing the nation. In Wiley’s own words: You may know the story of coaches who folded a $100 bill into an NFL playbook to see if a player cared enough to study. Well, Wiley was the only one who got the Benjamin (if we can still say that). Similarly, he took the time to read and scrutinize the Black Lives Matter manifesto and was rightly concerned that its mission extended way beyond racial equality and into disruption of the family. It’s an agenda not in pursuit of tolerance for all, but with spiteful contempt for the best guarantor of success. Who would have thought that the most important message amid this divisive moment would air on Fox Sports 1? It came not from a politician, activist, or anarchist, but from an athlete. By stating his stance, Wiley has proven that he has more courage than NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, the entire U.S. Senate, and the Screen Actors Guild. After all, it isn’t rebellious to be white and say, “Black lives matter.” It’s positively heroic to be black and say, “Pump the brakes.” This revelation won’t get Wiley on a short list to star in a Nike ad. But it will make him a hero in his own home, a voice for families in every community, and a guiding light for the majority of Americans. Since Wiley’s conversation, the NBA has announced that a vast majority of players will wear jerseys with moment-defining words and phrases, such as “Equality” and “Vote,” instead of their names. These amazing basketball players also have a responsibility to do their homework. Sports play an integral role in society, maybe more so here than in other countries. While local bonds are often strongest, the appeal of national teams and individuals transcends societal boundaries as well as geographic ones. The root attraction might be obvious: A level playing field like no other—where men and women and girls and boys can prove their mettle competing with the same set of rules—and anyone can emerge victorious. Parades are held for the winners who achieve the greatest triumphs, and adulation and respect are given even to those in defeat and loss. Sports emphasize individualism and teamwork, sacrifice and achievement, and outcomes as much as process. Our culture anoints those who navigate this well as leaders. It’s that leadership that is sorely missing today. The dominant formation in the NFL playbook is one of submission. We can learn a lot by reviewing the fallout of the August 2016 preseason game when Colin Kaepernick sat on the bench during the national anthem. It’s as if the San Francisco 49ers organization, then head coach Chip Kelly, and the NFL haven’t learned anything. Kaepernick 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. To me, this is bigger than football and it would be selfish on my part to look the other way.” Kelly embraced Kaepernick’s decision as “his right as a citizen” and said, “[I]t’s not my right to tell him not to do something.” The 49ers issued a statement saying: “The national anthem is and always will be a special part of the pre-game ceremony. It is an opportunity to honor our country and reflect on the great liberties we are afforded as its citizens. In respecting such American principles as freedom of religion and freedom of expression, we recognize the right of an individual to choose and participate, or not, in our celebration of the national anthem.” A mea culpa here and an acquiescence there didn’t satisfy fans, critics, or the public. The kumbaya huddle still eluded them. So the commissioner’s office doubled down and invited in Democrat press flack to save the day. Yet those who persist in amplifying division could never help the NFL transcend the moment. Those who are happy to force capitulation for political ends ensured that the only outcome for the league was failure. When captains don’t lead and leaders capitulate, the result is chaos—and that’s where the NFL finds itself. Rather than building on and elevating its role in American society as a force for legitimate civic conversation, it panders. Still, as our sports prove about this great country of ours, the land of opportunity extends well past the back of the end zone. It’s each of us, the people, who must pick up the pieces and stand for truth. Here lies the chance for every NFL player, coach, employee, and fan to demonstrate leadership in the way that it is lacking from the commissioner’s office. Read the history of the poem “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” first performed by schoolchildren in celebration of President Abraham Lincoln’s birthday in 1900. The poem honors a man who gave his life to ensure a nation conceived in liberty—dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal—remained a nation of liberty. Lincoln sustained the United States as the standard of liberty for all the world. Read the words that became the song. It’s about every voice and the harmony of liberty. Just like Marcellus Wiley was talking about. Tags: Ken Blackwell, NFL Again Fumbles, Opportunity to Unite America, The Daily Signal To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Soviet-Style Sacking of Statues by Sanctimonious Stalinists
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 02:45 PM PDT by Ileana Johnson: Violence, looting, sacking statues, lawlessness, burning, and murder by police and protesters should be condemned by all humans, no matter what political leanings one has. Yet the radical leftist Democrat Party refuses to agree with the Republican Party in condemning mob violence. There is so much supported mob violence that other nations are shaking their collective heads not understanding what is happening to America, “the shining city on the hill” that everyone aspired to flee to when oppression and tyranny was too much in their countries. International enemies are laughing at us and even rejoicing. Watching CNN internationally, Europeans truly believe that Americans are dropping dead like flies of Covid-19. Romanian friends are crossing themselves every day about what is happening to America in hopes that it will not infect the minds of their younger generations. Who wants to live in anarchy and chaos, with mobs tearing down statues with gusto, with approval of the Democrat state and local officials? It is a movie that has played before in early 20th century Russia when Bolsheviks and other Marxists tore down every historical statue they disagreed with and installed ugly monuments dedicated to the Marxist philosophy and the tyranny that it inspired. And the Stalinist style sacking of statues continues unabated. The councilmen of Jackson, MS, have voted to remove the statue of President Andrew Jackson, following the destruction of a similar statue near the White House in Washington, D.C. and one in New Orleans in the famous Jackson square. It is the symbol of the white man behind the statue that offends the Marxist and highly racist mob. They want every trace of person’s existence if they deem him/her a “systemic racist,” whatever this empty liberal construct means. They want them erased from history and their books burned. As one website wrote, it is a “demented pandemic” born by a flu virus and a communist insurrection facilitated by the brutal police killing of George Floyd. George Floyd became a martyr, a symbol of everything that is perceived wrong with America by those who wish to abolish and destroy capitalism and the white race. A murdered criminal with a long rap sheet became suddenly “the most beloved son of America.” Thousands of people mourned publicly a person they never knew a few days before, with fake pain and tears, dripping with remorse for being “white.” The world watched in disbelief thousands of imbeciles in the #resist movement begging for forgiveness for imaginary crimes they did not commit, apologizing for being white and kissing the feet of the BLM mob that had burned their cities, their neighborhoods, and their livelihoods just a few days earlier. All wealthy millionaire and billionaire black athletes and actors came out in droves, resplendent in their opulent limousines and offensive wealth, telling stories of racism they had to endure while hiding behind their gated mansions, partying on yachts, jetting around the world in their private airplanes, protected by body guards, and what it was like to have to walk in their 400 plus pairs of tennis shoes and Gucci loafers. Every Soros neo-Marxist came out to condemn the police, demanding its dismantling and defunding, denouncing the racist America that made them so wealthy in the first place, and the “systemic racism” that does not exist as we have laws against such racism and discrimination in the workplace. George Floyd has become such a symbol of America’s “most beloved son” that a scholarship was established in his name. They might even consider him for the Nobel Peace Prize. The bereaved widow, divorced from him for several years, received donations upwards of $20 million dollars. Bless his heart-Biden cried and wished that he was black. If a movie were to be made about the martyred Floyd, the title of “The Republic Burning” was suggested. The “demented psychosis” continued under the anti-racism ruse – rabid screaming by white girls, violence, looting of stores, destruction of statues, bystanders and old people beaten, rapes, burned out cars, buildings torched, police killed, and so many other vicious acts of anarchy. It is just the beginning of this “collective dementia.” In addition to the still-ongoing Covid-19 pandemic lunacy, the “collective dementia” will enable book burnings, complete destruction of history, wealth destruction, culture, movies, writers, jobs, a stable economy, and everything else that the well-funded and armed neo-Marxists deem offensive. Orwell’s book “1984” is no longer just a warning, it has become a manual to take power away from the “evil” white man and install anarchy. As a BLM leader in NY said, “we want black sovereignty and, if we don’t get it, we are going to burn everything down.” It reminds me of Zimbabwe. Tags: Ileana Johnson, Soviet-Style, Sacking of Statues, by Sanctimonious Stalinists To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Bye Bye Deep State Republicans, Hello New Biden-Pelosi-Schumer Democrats
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 02:24 PM PDT by Newt Gingrich: The Deep State Republicans are alive and well and doing what you’d expect them to be doing. They are living proof that President Donald Trump is a genuine change agent. The world he is changing is their world, and they hate him for it. In the near future, these Deep State Republicans will drop the pretense of still belonging to the Party of Abraham Lincoln and become Democrats. These are, after all, people who have grown deeply uncomfortable not just with President Trump but also with those Republicans (the vast majority) who are comfortable with President Trump (about 88 percent of the GOP). This is why they are now running ads against pro-Trump Republican Senators as well as against President Trump himself. They find the prospect of a Biden-Pelosi-Schumer machine running America more acceptable than the possibility of a Trump-McConnell-McCarthy team being in charge of Washington. The Deep State Republicans are against Trumpism as much as they are against President Trump. In a real sense, the revolt of the anti-Trump Republicans is further proof of just how different and disruptive the Trump candidacy and the Trump presidency have been. Most of the anti-Trump Republicans come from elite schools and built their careers around being part of the elite. They valued the professorial intellectual approach. They believed in leaders relying on staff work because they had usually been the staff. Antony Jay’s Yes, Minister and Yes, Prime Minister could have been written about them. In many ways, they found President Barack Obama’s professorial style comforting. They might have disagreed on policy, but they could agree on style. The Trump candidacy was an enormous, rude shock to the Deep State Republicans. These were people who knew how to play the game. They moved effortlessly from policy jobs in the bureaucracy to think tanks, where they wrote about their policies for law firms and lobbyists. They would go on television or be interviewed in newspapers where they talked about their own policies. The Deep State Republicans worked with and socialized with Deep State Democrats. They were much more comfortable with Deep State Democrats than with most Republicans. They could have bipartisan cocktail parties in Georgetown and nice dinners at elegant restaurants. They often went to the same vacation towns and enjoyed the same beaches and hobbies. For the Deep State Republicans, Democrats were often far more acceptable and desirable than the incorrigible Republicans in the House and Senate – or the incorrigible think tanks such as Heritage and Hudson Institute. They were a government in waiting for the next Republican President. Their roots sometimes went as far back as the Dewey Machine, the Dwight Eisenhower White House, and the Gerald Ford Administration. They worked for President Richard Nixon but never liked him (in his heart he was incorrigible no matter how brilliant his foreign policy was from their perspective). They loved the Ford Administration and deeply disliked Governor Ronald Reagan almost beating him in the 1976 primaries. They were deeply at home in the Bush Administrations (Yale, Skull and Bones – how could it get more establishment?) In 2016, they were gearing up for Jeb Bush – even though he was University of Texas and not Yale. Still, Jeb had been a remarkably innovative governor of Florida and had a warm, positive style. He felt right to the Deep State Republicans whose advice he would rely on and whose appointments to major policy posts in a third Bush Administration were virtually a foregone conclusion. Then along came Donald J Trump. It is hard for normal Americans to understand what an enormous shock the Trump candidacy was to the Deep State Republicans. His entire life had involved a kind of self-promotion and appeal to mass media that was beneath the dignity of elite, supposedly sophisticated intellectuals. He had hosted a successful reality show. He had been involved with professional wrestling. He was constantly fighting with gossip columns. He simply did not have the gravitas that Ivy League intellectuals expected of their leaders. From early in the campaign, Trump relied on the Federalist Society and the Heritage Foundation to give him conservative names for potential judges and justices. This was going to eliminate the kind of so-called sensible moderates like Justice David Souter, who had proven totally unreliable for conservatives. The Deep State Republicans would find it impossible to get their friends judgeships if the conservatives were doing the vetting. Trump’s entire campaign had been built around outsiders such as Steve Bannon, Dave Bossie, Brad Parscale, and others who had no ties to the traditional GOP establishment – except as critics. It was clear his transition was going to favor outsiders, disruptors, and thorns in the side of the old order. Since the Deep State Republicans are the old order, this pattern was a mortal threat to them. President Trump’s policies were clearly disruptive. The Deep State Republicans had fashioned the then-15-year failed policy in the Middle East. They had worked long and hard for NAFTA and close ties to China (which had enriched many billionaires who were also funding their think tanks). From the time he announced, candidate Trump was targeting their policies and promising to change them. Their life’s work was being destroyed. There was a vulgarity about Trump’s appeal to working Americans. The kind of people who voted for Obama over Mitt Romney because they distrusted country club, boardroom executive Republicans proved to be the margin of victory in Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Deep State Republicans knew you had to pretend to serve the people – but Trump actually liked the people. It was an unforgivable violation of class solidarity among the elites. Trump’s entrepreneurial aggressiveness, risk-taking, and unwillingness to allow the establishment to staff and control him was a mortal threat to the entire life to which Deep State Republicans aspire. They saw themselves as the movers and shakers and saw elected officials as tools to be manipulated. Suddenly, there was a candidate – and then a president – who was too tough and self-directed for the staff to be at the center of things. It was a repudiation of everything for which they had spent their lives preparing. Finally, there was a question of style. Deep State Republicans did not tweet. Deep State Republicans loathed President Trump’s tweets. Deep State Republicans cringed every day when the president went off on some topic which had not been vetted and edited by a Deep State Republican. With this list of profound differences, you can see why there is a core group of Deep State Republicans who simply can’t abide the new order. So, what do we do about them? We call them Democrats and relax. Tags: Newt Gingrich, commentary, Bye Bye Deep State Republicans, Hello New Biden-Pelosi-Schumer Democrats 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 In The First Days Of A Lawless Era?
Posted: 13 Jul 2020 02:11 PM PDT by I&I Editorial Board: A nation founded on the rule of law appears to be yielding to the rule of the mob. Not everyone has surrendered. The trend, though, is worrisome. Too many of our “leaders” and institutions are failing us. In 2020, law enforcement officers in this country are being treated not just with disrespect but in many instances are being abused verbally and physically. Rioters and looters are going unpunished, not because they can’t be identified or the cases against them are weak but because prosecutors (several of them backed by George Soros) refuse to uphold the law and charge the offenders. Violent gangs have been allowed, almost encouraged, to take over city streets, sidewalks, and private property; shut down the free movement of others; and topple public monuments. Civilized people don’t behave in this way. When some portion of a society goes beyond the law, the larger portion has historically made the course correction. Today, it’s a far smaller segment than it has been in the past. Right here we’re going to say something that might seem over the line. We believe that “the mobs of tearful, angry students,” as the Washington Post put it, who raged after the 2016 election, the current convulsion of violence, as well all the unrest in between, wouldn’t have occurred if Hillary Clinton was president. What we’re seeing is an extended tantrum over the Trump election. If she had been elected, and her party took the majorities in Congress, the troublemakers, and their political and media divisions, would be comfortable and smug, and not looking for reasons to foment riots, loot, burn, vandalize, attack police officers and innocents, and take over public and private property. The unwinding of civilization would be taking place internally, through the Democratic White House and Congress, and the Democratic state houses, governors’ mansions, and city halls across the country. Some from the party on the left would gladly aid the cause, since it reflects their own anti-America, anti-West view, others going along because they hope they will be consumed last by the reign of terror. Antifa and Black Lives Matter would have had little reason to continue rampaging under Clinton because of her solidarity with those who truly seem to be bent on pulling down society. She would have given them everything she possibly could have. Expect Joe Biden to do what Clinton had no chance to even start. Already he’s kowtowing to the extreme left of his party, which appears to have hijacked his presidential campaign from the inside. While a Democratic administration would be quieter than a second term of Donald Trump in regard to mob behavior, it would be much more lethal to civil society. The American legacy of liberty, independence, and charity will be ceded by political institutions, universities, local schools, and faithless businesses to a voracious mob if Biden moves from his basement to the West Wing in January. Tags: I&I Editorial Board, Are We In The First Days, Lawless Era 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
Watch: Antifa Guy Finds Out the Hard Way He Opened the Wrong Motorist’s Door
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the RedState.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: * Copyright RedState and its Content Providers. |
AMERICAN SPECTATOR
ABC
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Tuesday, July 14, 2020
|
Good morning, NBC News readers.
With the coronavirus surging in Florida, Gov. DeSantis may not be able to roll out the red carpet for the RNC after all, the Supreme Court has cleared the way for the first executions in 17 years and a tragic end for “Glee” actress Naya Rivera.
Here’s what we’re watching this Tuesday morning.
|
Coronavirus spread continues to overwhelm best-laid plans
California officials ordered sweeping new restrictions on Monday in response to a statewide surge of COVID-19 cases, including an immediate halt to indoor activities in restaurants, bars, museums, zoos and movie theaters.
Los Angeles and San Diego, the state’s two largest school districts, announced Monday that classes will be online-only at the start of the school year, citing “skyrocketing infection rates” of the coronavirus in their areas.
As the calls from the White House to fully reopen schools grow louder, evidence continues to pile up to show that is unlikely to happen, at least not on the national scale President Donald Trump desires.
That’s not because state and local officials aren’t trying, but because the spread of the virus is beginning to overwhelm even the best-laid plans, NBC News’ Benjy Sarlin writes in a news analysis.
Here are some other developments:
- With virus surging, Florida Gov. DeSantis may not be able to welcome Trump’s Republican National Convention with open arms, after all.
- After months of nary a face mask being seen in hard-hit England, they are slowly being embraced with Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s backing.
- A new poll underscores how COVID-19 anxiety differs by race.
- U.S. subsidiaries of Chinese companies got coronavirus bailout money.
- Track U.S. hot spots where COVID-19 infection rates are rising.
- The U.S. death toll from coronavirus has surpassed 136,000 according to NBC News’ tally.
|
Supreme Court clears way for first federal executions since 2003
The Supreme Court ruled early on Tuesday that the first federal executions in 17 years can be carried out.
In a 5-4 decision issued shortly after 2 a.m. ET, the justices rejected inmate claims that a lethal dose of the powerful sedative pentobarbital was unconstitutional.
The Supreme Court majority opinion says that “the plaintiffs have not established that they are likely to succeed on the merits of their Eighth Amendment claim” and “that claim faces an exceedingly high bar.”
The Eighth Amendment bars cruel and unusual punishment. The Supreme Court decision means four executions scheduled to take place at the U.S. Penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana, may now proceed as planned.
The Federal Correctional Complex at Terre Haute, Indiana, were the first federal executions since 2003 have been cleared to take place. (Photo: Scott Olson / Getty Images)
|
Body of “Glee” actress Naya Rivera was found in a California lake, authorities believe.
Authorities are confident they have found the body of actress Naya Rivera at Lake Piru in California, five days after she went missing during a boating trip with her son, the Ventura County Sheriff’s Office said Monday.
Rivera, 33, had been out boating with her 4-year-old son last Wednesday afternoon when she went missing.
On Thursday, the sheriff’s office said it was presuming that Rivera drowned in the lake. Deputy Chris Dyer said there were no signs of foul play or anything that went wrong “besides a tragic accident.”
Opinion: Rivera may be gone, but the “Glee” star’s queer legacy will last forever, Dana Piccoli writes in a THINK piece.
|
Want to receive the Morning Rundown in your inbox? Sign up here.
|
Plus
- Don’t stop the presses: Judge gives green light to Mary Trump’s tell-all book about the president. It goes on sale today.
- U.S. subsidiaries of Chinese companies got coronavirus bailout money.
- Ex-Uber employees are being surprised by big tax bills. They blame the ride-hailing company.
- Behind America’s tear gas business boom: Low-wage workers and angry neighbors.
- Listen to our Into America podcast. In the latest episode, host Trymaine Lee gets into Jamaal Bowman’s insurgent run for New York’s 16th Congressional district.
|
THINK about it
Mary Trump’s book reveals Trumpworld’s web of lies — and the enablers who protect it, author Nina Burleigh writes in an opinion piece.
|
Live BETTER
Try these 8 super simple, super satisfying summer pastas.
|
Shopping
Do you need to wear sunscreen inside? Experts weigh in.
|
Quote of the day
“There’s a public health imperative to keep schools from becoming a petri dish.”
— Austin Beutner, Los Angeles school superintendent, on beginning the school with online-only classes.
|
One true love thing
For 114 days, Mary Daniel wasn’t able to get closer to her husband than touching his hand through a pane of glass.
Her husband, Steve, is in a nursing home with early-onset Alzheimer’s. During the coronavirus pandemic, there have been no visitors allowed.
Mary felt like she was breaking her vow to be by his side. Then she learned that the nursing home needed a dishwasher, so she took the job so she could spend more time with him.
She said the message she hopes to convey to her husband is that “he is deeply loved and that he will never be alone. That’s the best gift I can give him for the rest of his life.”
|
NBC FIRST READ
|
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: High-profile runoffs in Alabama and Texas will set the stage for November
It’s Runoff Tuesday in Alabama and Texas, where Democratic and GOP runoffs will decide the nominees for key Senate and House contests in November.
The marquee matchup today is Alabama’s Republican Senate runoff, where former Sen. and Attorney General Jeff Sessions hopes to win back his old seat — but faces a tough fight against Trump-endorsed former Auburn football coach Tommy Tuberville.
The two men advanced to Tuesday’s runoff after no candidate received more than 50 percent of the vote in the March primary.
AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster
Runoffs will also decide several high-profile intraparty contests in the Lone Star State.
Air Force veteran MJ Hegar and state Sen. Royce West will face off to determine which of the two Democrats will take on incumbent Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas. (You may remember Hegar, who has the backing of the DSCC and EMILY’s List, from her viral ad “Doors” during her unsuccessful 2018 bid for Congress.) A CBS/YouGov poll out this weekend found both candidates trailing Cornyn in a head-to-head contest.
In the open seat for TX-13, former White House physician and onetime VA Secretary nominee Ronny Jackson is battling against cattle industry lobbyist Josh Winegarner. President Donald Trump is backing Jackson, while retiring GOP Rep. Mac Thornberry has endorsed Winegarner.
There’s also an intriguing GOP runoff in TX-23 to replace retiring Republican Rep. Will Hurd, where Raul Reyes is running with Ted Cruz’s support against Tony Gonzales, who has the backing of Kevin McCarthy, President Trump, Marco Rubio, Steve Scalise, Will Hurd and Rick Perry. The winner faces off against Democrat Gina Ortiz Jones, who narrowly lost to Hurd in 2018 in a district that Hillary Clinton won in 2016.
Runoffs will also decide the field for two open Texas House seats that Democrats hope to flip to blue in November
In TX-22, Republicans are picking between GOP donor (and prolific self-funder) Kathaleen Wall and Fort Bend County sheriff Troy Nehls as the GOP nominee to replace retiring GOP Rep. Pete Olson, who barely avoided defeat two years ago. The winner will face Democratic foreign-service officer and 2018 candidate Sri Preston Kulkarni.
And in TX-24, Democrats will choose their nominee in the seat formerly held by Republican Rep. Kenny Marchant. Retired Air Force colonel Kim Olson is up against school board member Candace Valenzuela, an Afro-Latina whose tale of growing up in poverty has gotten viral attention. The winner will face former Irving Mayor Beth Van Duyne.
|
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers that you need to know today
3,316,989: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 60,839 more cases than yesterday morning.)
136,402: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 356 more than yesterday morning.)
41.00 million: The number of coronavirus TESTS that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
About 30,000: The number of new cases recorded just yesterday in California, Texas and Florida alone.
5.4 million: The number of Americans who lost their health insurance coverage this spring, according to a new study from Families USA.
51 percent: The share of non-white adults in America who say they are “very worried” that they or a family member will be exposed to coronavirus, compared with just 29 percent of whites who say the same, according to a new NBC News|SurveyMonkey poll.
About 75,000: The number of employees of the unified Los Angeles public school district, which announced yesterday that it will not open for in-person classes in August.
17 years: How long it’s been since the last federal execution. The Supreme Court last night cleared the way for four more.
|
Talking policy with Benjy: Spiking cases scuttle school reopening plans
President Trump’s efforts to tweet schools into reopening is hitting some major roadblocks.
It’s not that state and local officials aren’t trying, Benjy Sarlin writes, it’s that even more ambitious reopening efforts are being rapidly overtaken by the pandemic.
The White House has so far not provided a clear plan as to how it intends to advise and support schools in reopening. But even assuming schools check every box on an airtight safety plan, some public health experts who have advocated for full reopenings warn that getting the virus under control is likely a prerequisite.
Now we’re starting to see consequences of that failure to lower infection rates. On Monday, Los Angeles and San Diego announced the school year would start online-only. San Diego until recently had been pushing for a five-day week of physical attendance, but with cases spiking in California and no sign of new federal aid, that’s off the table.
Similar online-only reopenings appear likely in places like Atlanta and Nashville, which are also facing outbreaks, and they’re threatening to affect other school districts, from Texas to Virginia. Meanwhile more states and metro areas are weighing plans for a hybrid of online and in-person classes to start, with Milwaukee joining places like New York City and Maryland.
Part of the problem, as Dallas’ superintendent explained on MSNBC, is that parents and staff alike are unlikely to go along with any reopening plan if they’re afraid to leave their house amid a raging pandemic. It’s worth asking what the White House and Congress might do to reassure them, but whatever it is, publicly attacking the administration’s own health officials seems unlikely to be the answer.
|
TWEET OF THE DAY: Mailing it in
|
2020 VISION: Climate control
Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden will deliver remarks at 1:30 pm ET today on climate change, clean energy and infrastructure, per NBC’s Marianna Sotomayor.
Biden’s focus on clean energy is the second part of his “Build Back Better” economic recovery plan that he debuted last week by proposing changes to strengthen U.S. supply chains and keeping jobs in America by reinvesting in manufacturing and technology, Sotomayor adds.
And the Washington Post previews the big policy announcement for Biden’s speech today: The Democrat “plans to outline a proposal Tuesday that would transform the nation’s energy industry with a new pledge to eliminate carbon pollution from power plants by 2035, according to a person briefed on his proposal.”
|
AD WATCH from Ben Kamisar
Today’s watch looks at the overwhelming spending discrepancy in Texas’ Democratic Senate primary runoff, which takes place today.
MJ Hegar and her allies have flooded the airwaves in recent months, leaving Royce West in the dust. Hegar’s campaign, Women Vote! (the EMILY’s List super PAC) and the DSCC have combined to spend $2.2 million on behalf of Hegar on TV and radio, according to Advertising Analytics.
West’s campaign has spent a paltry $22,000 since the two advanced to the runoff, for an ad-spending ratio between the two campaigns of about 102:1.
That spending disparity, plus Hegar’s big-name backers and significant fundraising advantage, has given her an advantage going into the runoff as she runs a race reminiscent of the strategy that helped win Democrats many pivotal House seats in 2018, leaning on health care and her military experience.
But West, a longtime state senator, has bristled at Hegar’s support from outside groups like the DSCC, and has played up his legislative career and work on issues like police reform amid the national upheaval on policing and racial injustice.
|
So you’re telling me there’s a chance on police reform?
After the Senate Republicans’ police reform bill failed to advance passed a procedural vote in June, GOP Sen. Tim Scott – the bill’s architect, and one of three Black senators – said he’s still hopeful reform legislation will happen.
House Democrats passed their version of reform already, and many Democrats have said that the Republican version didn’t hold much water. Democrats have called for Republicans to adopt their qualified immunity standards and to ban no-knock warrants in drug cases.
Here’s Scott’s back-and-forth with our Hill team on Monday:
Q: Are you working with the House on your police reform proposal?
SCOTT: Still working with them.
Q: Have you actually had discussions with I know you said with Karen Bass, just suggested she may be willing to go half way Is she really suggesting that you can go compromise on a deal with you on this?
SCOTT: Well, I think what she suggested is that she’s willing to continue the conversation of it, the question is what is halfway? I think the bill in and of itself is two thirds of the way. And so the question is can we rustle ourselves together around three or four of those key issues. I think there’s a chance that we can. We’ll just see if she can get enough folks on my side of the Senate versus just having a conversation with House people but I’m encouraged that she’s still working on it. I just had a conversation with some members on the phone, before I went to preside. So, there’s still a lot of activity around it I hope that activity blossoms into an actual signed piece of legislation.
|
THE LID: Primary colors
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we previewed some of today’s high-stakes primaries.
|
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
A federal judge has given the green light to Mary Trump’s book, scheduled for release today.
NBC’s Sahil Kapur checks in with the downballot Republicans who can’t live with Trump, but can’t live without him either.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis might have the final word on whether the RNC can hold its large-scale festivities in Jacksonville next month — and that’s putting him in a bit of a pickle.
Can Congress investigate the president’s move to commute Roger Stone’s sentence?
Pro-Trump super PAC America First Action is planning a new $23 million ad blitz.
|
CBS
|
|
|
|
IJR
MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
LOUDER WITH CROWDER
TOWNHALL
FACEBOOK TWITTER |
ADVERTISEMENT |
|
|
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions You can unsubscribe by clicking here. Or Send postal mail to: * Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers. |
REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
|
||||||||||||
|
REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
|
CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
|
BERNARD GOLDBERG
TWITCHY
|
|
HOT AIR
ADVERTISEMENT |
|
|
|
AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
NATIONAL REVIEW
|
|
NATIONAL JOURNAL
|
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
|
FRONTPAGE MAG
|
|
HOOVER INSTITUTE
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|